How amazing is it that Canadian celebrities like TV chef Mary Berg, crooner Michael Bublé, comedian Rick Mercer and hockey megastar Sidney Crosby are finally revealing their secrets to financial success? That is, until the Bank of Canada tried to stop them.

None of that is true, of course, but it was the figurative bag of magic beans apparent scammers on social media tried to sell to people, enticing users to click on sensational posts — Berg under arrest, Bublé being dragged away — and leading them to what looks like, at first glance, a legitimate news story on CTV News’s website.

If you’re further intrigued by what appears to be an AI-generated article, you’ll have ample opportunity to click on the many links — about 225 on a single page — that direct you to sign up and hand over your first investment of $350, which will purportedly increase more than 10-fold in just seven days.

I reported at least 3 of those fake CTV news ads on Facebook each time the reviewer stated it broke no guidelines and it would not be removed.

Why are you on Facebook? That’s your problem. That’s like going to a landfill and complaining about some of the trash being extra smelly

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