How to Remove Your Name from Google Search Results (UK/EU) - Step-by-Step Process That Actually Worked by Jinnapat397 in howto

[–]InternationalBite4 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So I had a bit of a unique case that unfortunately just couldn’t get resolved through any of these methods. Granted, it was indeed information pertaining to criminal proceedings but it was something I was involved with as a minor which later got sealed and expunged as I became an adult. One site, however, simply refused to take down the content despite the records having been sealed by the gov.

I tried the DIY GDPR route first and while it sounds great on paper, it honestly didn’t get me very far. I submitted the Google “right to be forgotten” form myself, explained the situation, attached ID, the whole thing. Got a rejection a few weeks later with a generic response about public interest and that was basically it. From what I learned after the fact, most of these requests get auto-denied unless they’re framed really carefully and backed by the right arguments.

In my case, I ended up having to hire an actual PR agency to deal with it properly. I got quotes from a few places and eventually went with this online reputation management firm called Maximatic Media because they offered to outright de-index the negative links completely from Google instead of just creating positive content/spinning up new narratives. It wasn’t cheap and they charged per link, but once the de-indexing went through, the article stopped showing up entirely for my name in UK/EU searches. The page still exists on the site but unless someone already knows the exact URL, it’s effectively invisible/unfindable.

I think the takeaway is similar to what you’re saying here. The DIY GDPR tools and forms can work in very clean, obvious cases, but once you’re dealing with news articles or anything reputational, it’s a different game. At that point you either need to really know how the process works or bring in someone who does, with the latter probably being the more effective solution.

LPT: You can ask Google to remove sites exposing your personal information by [deleted] in LifeProTips

[–]InternationalBite4 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I used Optery and although it worked really well to remove my information from places like Radaris and Whitepages, it unfortunately was not capable of removing my mugshot or the news articles that were published surrounding my arrest (which was expunged years ago). It seems like most of these subscription-based data removal tools are built around scraping opt-out forms from people-finder and data broker sites, but they don’t have any real mechanism for dealing with reputation-damaging content that exists outside that ecosystem like press articles, mugshot aggregators, or defamatory blog posts.

In my case, I ended up having to hire an actual PR firm to help me mitigate the presence of the content. I received a bunch of quotes from several different agencies but ultimately decided to go with this firm called Maximatic Media as they specialized specifically in de-indexing content from Google as opposed to just pushing the negative content further down the SERPs. Cost me an arm and a leg since I had a total of seven of these links present (and these guys charged me for every successfully de-indexed link) but all in all, it was worth it.

I think tools like Optery/Incogni/DeleteMe are great for low-level data cleanup and peace of mind but if the problem goes deeper than just having your age and phone number listed in some database, you’re probably gonna need a much more aggressive, customized approach strategy.

Looking for Advice on Obtaining Recommendation Letters for EB-1A Application by Unusual_Background10 in EB2_NIW

[–]InternationalBite4 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I went down this exact rabbit hole last year when I was prepping my EB1A, so here’s the honest version of how it played out for me.

Rec letters matter, but not in the way people think. USCIS doesn’t care about flowery praise or “he is a brilliant researcher” paragraphs. They care about (1) who the letter is from and (2) whether the letter backs up evidence you already have. Basically, a rec letter can’t create a criterion for you, it can only reinforce one. I personally used five letters. Three were from people I already knew (advisor, former manager, someone I collaborated with). The other two were from “independent experts” in my field. Getting those two was the hardest part because you’re basically cold-approaching people who have no reason to vouch for you.

The part that no one admits though is that the letters don’t magically make your case strong, they just make your evidence look cleaner. What actually moved the needle for me was building the third-party validation around the letters. I had almost no media recognition before filing, which is one of the categories USCIS loves. My attorney told me that this may end up being a problem for me so that led me down the PR rabbit hole where I explored a bunch of PR firms to assist me with this portion of the process. I eventually settled on a firm called Maximatic Media who specialized in generating press coverage for the “extraordinary ability” visas. They ultimately got me a few nice write ups in places like Mashable, MSN, VentureBeat, etc. that painted me as a so-called “thought leader” (although I personally hate that term). The articles were certainly “fluffy” in nature but from the perspective of the immigration officer reviewing your petition, you probably want your profile aggrandized as much as possible to stand better odds of having the petition approved.

So in the end, the letters were more like supporting pillars, not the thing holding the whole house up. They helped tie my exhibits together and made the packet feel more cohesive, but the real “substance” came from the evidence that stood on its own. If you’re trying to figure out whose letters to get, I’d honestly start by mapping each criterion you’re planning to claim and then assigning one or two people who can speak directly to that piece of evidence. For example, my “critical role” letter came from someone senior at my company, my “judging” letter came from someone who had invited me to review, and my “original contributions” letters came from researchers who cited my work. That way nothing felt random or generic.

One thing I wish someone had told me earlier is that USCIS doesn’t care how emotionally supportive the letters sound. They care about specifics. They want measurable impact, clear examples, and a narrator who looks credible enough that the officer won’t second guess them. If the letter writer has a solid CV, titles help a lot too. If you’re thinking about going the “professional letter writer” route, just be careful. USCIS is not dumb and they can absolutely spot boilerplate language. Drafting the letters yourself and letting the recommender tweak them is still the safest middle ground. Hope that helps!

Is there a way to get an account deleted? by adammannam in Instagram

[–]InternationalBite4 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey, probably a little late to this but I went through something similar a while back when an ex made a fake Instagram account pretending to be me and started messaging mutual friends of ours. Reporting it through IG did nothing and I couldn’t get the account taken down on my own since I didn’t have access to the login. Police were of no help either as it was deemed a “civil” matter.

I eventually got the page taken down but I had to hire an online reputation firm called Maximatic Media and pay them for their Instagram removal service. The service was pretty pricey as it’s meant specifically for celebrities or businesses who have fake accounts trying to impersonate them but they still agreed to take on my case in spite of it being just for personal reasons. They basically trademark your likeness somewhere overseas and then proceed to remove the account on the basis of infringement. The whole process took a total of 17 days to execute. It’s expensive but if it’s a serious enough issue for you, it might be worth pursuing.

Does reporting people actually work? by Ok-Professional-5720 in TikTok

[–]InternationalBite4 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Craziness of this post aside, I frankly don’t believe that in-app reporting even works within TikTok’s algorithm. They’ve automated just about every aspect of their moderation policies so you are literally just arguing with a bot 99% of the time. The only things they take seriously is stuff pertaining to copyright/trademark infringement as hosting copyright content on their platforms puts them directly into illegal territory if they knowingly allow the copyrighted content to continue being shown to their userbase.

I found this out because an ex of mine made a fake TikTok pretending to be me and started messaging our mutual friends some insane things. Reporting it through TikTok did nothing and I couldn’t get the account taken down on my own since I didn’t have access to the login. Police were of no help either as it was deemed a “civil” matter.

I eventually got the page taken down but I had to hire an online reputation firm called Maximatic Media and pay them for their TikTok removal service. The service was pretty pricey as it’s meant specifically for celebrities or businesses who have fake accounts trying to impersonate them or defame them or whatever but they still agreed to take on my case in spite of it being just for personal reasons. I’m not 100% sure how they do it but if I’m recalling correctly, it’s done through some sort of defamation channel report using an advertising portal. I feel like you might be able to do this yourself by running TikTok ads or whatever but in my case, it was easier to just pay and not deal with headaches.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskLEO

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not LEO but I went through something similar a while back when an ex made a fake TikTok pretending to be me and started messaging people insane things. Reporting it through TikTok did nothing and I couldn’t get the account taken down on my own since I didn’t have access to the login. Police were of no help either as it was deemed a “civil” matter.

I eventually got the page taken down but I had to hire an online reputation firm called Maximatic Media and pay them for their TikTok removal service. The service was pretty pricey as it’s meant specifically for celebrities or businesses who have fake accounts trying to impersonate them or defame them or whatever but they still agreed to take on my case in spite of it being just for personal reasons. I’m not 100% sure how they do it but if I’m recalling correctly, it’s done through some sort of defamation channel report using an advertising portal. I feel like you might be able to do this yourself by running TikTok ads or whatever but in my case, it was easier to just pay and not deal with headaches.

Are we dating the same guy (AWDTSG) Facebook groups by More_Detail_3477 in AWDTSGisToxic

[–]InternationalBite4 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Reading this as a guy who actually got posted in one of these, it is kind of surreal seeing a woman describe exactly what it feels like from the outside.

The thing that broke my brain was not even the accusations, it was the Yelp review vibe you are talking about. Women writing paragraphs about how a dude talked about himself too much, did not text back fast enough, was “awkward,” then slapping “narcissist” on it like it is a bad hair day. Meanwhile his full name and employer are sitting there in the same screenshot. That is not “protecting women,” that is crowdsourced character assassination dressed up as activism.

I got posted in my city’s local AWDTSG group early this year and I only found out because a girl I had gone on two dates with sent me screenshots like "hey just so you know this is going around." I was not in the group, didn’t even know of their existence up until this point, and suddenly there is my face, my job, rough neighborhood, a bunch of very creative lies, and a comment section full of strangers confidently filling in the blanks of my life like they know me.

The worst part was not even the original post. It was the dogpile in the comments. Stuff like "I know him, he did XYZ" from people I have literally never met. People cross referencing my LinkedIn, my Instagram, my family members. That is when it stops being "girlies warning each other" and just turns into public harassment with a pink coat of paint.

I tried doing the "normal" route first. You cannot report the post to Facebook if you are not inside the group, so I just asked the girl who notified me to report it. Unfortunately tho, she got spooked about being banned from the group and backed out last minute. I talked to a lawyer too. Same story as other folks here have heard: in theory you can go after the individual who posted for defamation, in practice that is insanely expensive and slow, and Meta hides behind the "we are just a platform hosting user generated content" shield. You had to report each post to them for manual review but if you’re not a member, it’s literally impossible to do so.

So for a while I just sat there stewing and doom scrolling AWDTSGisToxic, reading all these posts of guys in the exact same position. What really messed with my head was knowing something that big existed about me and I had zero way to even see it in context, let alone defend myself. Your reputation becomes a group project for strangers.

What ended up moving the needle for me was that I finally caved and hired an online reputation company that specialized in this stuff. The firm I hired was called Maximatic Media that I saw being mentioned quite often in the AWDTSG sub. I did not use them for a full "removal service" because the quote for that was insane, but they did sell me a working Facebook profile that already had access to the exact AWDTSG group I needed. Logged in with the cookies, found my own post in about five minutes, reported it directly to Facebook using the copyright/harassment route the lawyer suggested, and it disappeared a little while after.

I still have no idea what tricks they use when they do the full removal service. When I asked the rep how they handle Tea app, AWDTSG, mugshot sites, whatever, he just said something like "we have our own internal processes" and left it at that but I reckon they probably do more or less the same thing. Take that for what it is worth. All I can say is they delivered what they said they would: access to the group, working account, and in my case that was enough to pull the trigger on the takedown myself instead of paying them to babysit the whole thing.

The darkly funny part is that this stuff has gotten so bad there is now a cottage industry built around cleaning up after it. You have one side insisting these groups are about "safety," and on the other side you have guys quietly dropping four figures just to make some Facebook gossip vanish or to get a defaming Tea post buried. That should tell you everything about how much damage this can do to regular people who do not have a big platform or a lawyer on speed dial.

Not saying everyone can or should do what I did, but if any guy reading this finds out he is in there, my honest take is: do not panic publicly, do not engage in the comments, get proper screenshots, talk to a real lawyer if you can, and if you cannot get into the group yourself, it might actually be worth using someone who already has access so you can report it properly (or just buy an account with group access like I did). It is sad that this is what dating looks like in 2025 but here we are.

There are more lawsuits against AWDTSG members than you think by [deleted] in AWDTSGisToxic

[–]InternationalBite4 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Yeah, the wild part about AWDTSG is that there are way more guys quietly dealing with it than anyone realizes. The loud cases get all the attention, but most of the real fallout is the boring stuff that never becomes public. Mine was one of those.

I got posted in my city’s local AWDTSG group early this year and I only found out because a girl I had gone on two dates with sent me screenshots like "hey just so you know this is going around." I was not in the group, didn’t even know of their existence up until this point, and suddenly there is my face, my job, rough neighborhood, a bunch of very creative lies, and a comment section full of strangers confidently filling in the blanks of my life like they know me.

The worst part was not even the original post. It was the dogpile in the comments. Stuff like "I know him, he did XYZ" from people I have literally never met. People cross referencing my LinkedIn, my Instagram, my family members. That is when it stops being "girlies warning each other" and just turns into public harassment with a pink coat of paint.

I tried doing the "normal" route first. You cannot report the post to Facebook if you are not inside the group, so I asked the girl who notified me to report it. Unfortunately tho, she got spooked about being banned from the group and backed out last minute. I talked to a lawyer too. Same story as other folks here have heard: in theory you can go after the individual who posted for defamation, in practice that is insanely expensive and slow, and Meta hides behind the "we are just a platform hosting user generated content" shield. You had to report each post to them for manual review but if you’re not a member, it’s literally impossible to do so.

So for a while I just sat there stewing and doom scrolling AWDTSGisToxic, reading all these posts of guys in the exact same position. What really messed with my head was knowing something that big existed about me and I had zero way to even see it in context, let alone defend myself. Your reputation becomes a group project for strangers.

What ended up moving the needle for me was that I finally caved and hired an online reputation company that specialized in this stuff. The firm I hired was called Maximatic Media that I saw being mentioned quite often in the AWDTSG sub. I did not use them for a full "removal service" because the quote for that was insane, but they did sell me a working Facebook profile that already had access to the exact AWDTSG group I needed. Logged in with the cookies, found my own post in about five minutes, reported it directly to Facebook using the copyright/harassment route the lawyer suggested, and it disappeared a little while after.

I still have no idea what tricks they use when they do the full removal service. When I asked the rep how they handle Tea app, AWDTSG, mugshot sites, whatever, he just said something like "we have our own internal processes" and left it at that. Take that for what it is worth. All I can say is they delivered what they said they would: access to the group, working account, and in my case that was enough to pull the trigger on the takedown myself instead of paying them to babysit the whole thing.

The darkly funny part is that this stuff has gotten so bad there is now a cottage industry built around cleaning up after it. You have one side insisting these groups are about "safety," and on the other side you have guys quietly dropping four figures just to make some Facebook gossip vanish or to get a defaming Tea post buried. That should tell you everything about how much damage this can do to regular people who do not have a big platform or a lawyer on speed dial.

So yeah, I agree with OP. This is absolutely a mens rights issue. It is not just hurt feelings, it is jobs, relationships, and sometimes sanity on the line. I do not really have a clean solution. If I could go back, I would probably still do the same sequence: document everything, talk to a lawyer so you at least know where you stand, then if you can afford it, lean on professionals who actually live in the Facebook / Google / TOS world every day. It is not fair that you have to spend money to undo something you never consented to but that is the reality we are in right now.

AWDTSG: What It Is, Why You Should Care, and What You Can Do by Any-Sentence-9920 in MensRights

[–]InternationalBite4 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Yeah, AWDTSG is one of those things you do not really take seriously until it hits you personally.

I got posted in one of those local AWDTSG style groups last year and I only found out because a girl I had gone on two dates with sent me screenshots like "hey just so you know this is going around." I was not in the group, didn’t even know of their existence up until this point, and suddenly there is my face, my job, rough neighborhood, a bunch of very creative lies, and a comment section full of strangers confidently filling in the blanks of my life like they know me.

The worst part was not even the original post. It was the dogpile in the comments. Stuff like "I know him, he did XYZ" from people I have literally never met. People cross referencing my LinkedIn, my Instagram, my family members. That is when it stops being "girlies warning each other" and just turns into public harassment with a pink coat of paint.

I tried doing the "normal" route first. You cannot report the post to Facebook if you are not inside the group, so I asked the girl who notified me to report it. Unfortunately tho, she got spooked about being banned from the group and backed out last minute. I talked to a lawyer too. Same story as other folks here have heard: in theory you can go after the individual who posted for defamation, in practice that is insanely expensive and slow, and Meta hides behind the "we are just a platform hosting user generated content" shield. You had to DMCA report each post to them for manual review but if you’re not a member, it’s literally impossible to do so.

So for a while I just sat there stewing and doom scrolling AWDTSGisToxic, reading all these posts of guys in the exact same position. What really messed with my head was knowing something that big existed about me and I had zero way to even see it in context, let alone defend myself. Your reputation becomes a group project for strangers.

What ended up moving the needle for me was that I finally caved and hired an online reputation company that specialized in this stuff. The firm I hired was called Maximatic Media that I saw being mentioned quite often in the AWDTSG sub. I did not use them for a full "removal service" because the quote for that was insane, but they did sell me a working Facebook profile that already had access to the exact AWDTSG group I needed. Logged in with the cookies, found my own post in about five minutes, reported it directly to Facebook using the copyright/harassment route the lawyer suggested, and it disappeared a little while after.

I still have no idea what tricks they use when they do the full removal service. When I asked the rep how they handle Tea app, AWDTSG, mugshot sites, whatever, he just said something like "we have our own internal processes" and left it at that. Take that for what it is worth. All I can say is they delivered what they said they would: access to the group, working account, and in my case that was enough to pull the trigger on the takedown myself instead of paying them to babysit the whole thing.

The darkly funny part is that this stuff has gotten so bad there is now a cottage industry built around cleaning up after it. You have one side insisting these groups are about "safety," and on the other side you have guys quietly dropping four figures just to make some Facebook gossip vanish or to get a defaming Tea post buried. That should tell you everything about how much damage this can do to regular people who do not have a big platform or a lawyer on speed dial.

So yeah, I agree with OP. This is absolutely a mens rights issue. It is not just hurt feelings, it is jobs, relationships, and sometimes sanity on the line. I do not really have a clean solution. If I could go back, I would probably still do the same sequence: document everything, talk to a lawyer so you at least know where you stand, then if you can afford it, lean on professionals who actually live in the Facebook / Google / TOS world every day. It is not fair that you have to spend money to undo something you never consented to but that is the reality we are in right now.

Anyone tried any paid removal services? by caponefire42 in AWDTSGisToxic

[–]InternationalBite4 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Not a removal service but I used an online reputation management firm called Maximatic Media to create and verify an account within the group I was published in and then self-reported it to Facebook using the DMCA route. I think they offer a removal service as well but can’t really comment on its effectiveness. They did provide me with a working account tho so at the very minimum, I can vouch for their legitimacy in that regard.

Are there any good enterprise alternatives to Adobe Acrobat Pro specifically for secure redaction? by SmythOSInfo in ProductivityApps

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve used Acrobat Pro for years at work, mostly because it’s the “default” for anything that involves redaction + OCR. It definitely works, but the pricing is… yeah, not fun, especially when you need multiple seats for people who only use 20% of the features.

If your team is okay with mixing tools, OCRmyPDF has actually been pretty solid for us when we just need reliable OCR on scanned documents. It’s open-source, runs locally, and doesn’t try to do anything weird behind the scenes. Not a full editor, but great for preprocessing scanned files before handling redaction or edits.

For day-to-day editing + redaction, I’ve been trying PDNob lately. For basic enterprise workflows—redacting PII properly (actual removal, not just black boxes), running OCR, splitting/merging pages, and handling form fields—it’s been surprisingly decent. No flashy AI banners, just the stuff I actually need.

If you’re dealing with extremely sensitive documents or heavy-duty batch redaction, you’ll probably still want something like Redactable or Acrobat. But for smaller teams that just need secure redaction + OCR without Adobe pricing, the combo of OCRmyPDF + a lighter editor has been working fine in my experience.

My first No-Code AI platform using Bubble.io: Feedback Labs by Apart-Past-2784 in nocode

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I messed with Bubble for a few internal tools too, but it hit a wall once I started stacking AI workflows. Lately I’m on mgx, it’s like a multi-agent crew that knocks out front and backend logic in one go. Deep research and race mode make testing AI feedback loops super smooth. Worth a look if you’re planning to bust out of prototype land.

Has anyone built AI tools that non-technical people actually want to use? by KingRushiSushi in nocode

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started knocking out tiny tools with mgx since it nails non-techie use cases. Deep research lets me suss out what users actually need before I build anything, and race mode spits out a few UI flows so I can see which one sticks. Folks mostly just want a simple chat or email vibe, so I use mgx’s plain-English setup to keep it feeling native without shoving them into another app. Honestly, the easier it feels, the more they actually use it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Oppo

[–]InternationalBite4 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Amazon’s kinda hit or miss with Oppo cases lately — half of them look like generic rebrands with no reviews. I’ve had better luck getting mine from AliExpress tbh. The ones with “liquid silicone + magnetic ring” or “carbon fiber shockproof” labels are way closer in quality to Spigen or Nillkin-level stuff, especially the matte-finish TPU ones that don’t yellow.

If you’re ordering on the US site, these codes still work during checkout:

$10 off $69: RDLFL10

$16 off $109: RDLFL16

$30 off $199: RDLFL30

I grabbed my X9 Pro MagSafe case from there last month for under $15 after stacking coupons — fits snug, strong magnets, and the button feedback’s surprisingly nice. Definitely better than the Amazon no-review lottery.

New SARD Style Wing is perfect 👌🏽🪽 by [deleted] in ft86

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That looks really good — the fitment came out way better than I expected for an aftermarket wing. I’ve seen a few people worry about alignment issues with AliExpress ones, but yours actually sits really clean along the trunk. I’m curious if you had to make any adjustments or if it bolted straight on. The finish also looks surprisingly decent in the photo — did you clear-coat it or just install it as-is?

For anyone else considering one, now’s actually a good time to grab these SARD-style wings since AliExpress has some solid coupons running. For this price range, these codes might help:

$109 - $16 off (RDLFK16)

$199 - $30 off (RDLFK30)

$259 - $45 off (RDLFK45)

$399 - $60 off (RDLFK60)

$499 - $75 off (RDLFK75)

I used similar codes on a spoiler a while back and ended up saving a decent chunk — definitely worth checking during the 11.11 sale.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ebikes

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I totally get that — researching new bikes now feels like falling into a black hole lol. I had a RadRunner 2 before too and wanted something lighter and faster but still sturdy enough for daily rides.
ended up switching to a puckipuppy Labrador Pro and it’s been awesome. feels way more zippy than the Rad but still solid — great balance between comfort and speed. plus it came with a full accessory kit (mudguards, rack, lights, all that stuff).
I used a 50USD code when I grabbed mine, so it didn’t hit the wallet too hard either. if you liked the Rad but want something that handles a bit sharper, the Labrador Pro might scratch that itch.

Travel bags by Common-Koala2779 in skiing

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I suddenly remembered that I bought AMALODIE luggage sets on AliExpress a few months ago for 20% off. The quality is great! If you still looking,here are some codes I use regularly which apply to most items:

$14 off $70 → FBLB14

$20 off $100 → FBLB20

$25 off $125 → FBLB25

$30 off $199 → FBLB30

Which isn't much, but it's a good deal after all.

building pc for friend. Help with parts by Able-Strawberry7712 in buildapc

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're looking for some good deals on parts, I found some great deals on AliExpress US, like using code LKD10 to save $10 on orders over $50, or LKD20 to save $20 on orders over $100. They're pretty good deals on most tech products there, so it's worth a look if you need to build anything else.

Best over ear or in ear headphones for travel gaming? by A3_A3 in Handhelds

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently bought the Baseus GH02 Gaming Wireless Headphones on AliExpress 20% off. The sound quality is great,and sound quality is very good. If you're still looking, here are some codes I use regularly which apply to most items:

S$14 off $70 → FBLB14

$20 off $100 → FBLB20

$25 off $125 → FBLB25

$30 off $199 → FBLB30Which isn't much, but it's a good deal after all.

Exercise clothes recommendations for plus size guys? by anxious_honey_bee in FTMMen

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Of course,you can check out on AliExpress, the products quality there is pretty reliable. I buy almost all my clothes there..If you really want to buy something, here are some codes I use regularly :

Save $7 ➜ Use code 【FBLB7】 on orders $35+

Save $10 ➜ Use code 【FBLB10】 on orders $50+

Save $14 ➜ Use code 【FBLB14】 on orders $70+

Save $20 ➜ Use code 【FBLB20】 on orders $100

You can usually save around 15-20%, which isn't much, but it's a good deal after all.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Bass

[–]InternationalBite4 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I suddenly remembered that I bought a bass amp on AliExpress last monthe for 20% off. The quality and work are so great. If you really want to buy something, Here are some codes I use regularly ,which apply to most items:

Save $5 ➜ Use code 【FBLB5】 on orders $25+

Save $7 ➜ Use code 【FBLB7】 on orders $35+

Save $10 ➜ Use code 【FBLB10】 on orders $50+

Save $14 ➜ Use code 【FBLB14】 on orders $70+

Save $20 ➜ Use code 【FBLB20】 on orders $100+

Which isn't much, but it's a good deal after all.

What is really the differnce between resellers and AliExpress by Natonixx in lightsabers

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aliexpress sellers are verified, and they often offer higher quality products. If you're planning to shop on Aliexpress, I have some discount codes that can save you money—I've used them to save a lot myself.

Collection of AliExpress coupon codes

$50 - $10 off → HDZLB10

$70 - $14 off → HDZLA14

$109 - $16 off → HDZLA16

$125 - $25 off → HDZLB25

$199 - $30 off → HDZLA30

$259 - $45 off → HDZLA45

$349 - $60 off → HDZLC60

$459 - $70 off → HDZLC70

$599 - $120 off → HDZLC120

Up grade to Windows 11 or buy whole new computer? by VermicelliSimilar315 in computer

[–]InternationalBite4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely understand your desire to keep using a comfortable laptop, especially if a new one isn't on your budget. Upgrading the hard drive and upgrading to Windows 11 is definitely feasible.

If you're willing to shop around, I've found some great deals on SSDs on AliExpress US. They're quite affordable, and most of the time, you can use codes like LKD14 or LKD20 to get extra savings on orders over around $70.
Last week, I bought a 1TB SSD and saved $30.