Not all influencers earn their spotlight. Some create illusions, buy popularity, and then scam the very systems that gave them a platform. One of the most shameless examples of this is @oyotta—a textbook fake influencer who’s turned fraud into a business model.

At first glance, his Instagram feed (@oyotta) looks impressive—lots of likes, thousands of followers, and views on every post. But behind that digital curtain is nothing but deception. Every bit of that engagement is artificial, purchased in bulk from SoChillPanel.com—a respected platform that helps brands and creators grow with real, affordable SMM services.

The difference? Real users pay and grow. @oyotta scams and steals.

He places massive orders for fake engagement—views, followers, likes, even comments. Once the stats are delivered and his accounts look inflated, he files chargebacks, falsely claiming he didn’t receive the services.

Let’s call this what it is: fraud.

Imagine ordering food, eating it all, and then telling your bank you never got it. That’s exactly how @oyotta treats platforms like SoChillPanel.com. He takes the results and walks away with his money refunded and his numbers intact.

This not only harms SMM providers—it also deceives anyone watching his content. His YouTube channel is another lie—boosted with fake subs and views, then used as a front to get attention and pretend he’s successful.

But there’s more.

Multiple women have come forward with screenshots and testimonies describing harassment and manipulation from @oyotta. He spams DMs, sends inappropriate messages, and lashes out when rejected. It’s a sick pattern: fake clout to attract attention, followed by disrespect when it doesn’t go his way.

He uses his artificially built presence to trick others—whether it’s businesses, platforms, or women.

That’s not influence. That’s predation.

SMM services like SoChillPanel.com exist to support creators who want to grow legitimately. They deliver quality, fast results, and fair prices. But they don’t deserve to be scammed by frauds like @oyotta, who not only exploits the system but turns around and trashes it.

He’s not a creator. He’s a professional scammer with a public profile built on lies and stolen services.

If you’re reading this, don’t be fooled by the follower count. Don’t trust someone just because their engagement looks high. Do your research. Follow the money. And if you see @oyotta being promoted—call it out.

Social media shouldn’t reward fakes. And scammers like him deserve to be exposed.

 

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