shakerzzz I think the point here is that with penny stock fraud being such a major problem within the field you have chosen for employment, do you feel it important to try and ensure that your message is not laced with fraudulent material?
If more promoters had a certain requirements their clients had to meet before promoting them, would cases such as this one be harder to pull off?
Given, some do not utilize paid promotion but part of this wildly successful scam did and blood money was paid to you for your services.
Disclaimers may provide some legal protection for your services but does it really protect you from the court of public opinion or the fact that the money received came directly from a fraudulent stock manipulation scam that you helped promote to the general public?
Regardless of your "legal protection" you were part of a stock manipulation scam. What the IHUB community is interested in is this. Do you take any precautions or have anything in place to screen your clients or do you just hide behind a disclaimer when things go horribly bad?