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This video exposes the truth about YouTube Tool*, also promoted as *“YouTube’s new rewards program.” Despite claims circulating in Facebook and Instagram ads, YouTube does not have a product called YouTube Tool to make money, and there is no legitimate YouTube rewards program that pays users to answer surveys, review ads, or give feedback to advertisers. If you searched for *YouTube Tool reviews*, *YouTube Tool scam*, or *Is YouTube Tool legit*, this video explains exactly how this scheme works, where it starts, and why people are losing money. --- What the YouTube Tool scam claims The scam begins with Facebook and Instagram ads claiming users can earn $200 to $800 per day using YouTube Tool. The ads use AI-generated voices and manipulated video clips and falsely claim that MrBeast and “The Rock” (Dwayne Johnson) promoted the program. They did not. According to the ads, YouTube Tool pays users to give “quick feedback” to YouTube advertisers by answering simple survey questions. These claims are entirely false. --- masdelgada.shop: the fake YouTube website The ads redirect users to *masdelgada.shop*, a fraudulent website pretending to be connected to YouTube. The site falsely claims visitors have already earned money and encourages them to complete additional “evaluations” to unlock withdrawals. Major red flags include: A fake YouTube logo and branding Claims that money has already been earned without doing anything Fabricated testimonials and comments Broken or recycled terms of use links A disclaimer stating it is not affiliated with YouTube LLC --- The deepfake “The Rock” video The masdelgada.shop website plays a longer video featuring a deepfake of “The Rock.” The fake video claims YouTube personally invited viewers to join a confidential project and states: “And if you think this is one of those scammy videos trying to trick you into buying something at the end, you are completely wrong.” That statement is false. The video ultimately leads to a payment request. --- FC PROTOCOL, RMR Makers, and the payment trap After the video, users are redirected to a Hotmart checkout page where the product name suddenly changes to: Product name: FC PROTOCOL Author: RMR Makers Product image: A cat silhouette labeled “Silhouette” This bait-and-switch is deliberate. The scammers distance themselves from the ads while still collecting money from victims. Users are told to pay a $24 one-time access fee*, supposedly refundable. In practice, many people report *larger charges, recurring billing, or complete loss of funds after entering their payment information. --- Why the money-back guarantee cannot be trusted Scammers routinely promise refunds to lower skepticism. *Money-back guarantees offered by fraudulent operations are meaningless*, especially when the product itself is based on impersonation, deception, and false claims. --- Important facts to know YouTube does not pay users to answer advertiser surveys There is no official product called YouTube Tool There is no legitimate “YouTube new rewards program” MrBeast and The Rock never promoted this masdelgada.shop is not affiliated with YouTube FC PROTOCOL and RMR Makers are part of the scam funnel --- Video chapters 00:00 – YouTube Tool scam overview 02:10 – Fake rewards program claims 03:20 – masdelgada.shop walkthrough 05:30 – Deepfake “The Rock” video 09:40 – Survey lies and fake earnings 12:40 – FC PROTOCOL payment trap 14:30 – Final warning and what happens next --- Final warning Any online offer claiming you can earn hundreds of dollars per day by answering surveys, clicking buttons, or watching videos — especially when it pretends to be YouTube — is almost always a scam. Stay away from *YouTube Tool*, *YouTube’s new rewards program*, *masdelgada.shop*, *FC PROTOCOL*, and *RMR Makers*. Editor’s Note: I used ChatGPT to help write this video description. Scammers use AI to trick people. It’s time we use AI to bust scams. Everything in this video is based on my own independent research.