Erase Named Mentions in Online Scams Articles from Google UK
Nothing kills trust faster than being named in a scam article online — especially when it’s not true, not proven, or you’ve been lumped in unfairly.
It might’ve been a misunderstanding, a false report, or part of a wider incident that had nothing to do with you directly.
But now?
Your name shows up next to “scam” on Google.
And that means lost clients, rejected job offers, and serious reputational damage.
At Reputation Ace, we don’t just patch it — we make it disappear.
Why You’re Being Named in Scam Articles
We see this all the time in:
- Consumer complaint sites
- “Watchdog” blog posts
- Scam reporting forums
- Reddit threads and news comments
- Low-authority online ‘exposés’ written for clicks
You might be:
- Falsely accused
- Guilty by association
- Caught up in a business dispute
- Named without any evidence
Even when proven false, Google can keep showing it for years.
What Happens When Your Name Appears Next to ‘Scam’
🚨 People don’t read — they react.
If Google connects your name or business with “scam,” that’s all a customer needs to leave and never come back.
You’ll face:
- Instant doubt
- Trust issues with banks, clients, and platforms
- Shadow bans or restrictions on payment processors
- Damage to your personal AND professional name
Reputation Ace Removes and Suppresses Scam Mentions
✅ 1. Source-Level Removal
We review whether the scam article breaches:
- Defamation law
- Privacy law
- GDPR
If it does, we’ll contact the site or publisher with a structured takedown request backed by legal precedent.
We’ve had scam accusations removed from:
- Blogs
- Complaint sites
- Review platforms
- Forum posts
- Archived pages
✅ 2. Right to Be Forgotten Request
If your name was cleared, no legal action occurred, or you were wrongly included, we can apply for de-indexing from Google using GDPR Article 17.
✅ 3. Suppression by Overwriting
We flood Google with optimised, trustworthy, high-authority content about you or your business, including:
- Interviews
- Thought-leader blogs
- News-style articles
- Business profiles
- Positive third-party mentions
This pushes the scam page down, replacing it with real content about who you are — not who some blogger says you are.
Case Study:
A client from Leeds was wrongly named in a “cryptocurrency scam” blog post alongside dozens of other companies.
He’d never been involved.
We:
- Got the blog post removed from two mirror sites
- Filed a GDPR de-index request with Google
- Rebuilt his business presence with fresh press releases and third-party validation
Within weeks, nothing negative showed on Page 1.
Why You Can’t Leave This Alone
Google doesn’t forget.
Even if people know you’re not guilty, just seeing the word “scam” next to your name damages trust.
The longer it’s visible, the more people see it — and the harder it is to reverse.
Get Help From the Experts
This isn’t about asking nicely — it’s about strategic takedown, legal escalation, and reputation warfare.
That’s what we do best.
Reach Out to Reputation Ace Now
📞 0800 088 5506
📧 info@reputationace.co.uk
🌐 www.reputationace.co.uk
Let’s shut that scam article down.