Working on a machine that BSOD’d 3-4 times a week, couldn’t find much wrong but then I saw this. An NVME drive from a company named “OEMGenuine”.
Their website 404’s, waybackmachine says it was last cached 2 years ago, and even then it was a broken Godaddy landing page.
Found in a Thinkpad purchased from Amazon, sold by a third-party reseller who “upgrades” the devices before reselling.
Machine seems just fine/stable with a credible drive in it.
What’s the craziest shady “brand” name you’ve seen in the wild?
EDIT: NEW Discovery! One of the ancient waybackmachine cached pages previously redirected to oemgenuine.NET! It’s shoddy as hell but the .net domain is still visible today! oemgenuine.net
Huh, who’d of thought Genuine Leather would branch out into the tech industry.
I love the genuine naming scheme for scams like this. If something is genuine it doesn’t need to be labeled as genuine. You don’t order a “genuine” burger from a restaurant, you don’t buy a “genuine” BMW from a dealership, you don’t get hired by a “genuine” company…
Intel has been identifying their chips with “Genuine Intel” for quite some time, that brought the term into the IT zeitgeist.
I’m not sure that “AuthenticAMD” is any better. There’s probably an entire table of words like this that we should be wary of.
That said, this took me down a small rabbit hole of CPUIDs. I want one with “AMDisbetter!” Or “CyrixInstead”
And it’s not even that long ago their CPUs began genuinely committing
seppuku!unalive!uh… failingI think it was cheese nips that had “Real™️ Cheese” on the box where Real is the company name.
https://logos.fandom.com/wiki/Real_Seal
The Real Seal appears on products that are made with 100% U.S. cow’s milk
I could have sworn that it only needed to be 51%. Can’t find that now…