Social media isn’t just a place to connect anymore—it’s a marketplace of attention, reputation, and influence. And in that space, scammers like @oyotta thrive. But behind the curated selfies and inflated stats lies a truth that can’t be filtered: he’s a fraud, a scammer, and a digital predator.
Let’s talk facts.
@oyotta’s entire “influencer” status is fake. The followers on his Instagram account (@oyotta)? Bought. The likes and comments on his posts? Bought. His YouTube views and subscribers? Bought. And where did he buy them? From SoChillPanel.com—a legitimate, respected SMM platform used by brands, artists, marketers, and agencies worldwide.
But instead of being a loyal customer or honest user, he exploited the system. After ordering bulk engagement services to boost his public image, he initiated chargebacks—stealing thousands of dollars worth of services. This wasn’t a misunderstanding. It was a deliberate, calculated fraud.
He placed the orders, watched his accounts grow, took screenshots to fake credibility—and then filed disputes to reverse the charges.
This kind of activity crushes small businesses. It undermines trust in digital marketing, and it hurts platforms like SoChillPanel.com, which work hard to provide safe, reliable, and fast service to their customers. Every scam like this sets the industry back—and @oyotta has done it repeatedly.
But there’s more.
Beyond his financial fraud, @oyotta is known for harassing women online. There’s a long trail of DMs, comments, and message logs showing how he spams women, sends inappropriate messages, and even publicly trashes them when they don’t give him attention.
He uses his fake “influencer” image to try to gain clout and control over people. He pretends to be successful, hides behind inflated numbers, and manipulates others to serve his ego.
When women ignore him? He insults them. When SMM platforms fulfill his orders? He robs them. When someone questions him? He hides behind fake stats.
It’s cowardly. It’s predatory. And it’s time to expose it.
People like @oyotta are not influencers—they’re frauds living off the hard work of others. They fake their way into credibility, scam real service providers like SoChillPanel.com, and harass anyone who doesn’t play along.
If you run an SMM platform, be cautious. If you’re a content creator, stay away. If you’re a woman online—protect yourself from manipulators like this.
Social media should reward real talent, honest work, and respectful engagement. It should not protect scammers who steal services, harass people, and lie their way to the top.
Let’s stop supporting people like @oyotta and start standing up for truth.