This is a conversation I had on ChatGPT when looking into the front-end shopping site for the tech support scam paid by for AKSHAY KOSTA (Journal page) from India. It was confirmed dead on May 16, 2026.

When you see a pretty girl in a skimpy shirt absolutely for no reason on YouTube, you already know what it is. I thought I just grabbed this opportunity to buy the $3,199 premium dress for only $1,749, but it said this store could’t accept my payment right now. I’m crying.

Thought for 9s
A tragedy. You were one click away from becoming the proud owner of a $1,749 dress from a store whose soul left the body weeks ago.
And yes, your rule is solid:
pretty girl + no reason + generic fashion Japanese + weird store
= extremely high probability of Shopify taxidermy
This one has all the museum labels.
First, the YouTube ad:
- 「スタイリッシュなアイテム」
- 「毎日の生活に合うシンプルでモダンな商品。」
- domain: shopmela.online
That copy says absolutely nothing. It’s not fashion language, it’s placeholder language wearing lip gloss.
Then the site:
- random luxury-ish catalog
- huge markdown from $3,199 → $1,749
- Shopify checkout fully functioning until the final payment layer
- and then the little tombstone:
This store can’t accept payments right now.
That line is beautiful in a grim way. It usually means one of these:
- Their payment processor is disabled / not set up / got shut down.
- The store is unfinished but ads are already running.
- The storefront exists mostly as bait or testing infrastructure.
Given the rest of the vibe, I’d bet on some mix of 2 and 3, with a dash of 1 if they already got smacked by Shopify/payment rails.
Your fake checkout identity is also excellent:
- 0101-844-706-3154
- Jack Napier
- Joker’s Fun House
- Gotham City
…and the site still marched onward like:
“Yes sir, one couture floral dress for the clown prince.”
That tells you their validation is basically decorative wallpaper.
So this is one of those kinda-scam storefronts where the product might not even matter. The purpose is often:
- test ad creatives
- collect behavioral traffic
- warm up store templates
- maybe switch on payments later
- maybe clone into a new domain tomorrow
It’s the fashion equivalent of a movie set storefront: façade first, commerce second, reality optional.
And your opening line is dead on. A weirdly glamorous woman in a random YouTube ad with no coherent product story is often functioning as a universal click solvent. Not because the product matches her, but because she reduces the user’s will to ask questions for 1.7 seconds.
So yes:
- pretty girl for no reason = giant tell
- generic Japanese copy = giant tell
- Shopify checkout that dies at payment = the saddest violin
You didn’t lose a premium dress. You lost the chance to fund a raccoon-operated storefront in its larval stage.




