Trending News: A Noida woman's specimen of recovering 10 lakh from a real manor visitor has wilt a topic of discussion on social media. The woman claims that she threatened to publicly expose the company's director on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter), without which her money was returned within a few days. A New Delhi-based entrepreneur and content creator wrote in a post, "I invested 10 lakh in a major real manor visitor in NCR. Initially, they asked me to well-constructed the formalities, but despite repeated follow-ups for four months, I received no response. My father plane visited the office personally, but to no avail."
The woman stated that she emailed and messaged the visitor director on LinkedIn, but nothing was resolved. She then sent a uncontrived message to the director on X.
"The very next day, I received a undeniability from his team, promising a refund within 10 days. As promised, the money arrived in my wall worth on the 10th day. Furthermore, they delivered the trammels to my home within four days." The woman thanked X in her post, writing, "Thank you, X, who helped me get my money back."
Reactions from people on social media
One user wrote, "You should tag that director so others don't fall victim to fraud." To this, the woman replied, "No, I told him I'd make it public if I didn't get my money back. Now that I've got my money, there's no need to release his name."
Another user speculated that the woman might have signed an NDA (non-disclosure agreement), so she couldn't reveal his name. The woman clarified, "There is no such NDA."
One user wrote, "X has now wilt the largest consumer superintendency platform. From lost tons and phones to money, police complaints and insurance claims, everything is stuff resolved here."
Attempts to Bring Transparency to the Real Manor Sector
This incident comes at a time when the Noida Authority has decided to make information well-nigh defaulting builders and property allottees public on its website. The Authority's CEO, Lokesh M., said, "The new updates will provide easy wangle to information for home buyers and investors and prevent fraudulent activities."