How proximity, trust, and recycled narratives built the illusion of an empire

What follows is not speculation, hype, or hindsight commentary. It is a reconstruction of events, based on first-hand accounts, archived material, and direct outreach to people who were present inside the same business and social circles as Christopher Delgado before GOLIATH VENTURES INC ever existed as a brand.

A protected whistleblower came forward with historical detail that fundamentally reframes how this operation began. Not as a functioning blockchain company, but as a series of unfinished ventures, abandoned pitches, and evolving narratives that relied heavily on borrowed credibility — proximity to wealth, proximity to influencers, and proximity to earlier crypto schemes already trusted by participants.

“When trust is passed through social circles instead of earned through proof, belief spreads faster than facts.”
— Danny de Hek

To test those claims, I contacted every individual named by the whistleblower, giving each of them the opportunity to confirm, deny, or correct what was said. Some clarified their position. Some sought distance. Only two responded in detail. The rest chose silence.

That silence does not prove guilt. It does, however, leave the whistleblower’s account and the available documentary record largely uncontested.

What emerges is a clear pattern explaining how GOLIATH VENTURES INC was able to raise significant sums of money without producing verifiable evidence that it ever built the blockchain, liquidity, or mining operations it claimed to be developing.

Dubai: the credibility accelerator (2021)

In mid to late 2021, Christopher Delgado began spending extended periods in Dubai, operating inside crypto-adjacent circles where perception often substituted for proof. At that time, Dubai functioned as a credibility accelerator. Formal structures mattered less than proximity. If you appeared connected to the right people, attended the right events, or were seen in the right penthouses, trust followed automatically.

During this period, Delgado and a business partner, Vance Fundora, were involved in media and exposure-related services. Through this work, they moved through overlapping circles of crypto investing, venture scouting, and social promotion, entering the orbit of high-profile figures, including Carl Moon Runefelt.

Others present in this environment included Junaid Dar, Assad Dar, and Dariusz Kowalczyk, commonly known online as “DarekKrypto.” Kowalczyk is publicly listed as a co-founder on both Seed Hunter and Bitward, alongside Junaid Dar. What existed at this stage was not a company, but a relationship-driven ecosystem.

There is no evidence that GOLIATH VENTURES INC existed as a formal operation at this point. What did exist were introductions, social overlap, and the early borrowing of credibility through association.

This is where the story actually begins.

The MLP era: trust before verification (2021–2022)

Running parallel to the Dubai social environment was a high-yield investment structure commonly referred to as MLP, associated with Verlin Sanciangco. MLP was promoted as a liquidity-based strategy and circulated quietly through personal introductions, not public marketing. Early returns were observed, technical explanations were provided, and confidence spread rapidly.

Crucially, trust did not come from audits, transparency, or independently verified performance. It came from who introduced you. If the opportunity arrived through someone already perceived as credible within the Dubai crypto scene, that alone was often enough to override caution.

According to the whistleblower, many individuals who would later appear around GOLIATH VENTURES INC were present in this environment. Not necessarily as operators, but as investors, referrers, or people moving within the same social and financial circles. Names present in this ecosystem included Carl Moon Runefelt, Junaid Dar, Christopher Delgado, Nick Petrillo, Alex Bukalo, Fabian Kumpusch, Evan Klassen, and others.

Special terms were reportedly offered to certain participants. In Carl Runefelt’s case, MLP allegedly provided 12–16% monthly returns, rather than the standard 10%, reinforcing perceptions of exclusivity and insider access.

PDFCourt records add important context to this period. Verlin Sanciangco appears in official United States federal filings related to wire fraud and financial misconduct, including allegations of investor deception and misuse of proceeds. These matters were prosecuted in the United States District Court for the Central District of California (Case No. 8:21-cr-00185-DOC). These filings are not opinion or speculation. They establish a documented enforcement history that is relevant when assessing the credibility of MLP and understanding why its collapse later had cascading effects across adjacent ventures and social circles.

By late 2022, MLP began to fracture. Withdrawals stalled. Excuses followed. An “insurance protection plan” was cited as justification for delays. Confidence collapsed.

This was not just a failure.
It was a vacuum — and vacuums invite replacements.

Social overlap and the incubation phase (2022)

Throughout 2022, the same individuals continued to overlap at private events, launch parties, and crypto-related gatherings, where social proximity increasingly substituted for due diligence. Visibility became validation. Being seen in the right rooms, with the right people, carried more weight than audited results or verifiable operations.

During this period, Christopher Delgado and associates were not only presenting themselves as successful crypto entrepreneurs, but also as mission-driven investors and international philanthropists. Goliath-linked narratives emphasised “doing good,” supporting early-stage companies, funding innovation, and participating in charitable or socially responsible initiatives. This framing proved especially persuasive to prospective investors, who were drawn not just to returns, but to the idea that their capital was helping build something positive.

Several of these narratives later disappeared quietly. Early references to non-profit involvement, economic development, and socially aligned investments were dropped. Promotional material referencing projects such as the Coconut 100 water company — which Goliath at times implied it held an interest in — vanished without explanation. What remained were a small number of repeatedly cited projects, such as Kasta and Medieval Empires, neither of which has been independently verified as producing income for Goliath investors.

One confirmed event during this period was the Kasta launch party, attended by Christopher Delgado and Vance Fundora during Delgado’s second trip to Dubai. At the time, there was still no formal GOLIATH operation. What existed instead was something more subtle and ultimately more dangerous: a network where money, reputation, and expectation had already been normalised before any regulated structure was in place.

Kasta itself is a crypto-related project that GOLIATH VENTURES INC later referenced as part of its purported investment portfolio or strategic partnerships. At various points, Goliath communications implied an ownership stake or material involvement. No independent verification has been produced to substantiate any claimed level of ownership, partnership, or financial exposure.

Attendance at events associated with Kasta appears to have functioned primarily as social proximity, creating implied legitimacy rather than demonstrating operational or financial substance. A whistleblower has further indicated that several investments later listed on Goliath’s website may have been personal investments made by Christopher Delgado prior to the formation of Goliath Ventures Inc, later reframed as firm-level holdings. That distinction matters, because it directly shaped how investors interpreted Goliath’s credibility and track record.

This period is critical to understand. It explains how later claims were accepted with minimal scrutiny. The trust infrastructure was already built, long before there was anything verifiable behind it.

Collapse creates opportunity (late 2022 – early 2023)

By November–December 2022, MLP was effectively failing. Withdrawals stalled, confidence eroded, and explanations began circulating about insurance mechanisms and delayed protections. Most participants exited somewhere between early and too late, often without clarity on what had actually happened to their funds.

According to the whistleblower, Christopher Delgado and Nick Petrillo both had exposure to MLP during this period and were attempting to recover funds as the structure deteriorated. This collapse created a vacuum — not just financially, but reputationally — as participants searched for explanations, reassurance, and replacement opportunities.

Additional context from a confidential source familiar with Dubai proceedings helps clarify the conflicting narratives circulating at the time. According to this source, an individual later associated with the MLP environment had previously been sentenced in the United States for a real estate–related fraud matter, but was not detained. Following sentencing, permission was granted to travel to Dubai for business purposes. Subsequent disputes in Dubai — again related to real estate transactions — reportedly resulted in a six-month incarceration. This background helps explain the climate of silence, partial disclosures, and reputation management that surrounded MLP’s collapse.

It was during this same collapse phase that discussions about a new venture began. These conversations initially took place privately, among people already connected through the MLP environment, rather than through public marketing or formal announcements.

The first version of that replacement idea was not GOLIATH as it would later be presented.

It was Bitcoin mining.

The first Goliath concept: Bitcoin mining (early 2023)

The earliest incarnation of what would later become GOLIATH VENTURES INC was presented as a Bitcoin mining operation, not a liquidity pool or passive yield structure. According to the whistleblower, this phase was legitimate in intent, even if it ultimately failed in execution.

The proposal centred on tangible infrastructure rather than abstract returns. There were real discussions around water-cooled mining, containerised or warehouse-style setups, and access to cheap power, with investors funding hardware and physical build-out, not trading strategies. Limited testing reportedly took place. Real equipment existed, a facility had been identified, and power was available at a basic level.

Key individuals involved at this stage included Junaid Dar, Carl Moon Runefelt, Assad Dar, and Dariusz Kowalczyk, also known online as “Darek”, who is publicly listed as a co-founder of Seed Hunter alongside Junaid Dar. Christopher Delgado joined later, after the mining concept was already in motion.

Despite early groundwork, the project never progressed beyond testing and planning. Scaling the operation required substantial additional capital, logistical coordination, and long-term commitment. That capital never arrived in sufficient form, and the mining concept failed to cross the start line as a commercial operation.

The project stalled.

What did not stall was fundraising.

Christopher Delgado’s stated origin story

In a publicly available panel interview titled Private Capital’s Web3 Playbook Revealed! – Goliath Ventures, Christopher Delgado, speaking as CEO of GOLIATH VENTURES INC, states that prior to forming Goliath he owned “two large companies,” claiming that one was publicly listed while the other remained private, and that both were later sold, with the proceeds used to start Goliath using his own money.

Delgado presents this history as the foundation for Goliath’s structure, explaining that the firm initially operated solely with his personal capital before later opening to friends and family, whom he says personally trusted him due to a “proven strategy” and a claimed six-year track record of success. He further asserts that this origin allows Goliath to operate without a board, without investor approval, and to make rapid capital-allocation decisions based on internal audits alone.

However, no company names are disclosed, no exchanges or jurisdictions are identified, and no public listings, filings, or independently verifiable records are cited to substantiate the claim that a company was publicly listed or sold, leaving a material gap between the narrative presented and confirmable evidence.

The pivot: from infrastructure to yield (Q1–Q2 2023)

Around Q1–Q2 2023, the narrative changed.

Mining faded into the background. A yield-focused model emerged. Messaging shifted toward liquidity, passive returns, and wealth growth.

This pivot coincided with:

  • Increased lifestyle marketing
  • High-visibility events
  • Broader investor outreach

This is the moment when GOLIATH VENTURES INC became a brand, not just a concept.

From this point on, claims were made about:

  • Blockchain technology
  • Liquidity pools
  • Bitcoin mining

Yet no evidence has been produced showing these systems operating at scale.

The whistleblower’s account is clear: mining did not disappear because it succeeded — it disappeared because it couldn’t be pushed over the line, while money continued to come in.

Early capital and the illusion of scale (2024–2025)

Early capital for GOLIATH VENTURES INC appears to have originated primarily from Dubai-based contacts, where trust had already been established during the MLP era. Rather than being raised through a transparent fund structure, this capital functioned as social proof, repeatedly referenced to attract investors in other regions.

That perceived momentum was then used to target investors in the United States and Canada, with particular focus on Florida, including Miami and Orlando, where Goliath-hosted meetings and private introductions were framed as evidence of an expanding international operation.

Claims were repeatedly made about a Dubai “office.” In practice, these references appear to have been private residences, including a penthouse at FIVE Palm Jumeirah, used for meetings and events. These locations reinforced legitimacy visually and socially, but there is no evidence of a formally registered or operational Dubai office connected to Goliath Ventures.

Corporate Reality: One Name on Every Filing

Public records from the State of Florida show that GEN-Z VENTURE FIRM INC was incorporated on February 13, 2019, with Christopher Delgado listed as the sole individual in a managerial or ownership capacity. No other officers, managers, or directors have ever appeared on these filings.

At a later date, GEN-Z VENTURE FIRM INC was renamed GOLIATH VENTURES INC, which continued operating under the same structural reality: Christopher Delgado remained the only listed manager and controlling individual. The company remained active until September 3, 2025, when it was administratively dissolved.

All filings for both entities were handled by the same registered agent and CPA, Harry M. Samuels, who submitted the original incorporation documents in 2019 and continued to file updates thereafter. While long-term professional relationships with accountants are common, the filings establish a clear fact: no other individual ever held formal authority within Goliath Ventures Inc, regardless of how roles may have been portrayed publicly.

Who was asked — and who stayed silent

After receiving the whistleblower’s account, I wrote directly to the following individuals, giving each of them the opportunity to confirm, deny, or correct what was said about their connection to Christopher Delgado, MLP, and the early Goliath ecosystem:

  • Verlin Sanciangco
  • Junaid Dar
  • Carl Moon Runefelt
  • Tony de Graff
  • Didi Wong
  • Fabian Kumpusch

Two people responded: Didi Wong and Fabian Kumpusch.

Both responses focused on distancing, limited involvement, and a lack of operational control or decision-making authority within GOLIATH VENTURES INC. Neither described themselves as operators of the structure.

The remaining individuals did not respond.

I am not presenting silence as proof of wrongdoing.
I am documenting it because this investigation is about accountability, not assumptions — and unanswered questions are part of the historical record.

What they were asked

Each person contacted was asked the same core questions, framed narrowly and factually.

These included whether they had invested in, promoted, or introduced others to GOLIATH VENTURES INC or its predecessors; how and when they first became connected to Christopher Delgado; whether they had received commissions, preferential terms, or insider access; and whether they were aware their name, image, or association had been used publicly in connection with Goliath or related initiatives.

They were also asked to confirm or correct specific historical claims made by the whistleblower, including early Bitcoin mining plans, MLP exposure, and whether any role they played was operational, advisory, or purely social.

The purpose of these questions was not to accuse, but to separate operators from proximity figures and to correct the public record before publication.

Roles, proximity, and responsibility

Based on the information available, Christopher Delgado and Nick Petrillo appear to have been the primary operators behind GOLIATH VENTURES INC, exercising control over its direction, messaging, and investor-facing narratives. Others moved through the same environment as connectors, introducers, investors, or proximity figures, rather than formal decision-makers.

Public records provide additional context when assessing Petrillo’s role. Prior to involvement with ventures later aligned with Goliath narratives, Nick Petrillo is referenced in federal disclosures relating to a $2.24 million False Claims Act settlement involving Trinity Medical Pharmacy. According to the United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, Petrillo served in executive roles at Trinity, which agreed to resolve allegations of knowingly billing government healthcare programs improperly. This information is included for context only, but it establishes a history of regulatory scrutiny and governance failures relevant when evaluating patterns of risk and oversight.

Throughout this ecosystem, social presence repeatedly functioned as implicit endorsement, whether intended or not. Appearances at events, shared spaces, and public association created confidence that was not always matched by operational reality.

My mother used to say: you can be guilty by association.

That does not mean everyone involved is a criminal.
It means association creates trust — and trust is the most valuable currency in a scam.

What Goliath claims — versus what exists

GOLIATH VENTURES INC has consistently claimed to operate across blockchain technology, liquidity pools, and Bitcoin mining, presenting itself as a diversified crypto investment firm with multiple revenue streams.

Earlier narratives went even further. Goliath was repeatedly framed as a private equity–style investment firm that not only generated returns, but also did good — supporting start-ups, backing innovation, and participating in philanthropic or socially responsible initiatives. References were made to charitable involvement, economic development, and ownership interests in ventures such as the Coconut 100 water company. Over time, those narratives quietly disappeared, along with the posts and claims that supported them.

Based on the information reviewed — including whistleblower testimony, archived materials, corporate filings, and direct outreach — there is no evidence that any of these activities ever operated at scale or generated verifiable income for investors. The Bitcoin mining concept never progressed beyond limited testing. Liquidity and yield narratives were asserted, but not substantiated. Claimed investments were, in some cases, personal holdings later reframed as firm-level activity. The philanthropic and “impact” framing faded without explanation.

Goliath also repeatedly asserted that investor funds were “insured,” a claim that played a significant role in calming concerns and discouraging scrutiny. Yet as payouts stopped and investor funds were frozen, no evidence has emerged of any insurance claims being filed, any insurer being named, or any policy documentation being produced. If such coverage ever existed, its absence now raises a simple but unavoidable question: why has no insurance mechanism been invoked to cover missed payouts?

What did operate at scale was something else entirely.

Networking.
Social proof.
Fundraising.

That gap — between what was claimed and what was actually built — is where victims now find themselves trapped, still searching for returns that were never backed by a functioning business.

The unanswered question

If the people once closest to Christopher Delgado are now distancing themselves, and if no verifiable income streams ever existed, then one question remains unresolved.

Did Christopher Delgado act alone — or did proximity, silence, and borrowed credibility make it possible?

That is the question victims are still trying to answer.

And it is why documenting this history matters — not to speculate, not to sensationalise, but to ensure the same playbook cannot be reused while those left behind are still searching for the truth.

A Request for Investors and Insiders to Come Forward

GOLIATH VENTURES RECOVERYIf you are an investor, introducer, or insider with direct knowledge of GOLIATH VENTURES INC, your information matters.

This investigation is no longer about belief, timelines, or waiting for explanations to resolve themselves. It is about verifiable records, documented representations, and what actually occurred versus what was presented. Where claims, outcomes, and disclosures diverge, contemporaneous evidence becomes critical.

If you hold contracts, written payout representations, wallet addresses, transaction records, internal communications, or first-hand knowledge of how funds were handled or represented, that information may help establish an accurate historical record — not only for you, but for others seeking clarity and accountability.

You do not need to navigate this process alone. If you are unsure how or where to report information, I can help point you toward appropriate authorities or reporting channels based on your jurisdiction, including law enforcement or regulatory agencies where applicable.

Investors are also encouraged to connect with one another, compare records, and preserve evidence independently. A WhatsApp group has been created for affected parties who wish to coordinate, though participation is entirely optional and you are equally free to organise privately.

https://chat.whatsapp.com/Efh9mnIRWVe2FSjASwAOgO

History shows that what is documented early often determines what can be proven later. If you have information, preserving it now may matter more than you realise.

Previously in This Series on Goliath Ventures

  1. Glossy Promises, Shaky Contracts
    Goliath Ventures Exposed – Glossy Promises, Shaky Contracts, and the Dark Reality of Guaranteed Returns
    Where it all began: inflated promises of 60% returns backed by contracts that were flimsy at best.
  2. The Compliance Illusion
    Goliath Ventures Exposed Part 3: Christopher Delgado, Matt Burks, BlackBlock and the Compliance Illusion
    The smoke-and-mirrors routine — how Burks and BlackBlock tried to pose as “independent” while being insiders.
  3. The Smear Campaign Claim
    Chris Lord Delgado Claims “Smear Campaign” – Goliath Ventures Exposed in My Full Response
    Delgado’s pushback — calling legitimate questions a “smear campaign” while victims kept piling up.
  4. The Bookkeeper’s Vanishing Act
    The Bookkeeper’s Vanishing Act: Chris Delgado, Nadia Bringas, and Goliath Ventures
    When the money trail grew hot, Bringas dissolved her company in Florida overnight and popped back up in Wyoming.
  5. The Fake Audit
    Pull Money While You Can! Goliath Ventures Ponzi Exposed by FAKE Audit. Florida Ponzi Scheme SCAM
    A so-called “audit” that turned out to be nothing more than a Mailchimp blast with zero financial data.
  6. The Missing FinCEN Registration
    Goliath Ventures Inc (Christopher Delgado) and the Missing FinCEN Registration: Why It Matters
    Digging into why a real investment firm would never operate without this registration — unless it was hiding.
  7. Collapse and Clawbacks
    Goliath Ventures Inc Florida Ponzi Collapse, Coming Clawbacks and Arrests
    The unraveling accelerates: clawbacks loom, and indictments draw closer.
  8. The Securities Question
    The Unregistered Securities Problem: Why Goliath Ventures’ Contracts Are Likely Illegal
    Breaking down why Goliath’s contracts were never legal in the first place — a fatal flaw in their setup.
  9. What Real Funds Look Like
    What Real Quant Funds Look Like Vs. Goliath Ventures, FL Ponzi Scam
    Today’s deep dive: exposing how every part of Goliath’s structure collapses under scrutiny.
  10. Stolen money, gifts, and uneconomical deals
    Who Is Still Profiting From Goliath Ventures Inc, Orlando Ponzi? Don’t Drop The Soap.
    Unusual developments connected to the Goliath Ventures Ponzi scheme, which is now imploding.
  11. FBI Director Kash Patel, Ron DeSantis and even Andrew Tate
    Goliath Ventures Ponzi: Verlin Sanciangco & My Liquidity Partner (MLP) Scam Rebranded.
    Goliath Ventures Inc ponzi scheme has been running for a lot longer than most people realize.
  12. I just got sued for telling the truth
    Danny vs Goliath: New Zealand Journalist Sued by Christopher Delgado’s GOLIATH VENTURES INC.
    I uncovered what I believe is a large-scale Ponzi scheme.
  13. You now have 3 copyright strikes
    Dirty Tactics: How GOLIATH VENTURES INC Is Abusing YouTube’s Copyright System to Silence Journalism.
    Your channel (as well as YouTube channels associated with it) is scheduled to be terminated in 7 days.
  14. Crypto Crash!
    Crypto Prices Crash! GOLIATH VENTURES Investors Should Be Very Worried.
    Questions Goliath Ventures Investors Should Be Asking
  15. Filed a 22‑page Motion to Dismiss
    Florida Orlando Ponzi Scheme Sues New Zealand Journalist, $150,000 Bribe Attempt.
    This lawsuit isn’t about protecting a reputation—it’s about damage control and intimidation.
  16. You didn’t escape the scam — you benefited from it
    Whistleblower or Opportunist? The Anatomy of a Non-Whistleblower Who Protected Goliath Ventures.
    To show what a real whistleblower looks like, and what one doesn’t.
  17. The Banking Breakdown
    GOLIATH VENTURES INC’s Secret Bank Switch: The Collapse Behind the “Transparency” Spin.
    A false transparency update masking a banking crisis and ongoing promotion.
  18. Director of Administration at Goliath Ventures Inc
    Stephen Davis: The Fire Chief Who Walked Out of the Firehouse and Straight Into a Financial Inferno.
    There is one path still open to Stephen Davis — the only path that honours the uniform he once wore.
  19. Goliath Ventures Inc has now collapsed
    Goliath Ventures Payouts Stop: Insiders Pull 10’s of Millions While Everyone Else Waits.
    Paid their romantic partners and family members tens of millions since 12/Nov/2025.
  20. Behavioural pattern is the same
    Andrew Tate’s Hyperliquid Wipeout – And Why Goliath Ventures Investors Should Pay Attention.
    High-risk gamblers calling themselves “genius traders,” sitting on terrible risk management, and using other people’s trust.
  21. Goliath Ventures December Breakdown: What Investors Must Know
    Goliath Ventures: Chris Delgado and Jonathan Mason Ruin Christmas! Canadians, Hide Your Wallets!.
    Delgado’s deceit deepens as victims face mounting pressure, collapsing trust and urgent accountability.
  22. Tomo Marjanovic’s “Brotherhood” Post
    Tomo Marjanovic, #GoliathStrong and the Miami Dinner That Exposes Goliath’s Collapse
    And loyalty is the last thing a failing scheme demands before the crash.
  23. Rapidly Unfolding Financial Collapse
    Goliath Ventures Inc Dec 15–18: Payouts Promised – Where is The Money? Where is Christopher Delgado?
    Investigating Goliath Ventures’ missing payouts, executive distancing, jurisdiction shifts, and evidence pointing to a collapsing Ponzi structure.
  24. Broken Promises, Vanishing Transparency, Accountability Looms
    The Collapse of GOLIATH Ventures Inc: Missed Promises, Narrative Control: The Calm Before the Storm
    Delayed distributions, opaque explanations, missing proof, leadership silence, heavy spending, and growing investor coordination emerge.
  25. A story of control, delay, and retreat.
    Goliath Ventures Inc: The Deleted Video, The Rewritten Narrative, And The Quiet Exit
    A documented analysis of what was said, what was removed, and why it matters as withdrawals remain frozen.
  26. Before the Collapse: How GOLIATH Was Built Without Proof
    The Origins of GOLIATH VENTURES INC: How Proximity Replaced Proof as Millions Were Raised (this article)
    Tracing the social networks, abandoned ideas, and unverified claims that enabled Goliath to raise millions before anything real was ever built.

Disclaimer: How This Investigation Was Conducted

This investigation relies entirely on OSINT — Open Source Intelligence — meaning every claim made here is based on publicly available recordsarchived web pagescorporate filingsdomain datasocial media activity, and open blockchain transactions. No private data, hacking, or unlawful access methods were used. OSINT is a powerful and ethical tool for exposing scams without violating privacy laws or overstepping legal boundaries.

About the Author

I’m DANNY DE HEK, a New Zealand–based YouTuber, investigative journalist, and OSINT researcher. I name and shame individuals promoting or marketing fraudulent schemes through my YOUTUBE CHANNEL. Every video I produce exposes the people behind scams, Ponzi schemes, and MLM frauds — holding them accountable in public.

My PODCAST is an extension of that work. It’s distributed across 18 major platforms — including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, and iHeartRadio — so when scammers try to hide, my content follows them everywhere. If you prefer listening to my investigations instead of watching, you’ll find them on every major podcast service.

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