After reading all the glowing reports on here, and hearing how easily and cheap it is to obtain these products, it's hard not to get excited by such an offer. Initially I was very tempted to place an order myself. At the same time though, I was highly skeptical about the contents being kept a mystery.
I couldn't tell what angle the company was coming from. At first glance the website appears somewhat professional, and the company appears legitimate by offering a variety of benign products such as vitamins, diet pills, and anti-aging pills. The ND's and SC's are categorized as "Mood / Energy" pills, and though they describe the effects as euphoric or loved up, they are very careful to never mention that these products could be considered similar in effect to coke or mdma.
I decided to look a bit deeper, and brought up the page source. Immediately the large list of meta keywords caught my eye:
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It also contained the URL to a competitors site, which I have removed.
These are keywords, read by search engines. For a supposed health site, these are the key words they believe best describe their webpage. In theory, when people type the same keyword into a search engine, it would show the neo-doves site as one of the "hits". However, these days search engines are more powerful and don't need to make use of this type of manually inputted list, which lead me to believe the person who made the site probably had little to no idea about html.
<meta name="generator" content="Homestead SiteBuilder">
The above suggests to me that the whole site was made using a "cookie cutter" style webpage builder, which the homestead site seems to specialize in (and the site offering the ND's is hosted by homestead too). Whereas at first glance I thought the site appeared professionally made, in my eyes a site made using one of these "cookie cutter" programs is anything but professional. Literally anyone over the age of about 12 could have made the site.
As I saw pointed out on another forum, another dodgy part of the site is the dealer login. You'd think that this allows dealers to logon and view some "special" page, instead however there is absolutely no code that does any sort of username or pasword checking, and instead it just sends you to a page that says "error".
Then again, it's not like other "legal drug" sites are known for their advanced html. Most of the sites are very simplistic. The main difference to me is that the neo dove site seems to be operating under the guise of professionals who deem these products to be healthy. The reality is that they show no qualifications, and probably have very little idea about the side effects.
Above all, the fact that they don't even disclose what the contents is, is by far the most concerning issue. While they give the impression that they produce it in a clean well equipped lab, it could very well be made in clandestine conditions. Or maybe not even made at all, and is just a bunch of products available OTC (in Israel) and mixed together into caps.
Sorry for the lengthy geek post, but to me it appears a company with unknown intentions is essentially making guinea pigs out their consumers.