From the homepage:
"We have a large database of satisfied students from different parts of the world including USA, Canada, UK, Australia, Hungary, France, U.A.E., New Zealand. We recently became online for better provision of our services with 24/7 support available for our customers."
As undertow said, this could merely be amateurish, but there's really no way of knowing, Besides the many irregularities in grammar, however, this paragraph makes an interesting claim: despite having satisfied customers in many parts of the world, the company claims to have come online only recently. How did they do business in the US, UK, Australia, Hungary, New Zealand, etc., BEFORE they were online? This claim seems highly dubious to me....
Chacha, I have no verifiable evidence that this site is a scam. I am only using the information from the website itself to come to this conclusion. I urge all readers to visit the site themselves and make up their own minds.
they consider posting links as verifiable evidence and even consider contracts written on toilet papers as valid legal documents
I have never posted a link as evidence. I quote things from other sites (often direct copies of US law), and will provide the link to the site where I obtained the information for others to verify it. This is called "referencing" and is required in any and all published writing and in academic papers. Otherwise it's called "plagiarism."
Also, in the US, a contract written on toilet paper IS valid as long as it meets all of the other necessary criteria for a contract. A contract written on a kleenex or a cocktail napkin is also valid, as long as both parties signed it. If you can show me a law that proves this is incorrect, I will eat any entire roll of blank legal documents.