All I wanted was a press release for my upcoming album. As others have noticed, it was rife with spelling, capitalization and grammar errors but I looked past it because it was a flattering PR and it appeared they had at least put some effort in. I noticed after publication that all the sites they distributed the press release appeared to have no real traffic. They were sometimes extensions of bigger media names, but it was clear that no one would have any reason to visit these pages. Again, I was annoyed but my main objective was to increase search results when people looked for my album, so I looked past this. HOWEVER, after about a year with no noticeable change from this PR, I searched for my album on google and checked the "Press Release Report" ArtistPR sent me, and noticed that NOT A SINGLE WEBPAGE with my press release was still active, and the Press Release Report page was no longer available. The ONLY place you can still view my press release is on the ArtistPR website, where it is of course buried under thousands of others. So it seems that the pages they distributed the PR to were not even real to begin with. As I said, I was willing to look past a lot of issues here, but this is just absurd. Theses guys don't even have the decency to keep the clearly fake webpages up for more than a few months after your PR is released to help you with traffic. Massive waste of $200, but a lesson learned. Just another company preying on amateur musicians and taking advantage of them for a quick buck. Nothing of value here.