WhatDoesItMatter - With all due respect, I think you are missing the point being made in this forum.
If I go to the beach at midnight on the vernal equinox and collect a thousand small stones at the low tide line, then go to people and tell them that these "magic stones" will help them sleep, or ease their pain, because they are 'infused with the healing energy of the universe', and the "resonate with universal love and healing" when you put them in your pocket, some people are going to buy into it and experience relief purely because of the placebo effect. They're still just stones. Plain old rocks. No test in the world will be able to find any evidence of anything eminating from the chunk of matter. Just like a CieAura hologram.
Every scientist and expert who has commented on the CieAura hologram says it is total nonsense. The science doesn't even make sense. Ergo, any relief being experienced by this CieAura scam is just in the mind of the buyer. I can't verify your numbers - 50,000 people with 'amazing results' sounds almost as absurd as holographic frequencies embedded into a sticker. On top of that, these people with 'amazing results' are likely trying to sell the CieAura scam to the next victim.
But the bottom line is, I'll grant you some people experience relief. You can look up the placebo effect and see why. Even the FDA website has a link about the placebo effect.
But if I was selling magic rocks infused with healng moonlight and they gave people placebo relief, that would still make me a scammer and a con artist. Because I am taking their money and selling them a rock. Which is probably more valuable than the CieAura sticker. At least it makes a better paperweigt.
CieAura will apparently not respond to queries about whether they can tell a live 'hologram' from a used 'hologram', and the similarities between this company and Rasner's old company LifeWave are too many to even mention here.
Do you really think that it's okay to sell a fake product if some people believe they are getting relief?
You do realize that eventually the FTC and the FDA are going to step in and CieAura will be shut down. They are making false health claims, and hiding behind a disclaimer that they are *not* making any health claims. It all reeks of scam.