NOTE: I am not affiliated in any way, shape, form or fashion with that website and have no idea what they are peddling. I simply tried to visit the site and found the error in the URL.
I am a geophysicist though who watches the USGS mapview of recent quakes every day.
Going in now...
If I'm not back in a couple of days tell my family they're some of my favorite people.
Alright. I'm back after a brief dive into the site.
My initial impression is that this proves the old adage that even a blind squirrel gets a nut once in a while.
Their maps with the color-coded target areas are spread around the known regions of the globe where one would reasonably expect to be able to keep updating a prediction and eventually have it come true. (Stock market newsletter predictions are probably as accurate.)
I didn't watch videos yet nor did I read any of the papers that might have been linked since it was not obvious how to access any of that. The whole site is geared for believers in that you have to make an account as a predictor to be able to see any of the predictions that have been made and thus it is impossible for an outsider to gauge the accuracy of any of their claims.
Took another dive and found that the main site showing what they are looking at and what they think they found is suspicios0bservations.org and if you visit that site you will find links to several other sites that have content related to their efforts.
I'll dive into some of this as time permits but for now I did watch a video from 2016 that outlined the data they are using and potential links they have found and papers published as a result.
I'll suit up, grab some coffee and dive into that later. Looks interesting so maybe not fair to compare it to stock market shysters at this point though the blind squirrel analogy will always be valid.
Ben Davidson is not a pseudo scientist and has plenty of training in the scientific method.
I'll start listening to you if can predict earthquakes as good as the community developed by Ben over at quakeqatch.net