Take a legit concept already in widespread use like a mining pool and then put a big ponzi twist on it. Unlike conventional pools, you don't pay to join them, you pay a small percentage like 1% from actual mining proceeds. Screwing it up to ponzify the concept, you make people pay to join the pool, buy supposed equipment in a so-called "mini miner" that can only be used in one pool(the ponzi's), and recruit others to do the same. What can go wrong?

Well, does the equipment even exist? Any mining rig that costs 1000 won't mine much of anything, even the alt-coins. A Bitcoin or other ASIC miners are triple that cost and the ROI takes months to a year, even assuming the price of what your mining stays the same. Here's the kicker: even if your barely mining crap, if the price of the coin is skyrocketing higher, yeah you might see gains, but that assumes that these mini miners really exist, that the pool really exists, the company is trustworthy, etc. Uh, NO.

The way Cameron Sar explains "computer networking" is laughably stupid and he says "how it was explained to me." So you have the scammer explaining to the dumbass some terms the scammer his or her self doesn't understand, leaving a jumbled mess to try and confuse people into thinking this is somehow legit. The MLM aspect adds even further taint to the mess and it becomes an obvious scam which the admins have managed to not only run afoul of security regulations by making the pool aspect a security, but also running into FTC regulations because there's nothing that exists except in vapor so no product/service and simply pay for recruiting. Mining pool? Yeah right. Actual mini mining machines? Me no see me no believe. 50% monthly return? Are u insane?

There are better ways to create a ponzi than this disaster that screws up on more than just front. This takes a "50% Return a Month" hyip and attempts to make it sound fancy and innovative in hopes of confusing enough suckers to fall for the BS.

NUK