Are all autosurf programs scams?
Now that Charis Johnson‘s (yes, it’s a lady) 12dailypro is confirmed to be a ponzi scheme by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), I’m getting more than a little suspicious of all similar programs.
12dailypro apparently got 300K members with USD50mil in Stormpay, Johnson apparently pocketed USD1.9 million into her personal a/c.
I first knew about this at ST’s blog.
Many Malaysians are members and openly promote it at least until recently, including:
Sorry guys, I guess you fell for it.
I’ve been reading desperate calls for help and death throes of Malaysian autosurf proponents. In another local forum, it was optimism at the beginning of the issue (earlier Feb), then disbelief, then a “lets just find a new moneymaking scheme” attitude. Most damning is the total silence of its most staunch supporter(s).
Yes, as anti-MLM as I am, it is still better than ponzis.
The tendency of their members to spam only makes the impression worse.
How about the others out there, eg:
- studiotraffic.com [apparently 400K members, with USD20 million membership fees collected]
- eprofitsurf.com
- dadndaves.net
Wyejon as written a fantastic article against autosurf in general and 12dailypro in particular, including a spectacular rebuttal against a detractor.
Of course, some people remain defiant, like 12dailypro forum senior member gojo.
Wikipedia’s article on autosurf/pay to surf programs are also negative in tone.
The SEC has also served a warning against autosurf programs.
It was big enough news to go on CNN.
Popularity: 2% [?]
Related posts
No comments yet.