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Pyramid scheme
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A pyramid scheme is a non-sustainable business model that involves the exchange of money primarily for enrolling other people into the scheme, without any product or service being delivered. Pyramid schemes are a form of fraud.[1]
Pyramid schemes are illegal in many countries including Albania, Denmark, Australia,[2]Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, China,[3]Colombia,[4]France, Germany, Hungary, Iceland,[citation needed]Iran[5], Italy,[6]Japan,[7]Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal,[citation needed]The Netherlands,[8]New Zealand,[9]Norway[10], the Philippines,[11]Poland, Portugal, Romania,[12]South Africa,[13]Sri Lanka,[14]Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand,[15] the United Kingdom, and the United States.[16]
These types of schemes have existed for at least a century some with variations to hide their true nature and there are people who hold that multilevel marketing, even if it is legal, is nothing more than a pyramid scheme.[17][18][19][20] There have even been charges by people like economist Thomas Sowell that the United States Social Security program itself is nothing more than a legalized pyramid scheme.[21]
- 1 Concept and basic models
- 1.1 The “Eight-Ball” model
- 1.2 Matrix schemes
- 2 Connection to multi-level marketing
- 3 Notable recent cases
- 3.1 Internet
- 3.2 Others
- 4 See also
- 5 References
- 6 External links
[edit] Concept and basic models
A successful pyramid scheme combines a fake yet seemingly credible business with a simple-to-understand yet sophisticated-sounding money-making formula which is used for profit. The essential idea is that the mark, Mr. X, makes only one payment. To start earning, Mr. X has to recruit others like him who will also make one payment each. Mr. X gets paid out of receipts from those new recruits. They then go on to recruit others. As each new recruit makes a payment, Mr. X gets a cut. He is thus promised exponential benefits as the “business” expands.
Such “businesses” seldom involve sales of real products or services to which a monetary value might be easily attached. However, sometimes the “payment” itself may be a non-cash valuable. To enhance credibility, most such scams are well equipped with fake referrals, testimonials, and information. The flaw is that there is no end benefit. The money simply travels up the chain. Only the originator (sometimes called the “pharaoh”) and a very few at the top levels of the pyramid make significant amounts of money. The amounts dwindle steeply down the pyramid slopes. Individuals at the bottom of the pyramid (those who subscribed to the plan, but were not able to recruit any followers themselves) end up with a deficit.
[edit] The “Eight-Ball” model
Many pyramids are more sophisticated than the simple model. These recognize that recruiting a large number of others into a scheme can be difficult so a seemingly simpler model is used. In this model each person must recruit two others, but the ease of achieving this is offset because the depth required to recoup any money also increases. The scheme requires a person to recruit two others, who must each recruit two others, who must each recruit two others.
Prior instances of this scheme have been called the “Airplane Game” and the four tiers labelled as “captain,” “co-pilot,” “crew,” and “passenger” to denote a person’s level. Another instance was called the “Original Dinner Party” which labelled the tiers as “dessert,” “main course,” “side salad,” and “appetizer.” A person on the “dessert” course is the one at the top of the tree. Another variant, “Treasure Traders,” variously used gemology terms such as “polishers,” “stone cutters,” etc. or gems like “rubies,” “sapphires,” “diamonds,” etc.
Such schemes may try to downplay their pyramid nature by referring to themselves as “gifting circles” with money being “gifted.” Popular schemes such as the “Women Empowering Women”[22] do exactly this.
Whichever euphemism is used, there are 15 total people in four tiers (1 + 2 + 4 +
in the scheme – with the Airplane Game as the example, the person at the top of this tree is the “captain,” the two below are “co-pilots,” the four below are “crew,” and the bottom eight joiners are the “passengers.”
The eight passengers must each pay (or “gift”) a sum (e.g. $1000) to join the scheme. This sum (e.g. $8000) goes to the captain who leaves, with everyone remaining moving up one tier. There are now two new captains so the group splits in two with each group requiring eight new passengers. A person who joins the scheme as a passenger will not see a return until they advance through the crew and co-pilot tiers and exit the scheme as a captain. This requires that 8 others have been persuaded to join underneath them.
Therefore, the bottom 3 tiers of the pyramid lose their money if the scheme collapses. Consider a pyramid consisting of tiers with 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 64 members. The highlighted section corresponds to the previous diagram.
If a person is using this model as a scam, the confidence trickster would make the lion’s share of the money. They would do this by filling in the first 3 tiers (with 1, 2, and 4 people) with phoney names, ensuring they get the first 7 payouts, at 8 times the buy-in sum, without paying a single penny themselves. So if the buy-in were $1000, they would receive $8,000, paid for by the first 8 investors. They would continue to buy in underneath the real investors, and promote and prolong the scheme for as long as possible in order to allow them to skim even more from it before the collapse.
Other cons may also be effective. For example, it is fathomable but not cited or reported anywhere that rather than using false names, a group of seven people may agree to form the top three layers of a pyramid without investing any money. They then work to recruit eight paying passengers, and pretend to follow the pyramid payout rules, but in reality split any money received. Ironically, though they are being conned, the eight paying passengers are not really getting anything less for their money than if they were buying into a “legitimate” Eight-Ball scheme which had split off from a parent. They truly are now in a valid eight-ball, and have the same opportunity to earn a windfall if they can successfully recruit enough new members and reach captain.
It is clear by the above description that the Eight-Ball model is, in fact, not a pyramid scheme. As stated in this section, there is no one at the top. Rather, the “captain” leaves and is able to re-enter as a “passenger” if he or she decides to.
[edit] Matrix schemes
Matrix schemes use the same fraudulent non-sustainable system as a pyramid; here, the participants pay to join a waiting list for a desirable product which only a fraction of them can ever receive. Since matrix schemes follow the same laws of geometric progression as pyramids, they are subsequently as doomed to collapse. Such schemes operate as a queue, where the person at head of the queue receives an item such as a television, games console, digital camcorder, etc. when a certain number of new people join the end of the queue. For example ten joiners may be required for the person at the front to receive their item and leave the queue. Each joiner is required to buy an expensive but potentially worthless item, such as an e-book, for their position in the queue. The scheme organizer profits because the income from joiners far exceeds the cost of sending out the item to the person at the front. Organizers can further profit by starting a scheme with a queue with shill names that must be cleared out before genuine people get to the front. The scheme collapses when no more people are willing to join the queue. Schemes may not reveal, or may attempt to exaggerate, a prospective joiner’s queue position which essentially means the scheme is a lottery. Some countries have ruled that matrix schemes are illegal on that basis.
[edit] Connection to multi-level marketing
The network marketing or multi-level marketing business has become associated with pyramid schemes as “Some schemes may purport to sell a product, but they often simply use the product to hide their pyramid structure.” [23] and the fact while some people call MLMs in general “pyramid selling”[24][25][26][27][28] others use the term to denote an illegal pyramid scheme masquerading as an MLM.[29]
The FTC warns “Not all multilevel marketing plans are legitimate. Some are pyramid schemes. It’s best not to get involved in plans where the money you make is based primarily on the number of distributors you recruit and your sales to them, rather than on your sales to people outside the plan who intend to use the products.” [30] and states that research is your best tool and gives eight steps to follow:
- Find — and study — the company’s track record.
- Learn about the product
- Ask questions
- Understand any restrictions
- Talk to other distributors (beware shills)
- Consider using a friend or adviser as a neutral sounding board or for a gut check.
- Take your time.
- Think about whether this plan suits your talents and goals[31]
Some believe MLMs in general are nothing more than legalized pyramid schemes[17][18][19][20] making the issue of a particular MLM being legal or not moot.
[edit] Notable recent cases [edit] Internet
In 2003, the United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) disclosed what it called an internet-based “pyramid scam.” Its complaint states that customers would pay a registration fee to join a program that called itself an “internet mall” and purchase a package of goods and services such as internet mail, and that the company offered “significant commissions” to consumers who purchased and resold the package. The FTC alleged that the company’s program was instead and in reality a pyramid scheme that did not disclose that most consumers’ money would be kept, and that it gave affiliates material that allowed them to scam others.[32]
WinCapita was a scheme run by Finnish criminals that involved about â‚ 100 million.
[edit] Others
In early 2006 Ireland was hit by a wave of schemes with major activity in Cork and Galway. Participants were asked to contribute â‚ 20,000 each to a “Liberty” scheme which followed the classic eight-ball model. Payments were made in Munich, Germany to skirt Irish tax laws concerning gifts. Spin-off schemes called “Speedball” and “People in Profit” prompted a number of violent incidents and calls were made by politicians to tighten existing legislation.[33] Ireland has launched a website to better educate consumers to pyramid schemes and other scams.[34]
On November 12, 2008 riots broke out in the municipalities of Pasto, Tumaco, Popayan and Santander de Quilichao, Colombia after the collapse of several pyramid schemes. Thousands of victims had invested their money in pyramids that promised them extraordinary interest rates. The lack of regulation laws allowed those pyramids to grow excessively during several years. Finally, after the riots the Colombian government was forced to declare the country in economical emergency in order to seize and stop those schemes. Several of the pyramid’s managers were arrested, and these are being prosecuted for the crime of “illegal massive money reception.”[35]
November 2008: The Kyiv Post reported on November 26, 2008 that American citizen Robert Fletcher (Robert T. Fletcher III; aka “Rob”) was arrested by the SBU (Ukraine State Police) after being accused by Ukrainian investors of running a Ponzi scheme and associated pyramid scam netting $20 million in US dollars. (The Kiev Post also reports that some estimates are as high as $150M USD.)
[edit] See also
- Advance-fee fraud
- Autosurf
- BurnLounge
- Cobra Group (company)
- High-yield investment program
- Holiday Magic
- Make Money Fast
- Multi-level marketing
- Ponzi scheme – A similar type of fraud, which involves making payment to a central originator, who pays returns to investors from their own money or money paid by subsequent investors, rather than from any actual profit earned.
- Success University
[edit] References
- ^ Common Fraud Schemes: Pyramid Scheme Federal Bureao of Investigation
- ^ Trade Practices Amendment Act (No. 1) 2002 Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) ss 65AAA – 65AAE, 75AZO
- ^ Regulations for the Prohibition of Pyramid Sales
- ^ “Colombia scam: ‘I lost my money’”. BBC News. November 18, 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7736124.stm. Retrieved April 12, 2010.
- ^ Key GoldQuest members arrested in Iran Airport
- ^ Legge 17 agosto 2005, n. 173 (in Italian)
- ^ ç„ é™é€ éŽ–è ›ã é˜ æ ã é– ã™ã‚‹æ •å ‹ (in Japanese)
- ^ Sentence by the High Council of the Netherlands regarding a pyramid scheme
- ^ Laws and Regulations Covering Multi-Level Marketing Programs and Pyramid Schemes Consumer Fraud Reporting.com
- ^ http://www.lovdata.no/all/tl-19950224-011-004.html#16
- ^ [1] Investors in Philippine Pyramid Scheme Lose over $2 Billion
- ^ Explozia piramidelor Ziarul Ziua, 12.07.2006
- ^ [2] Pyramid Schemes
- ^ Pyramid Schemes Illegal Under Section 83c of the Banking Act of Sri Lanka Department of Government Printing, Sri Lanka
- ^ à ‚à ‰à à à à à €à žà à ˆà à €à •à à à ƒà ™à à à šà šà ˜à à à à à ˆà ‚à à à •à à ‡à à à à ˜à à à à à ˆà žà à à à à à ” by Thai Direct Selling Association (in Thai)
- ^ Pyramid Schemes Debra A. Valentine, General Counsel, Federal Trade Commission
- ^ a b Carroll, Robert Todd (2003). The Skeptic’s Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions. Wiley. pp. 235. ISBN 0471272426.
- ^ a b Coenen, Tracy (2009). Expert Fraud Investigation: A Step-by-Step Guide. Wiley. pp. 168. ISBN 0470387963.
- ^ a b Ogunjobi, Timi (2008). SCAMS – and how to protect yourself from them. Tee Publishing. pp. 13–19.
- ^ a b Salinger (Editor), Lawrence M. (2005). Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime. 2. Sage Publishing. pp. 880. ISBN 0761930043.
- ^ Sowell, Thomas (March 23, 2002). “Social Security: The Enron That Politicians Have In the Closet”. Capitalism Magazine (Bahamas 2000, Ltd. published). http://www.capitalismmagazine.com/index.php?news=1505. Retrieved April 10, 2010.
- ^ Pyramid selling scam that preys on women to be banned
- ^ Pyramid Schemes, May 13, 1998″ Federal Trade Commission
- ^ Edwards, Paul (1997). Franchising & licensing: two powerful ways to grow your business in any economy. Tarcher. pp. 356. ISBN 0874778980.
- ^ Clegg, Brian (2000). The invisible customer: strategies for successive customer service down the wire. Kogan Page. pp. 112. ISBN 074943144X.
- ^ Higgs, Philip; Smith, Jane (2007). Rethinking Our World. Juta Academic. pp. 30. ISBN 0702172553.
- ^ Kitching, Trevor (2001). Purchasing scams and how to avoid them. Gower Publishing Company. pp. 4. ISBN 0566082810.
- ^ Mendelsohn, Martin (2004). The guide to franchising. Cengage Learning Business Press. pp. 36. ISBN 1844801624.
- ^ Blythe, Jim (2004). Sales & Key Account Management. Cengage Learning Business Press. pp. 278. ISBN 1844800237.
- ^ Facts for Consumers; The Bottom Line About Multilevel Marketing Plans and Pyramid Schemes Federal Trade Commission
- ^ Facts for Consumers; The Bottom Line About Multilevel Marketing Plans and Pyramid Schemes Federal Trade Commission
- ^ FTC Charges Internet Mall Is a Pyramid Scam Federal Trade Commission
- ^ Gardaà hold firearm after pyramid scheme incident Irish Examiner
- ^ National Consumer Agency Ireland
- ^ Colombians riot over pyramid scam. Colombia: BBC news. Nov 13, 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7726069.stm.
- The Fraudsters – How Con Artists Steal Your Money Chapter 9, Pyramids of Sand (ISBN 978-1-903582-82-4) by Eamon Dillon, published September 2008 by Merlin Publishing, Ireland
[edit] External links
- An information graphic that describes a pyramid scheme
- FTC consumer complaint form
- Article by Financial Crimes Investigator, Bill E. Branscum
- Spoof article
- The Math Behind Pyramid Schemes, Chain Letters, and 2-Up Schemes – Investigates the mathematics of the geometric series involved.
- IMF feature on “The Rise and Fall of Albania’s Pyramid Schemes”
- Cockeyed.com presents: Pyramid Schemes – A description of the 8-ball model and matrix schemes which is a close cousin to pyramid schemes.
- National Consumer Agency on Pyramid Schemes – Irish consumer site describes two local pyramid schemes and offers advice to would-be participants.
- PyramidSim.com simulation, graphing and calculation of various pyramid schemes.
- National Consumer Agency Ireland
- Australian Trade Practices Amendment Act (No. 1) 2002 Australian Law Online
- Public Warning on Pyramid Schemes Central Bank of Sri Lanka
Scams and confidence tricks See also Fictional con artists and List of Ponzi schemes Terminology Notable scams and
confidence tricks Internet scams and
countermeasures Pyramid and
Ponzi schemes
The Best Way to Make Money Online: A Group Survey
There are several things that must be considered in order to find the best way to make money online.
I think that the best way to make money online is to blog effectively.
To do this you must have great content that helps your readers. If you can entertain them and make them laugh, then so much the better!
Whenever possible, post unique content. However, blogging is all about exchanging ideas, so post articles about topics that are already being discussed but be sure to express your opinions and viewpoints! Be opinionated!! Experiment with controversy! You want traffic? Controversy is one way to get it baby!!
You must interact with your readers. You do this by replying to their comments on your fine blog. Engage your readers by asking them questions when you reply to their comments. Better yet, ask ‘em controversial questions in the comments. Commenters, engage the blog author back any way you can!
Reward your readers by commenting on their blogs and by emailing them a simple thank you for their comments on your blog.
Reward your backlinkers by backlinking to them and by commenting on their blogs and emailing them your message of gratitude for their participation in the conversation.
Craft riveting, gripping titles! Use a negative slant whenever possible to drag your readers into your blog by the throat! Interlink your articles and craft sneeze pages to sneeze your readers deeper into your revolutionary blog!! Follow up your title with your best lead paragraph! Use vivid imagery! Use negative slants! You have got to tell people why they should even bother to read your article! You gotta dog ‘em! Tell them that their blog will crash right into the Dead Pool if they don’t read your posts! On the other hand, inform them of the dazzling surges of new RSS subscribers and titanic amounts of traffic they can expect to enthusiastically check out their entertaining blog, if only they would read your priceless articles! Then follow up with useful content! You’d better be able to back up your promises! Don’t even try to write yourself a check your @ss can’t cash!!
Build traffic to your dazzling blog by participating in blogging forums and commenting on as many blogs as you can. Post usefully on forums and in the comments in blogs both in and outside of your niche. Experiment with social media. Post excerpts from your blog articles on different social media sites and link back to your main blog articles, but also take the time to post articles exclusive to social media sites. You’ll develop readers there who will gravitate to your blog. Participate in blog carnivals, and experiment with blog carnivals outside your niche. Get out of your comfort zone and guest blog! Submit articles to article directories such as ezinearticles.com where they allow you to link back to your blog. Get involved in group writing projects! Check out and read carefully the rules for the GWP, then dive in by writing up superb articles and submitting them enthusiastically!
As you blog, you are establishing your expertise on a subject in the blogosphere. In time, you will establish your preeminence. People will use your site as a reference. You will experience increases in RSS subscribers and traffic and your blog will grow like the weeds in a rain forest in a record El Nino rainy season!!
Do not be afraid of ads! Just Do It!! Early to bed, early to rise, and advertise, advertise, advertise! Experiment with ads on your riveting blog! Try AdSense, Chitika, WidgetBucks and other means of ads on your blog! Experiment with and develop several different types of revenue streams on your blog over time.
Once you develop some serious traffic and standings in Alexa, you should sell ad blocks on your blog. This is a steady source of income for your blog and your advertisers will receive significant traffic to their sites.
You could consider setting up a membership site similar to Yaro Starak’s Blog Mastermind school for bloggers. Yaro has written up an impressive pillar series about how to set up a membership site on his blog, Entrepreneur’s Journey.
Selling your popular blog could be a source of significant online revenue.
From my point of view, blogging is the best way to make money online, but it is hard work, you must be willing to read a lot, learn a lot, and you must have a passion for it. If you don’t have a passion for blogging, then don’t start.
Once you have attained excellence in blogging, you will find it a lot easier to sell products in your online stores. This is because online sales are all about relationships with customers, not only with prospective customers, but also with your customers after the sale. Blogging offers an effective way for you to address your customer’s concerns, as well as to address your critics.
I have a question for YOU, Maki!
Tell US, Maki, What do YOU think is the best way to make money online?
Cash For Writing Down License Plates (Narcthatcar)
#70 Posted: 7 Feb 2010 23:58 Edited by: TJamMoneyMan
Yes, because “there’s a sucker born every minute!”
There will always be folks who will join in a venture, like this for example, based on the type of exaggerated income claims and blatant ad copy posted here, without doing RESEARCH.
This even though there is information out there, and forums like this one which would save them the loss of lots of money.
One thing is for sure, this is NOT about getting paid for writing down license plate numbers!
You get paid for recruiting a huge downline.
They only pay you for a max of 10 plates a month so how much money can you earn that way? You MUST have a downline. You must have a group of 12 to get paid.
So although they say “you don’t have to sell anything” you have to SELL this idea to 12 people or you will NOT get paid.
Yes, no doubt there will always be someone to take the bait. Hoping to be one of those at the top of the pyramid.
But any marketer should know that ‘running out of people’, is NOT the argument!
It is market saturation of course.
Even if this ‘information’ were valuable, there are only so many folks who can offer it.
Only so many clients are available who would pay.
But the folks at the bottom of the pyramid will still need to recruit, recruit, recruit.
Which of course creates a new ‘bottom’ with the same recruiting need.
The market is not saturated when you ‘run out of people’ but long before that when there are just too many distributors offering the product, to what soon becomes too few ‘clients’.
Consider this quote from mlm-thetruth.com:
MLM promoters who claim that saturation never occurs are referring to total saturation, which never would or could occur. It is absurd to assume that in a city of 100,000 people, 100,000 MLM distributors would be needed. The city may accommodate 10 or 20 distributors before the market is saturated, in that each new recruit would find it tougher and tougher to recruit more participants. So it is market saturation, not total saturation that is relevant to the analysis.
“The product being sold” means nothing as far as this being an illegal (if it is) pyramid is concerned.
The issue as to the illegal/unethical status of a pyramid has to do with the source of income, and the need for an ‘endless chain’ of recruiting.
Look into product based pyramids at:
www.mlm-thetruth.com
www.pyramidschemealert.org
A quote from one of those sites:
Many assume that since MLM chain sellers offer legitimate products they cause less losses than naked, no-product pyramid schemes. The facts show otherwise. Extensive research correlating the compensation plans with financial reports of leading MLMs and analyses of other classes of chain selling schemes leads to the conclusion that of all classes of pyramid/chain selling schemes, those that do the most harm are MLMs (product-based pyramid schemes) by any measure – leverage, loss rates, aggregate losses, or number of victims.In fact, statistical reports show that joining an MLM makes a bet on snake eyes in a game of craps at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas look like a safe bet in comparison.
Yes, “if MLM’s are so bad, what about Amway?”, goes the retort.
Just do the research:
http://www.amquix.info/amway.html
And consider this quote from Forbes Mag:
“One must turn outside the world of business – to religion and
politics – to find people who work as hard for as little
financial reward as most Amway people do.” Forbes Magazine
Yes.
Any sober individual should be leery of the claims posted here and simply RESEARCH before paying into something.
With 15,000 people paying $400 per year – I’d love to know where that SIX MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR goes!
__________________
Make Money Fast
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“MAKE.MONEY.FAST” is a title of an electronically forwarded chain letter which became so infamous that the term is now used to describe all sorts of chain letters forwarded over the Internet, by e-mail spam or Usenet newsgroups. In anti-spammer slang, the name is often abbreviated “MMF”.
- 1 History
- 2 Mechanics and legality
- 3 MMF parodies
- 4 See also
- 5 References
- 6 External links
[edit] History
The original “MAKE.MONEY.FAST” letter was written around 1988 by a person who used the name Dave Rhodes. Biographical details are not certain, and it is not clear that this is even the person’s actual name.
It is often said, such as in the FAQ for the net.legends Usenet group, that Rhodes was a student at Columbia Union College, a Christian college in Maryland, who wrote the letter and uploaded it as a text file to a nearby BBS[1] around 1987. It is also often said[2] that Rhodes was convicted of some fraud-related crime and that as part of his sentence he had to create an anti-spam website, but no evidence of this has been found.[3] Sites that appear to be such a site, for example http://daverhodes.etee2k.net, are apocryphal.
The scam reached the Internet, where it was forwarded over e-mail and Usenet, although it was not until spamming became a major problem in 1994 that “MAKE.MONEY.FAST” exploded. It became one of the most persistent spams in existence and multiple variations have come into existence, often by spammers who change the subject of their email to “This really works!” or “You are a winner!”
[edit] Mechanics and legality
The letter encouraged readers of the email to forward one dollar in cash to a list of people provided in the text, and to add their own name and address to the bottom of the list after deleting the name and address at the top. Using the theory behind pyramid schemes, the resulting chain of money flowing back and forth would supposedly deliver a reward of thousands of dollars to the ones participating in the chain, as copies of their chain spread and more and more people sent one dollar to their address.
The text of the letter originally claimed to be “perfectly legal”, citing Title 18, U.S. Code, Sections 1302 (which deals with postal lotteries) and 1341 (which deals with mail fraud).[4] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service cites 18 USC 1302[5] when it asserts the illegality of chain letters, including MMF:
[Chain letters are] illegal if they request money or other items of value and promise a substantial return to the participants. Chain letters are a form of gambling, and sending them through the mail (or delivering them in person or by computer, but mailing money to participate) violates Title 18, United States Code, Section 1302, the Postal Lottery Statute.[6]
It also asserts that “[r]egardless of what technology is used to advance the scheme, if the mail is used at any step along the way, it is still illegal.”[6] The U.S. Postal Inspection Service asserts the mathematical impossibility that all participants will be winners, as well as the possibilities that participants may fail to send money to the first person listed, and the perpetrator may have been listed multiple times under different addresses and names, thus ensuring that all the money goes to the same person.[6]
As of this writing, few chain letters use the U.S. mails to transmit the money. A common chain letter suggests that the participant transfer $6 using the Paypal electronic funds transfer service to send $1 to each of 6 people. However, the mathematical impossibilities of the claims noted in the U.S. Postal Inspection Service blurb survives the change in medium and pyramid schemes are still illegal in most places around the world, possibly as investment frauds or consumer frauds or illegal lotteries.
Paypal prohibits its use for payment of membership in pyramid schemes.[7]
[edit] MMF parodies
The chain letters follow a rigidly predefined format or template with minor variations (such as claiming to be from a retired lawyer or claiming to be selling “reports” in order to attempt to make the scheme appear lawful). They quickly became repetitive, causing them to be bait for widespread satire or parody.
[edit] See also
- List of spammers
- Pyramid scheme
- There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch
[edit] References [edit] External links
Spamming Protocols Anti-spam Spamdexing Internet fraud Scams and confidence tricks See also Fictional con artists and List of Ponzi schemes Terminology Notable scams and
confidence tricks Internet scams and
countermeasures Pyramid and
Ponzi schemes Types of fraud Financial Business related Family related Government related Other types
Spam Links
Schemes which are based on paying the previous tier to enter. They are variously known as Make Money Fast (MMF), Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) or pyramid schemes.
- The MMF Scam
- Victims of MMF Scam
- Discussion of MMF Scam
- Street Sign Spam
- US Official Anti-MLM Sites
- UK Official Anti-MLM Sites
- Other Anti-MLM Sites
USPIS: Multi-Level Marketing – https://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/investigations/MailFraud/fraudschemes/employmentfraud/Marketing.aspx
USPIS: Lotteries – https://postalinspectors.uspis.gov/investigations/MailFraud/fraudschemes/sweepstakesfraud/ForeignLotteries.aspx
USPIS: “Cooperative Advertising Program” Legal Judgement – www.usps.com/judicial/1978deci/6-72.htm
FTC: The Lowdown on Chain Letters – www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/alerts/alt075.shtm
FTC Launches Crackdown on Deceptive Junk E-mail – www.ftc.gov/opa/2002/02/eileenspam1.shtm
FTC Cracks down on Internet Mall Pyramid Promoters – ftc.gov/opa/2005/05/nexgen.shtm
Parsons Heritage Offshore Opportunities – www.growthventure.com/parsons/
UK DCMS: Lotteries – www.culture.gov.uk/gambling_and_racing/fact_sheets/fact_lotteries.htm
UK DCMS: Chain Gifting Schemes – www.culture.gov.uk/what_we_do/Gambling_racing/gambling_law_until_sept_2007/chain_gifting_schemes.htm
UK Trading Schemes Regulations 1997 – www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si1997/19970030.htm
UK DTI: Trading Schemes, Pyramid Selling Quick Facts – www.dti.gov.uk/consumers/fact-sheets/page38561.html
Make Money Fast – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Make_Money_Fast
What’s Wrong with Chain Letter Pyramid Schemes? – www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/pyramid.html
MLM Watch: Your Skeptical Guide to Multilevel Marketing – www.mlmwatch.org/
Make Money Fast (MMF) Chain Letters – www.stopspam.org/mmf/
MLMLaw – www.mlmlaw.com/
Home-business scams – homeparents.about.com/od/avoidscams/
Multi-Level Marketing – cageyconsumer.com/mlminfo.html
False Profits – www.falseprofits.com/
Anti-MLM and Anti-Amway Webring – q.webring.com/hub?ring=amaaaw
Pyramid Scheme Alert – www.pyramidschemealert.org/
Welcome to Amway: The Continuing Story – www.cocs.com/jhoagland/
Chain letters – www.cs.rutgers.edu/~watrous/chain-letters.html
What is Wrong With Multi-Level Marketing – www.vandruff.com/mlm_intro.html
alt.make.money.fast Mini FAQ – josh.nu/mmf/
Grundbegriffe des Multi Level Marketings – www.zingel.de/mlm_d.htm – German
E-Mail Kettenbriefe- Lästig und unnütz – www.trash.net/~roman/mlm/ – German
Make Money Fast, from Wikipedia – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Make_Money_Fast
Cockeyed.com presents Pyramid Schemes – www.cockeyed.com/ebay/scam/laptop_pyramids.html
How chain letters (don’t) work – www.rickconner.net/spamweb/chainletteranalysis.html
Pre-paid Legal: Religion & Pyramid Schemes – www.skepchick.org/7.15.06/prepaidlegal.html
The Make Money Fast Hall of Humiliation – www.mmfhoh.org/
- Global Prosperity
Please, No More ‘Make Money Fast’ – www.angelfire.com/ok/nommf/
MLM Survivor – www.mlmsurvivor.com/