Merry Makowski began promoting AdFeedz on November 8, 2018, just eight days before its official launch, a platform that promised 120% returns on $29 "profit contracts" but operated as an adcredit Ponzi scheme. The website domain was privately registered on November 2, 2018, obscuring its true operators.

Makowski's promotional materials, including a marketing presentation that has since vanished, linked company support to a Skype account under "merry.makowski." Her public Facebook profile lists Ontario, Canada, as her home. Before her involvement with AdFeedz, Makowski had promoted the Crypto Pros pyramid scheme and worked as a CryptoTab Browser affiliate. Her LinkedIn profile also claims ownership of MMM Global, a name she insists matches her initials and not the notorious Ponzi scheme. Makowski spent the past year promoting numerous cryptocurrency projects, most of which failed and resulted in widespread losses for participants.

As Makowski manages the official AdFeedz Facebook page, she likely directs the company's operations. No evidence suggests another individual holds a leadership role. This makes it reasonable to assume Merry Makowski and the alias "Ori Ginex" are the same person.

AdFeedz offers no retail products or services. Affiliates can only market AdFeedz affiliate memberships. This structure means no external revenue sources support the promised returns.

Once an affiliate joins, they are encouraged to invest in $29 "profit contracts." Each contract purports to bundle ad credits for displaying advertising on the AdFeedz website. This advertising component functions primarily as a superficial justification for the investment.

AdFeedz affiliates invest $29 per adpack, expecting a 120% return. The company states profit contracts remain active for 50 days or until they reach the maximum $34.80 payout.

A 10% referral commission is paid on adpack investments generated by personally recruited affiliates. The scheme also pays residual commissions through a unilevel structure. An affiliate sits at the top, with personally recruited affiliates placed directly under them on level 1. When level 1 affiliates recruit, those new members land on level 2. This structure continues downward.

AdFeedz diverts 20% of funds invested across the first ten unilevel levels into a "Team Pool." This pool is split daily among the affiliate and every affiliate with an active profit contract across those ten levels. Each active profit contract counts as one share in the daily Team Pool payout.

Affiliates who pay a recurring fee—$599 every four months, $999 every eight months, or $1,299 every twelve months—become "group managers." Group managers receive an additional 5% of investments made by their downline.

The company takes another 20% of profit contract investments within a group and places it into a "Group Bonus" pool. This pool is shared daily among group affiliates holding active profit contracts, with each active contract representing one share.

A "Global Pool" receives 20% of all company-wide investment. This pool also pays out daily to affiliates with active profit contract positions, with one contract equating to one share.

Finally, 10% of invested funds enter the "Surf Pool." Affiliates who visit company-supplied websites receive one share per site visited. At the close of each day, AdFeedz distributes the Surf Pool funds to these shareholders.

While AdFeedz affiliate membership is technically free, free affiliates can only earn limited commissions. Full participation and the ability to earn the advertised returns require a minimum $29 investment approximately every 50 days.

AdFeedz openly admits to recycling 90% of invested funds to pay affiliates. They describe this as a "foolproof, unique, never seen before system paying out up to 90% commission." This admission directly confirms the operation of a standard adcredit Ponzi scheme.

Affiliates invest $29 or more for a promised 120% return on investment (ROI). The company claims each purchase grants a profit contract that pays "cash back" for up to 50 days or until the 120% purchase amount is reached.

This promised ROI comes not from legitimate advertising revenue or external business activity, but from funds subsequently invested by new participants. Affiliates are strongly encouraged to roll over their purported returns into new investments, fueling the cycle.

The scheme deliberately misuses "cash back" terminology. Legitimate cashback returns a percentage of a purchase to the buyer. If a company genuinely returned 120% of the purchase price as cashback, it would face immediate financial collapse. AdFeedz attempts a form of pseudo-compliance by redefining investment returns as cashback. This distinction, while legally meaningless, aims to obscure the true nature of the transactions.

Ponzi schemes like AdFeedz rely entirely on a continuous influx of new investor funds. When affiliate recruitment slows, new investment dries up, starving the scheme of the revenue needed to pay existing investors. Collapse inevitably follows. Ultimately, such schemes collapse when new investor money slows, ensuring the vast majority of participants lose their capital, a consistent outcome in all Ponzi structures.