AdsWorker, a platform promising returns from $100 to $10,000 on "advertising investments," provides no verifiable details about its ownership or operators. The website's domain was registered on September 6, 2014, with privacy protection activated, obscuring the registrant's identity.
A marketing video on the site features a YouTube account named "Alice Breton," created in November of the same year. This account shows no genuine activity or personal information, suggesting it is not associated with a real individual.
The company lists a business address in Glasgow, Scotland. Public records indicate this location is a rented mailbox service, shared by numerous other entities, and offers no physical presence for AdsWorker. This practice further hides the scheme's true operational base.
Alexa tracking data reveals that 90.6% of AdsWorker's web traffic originates from the Dominican Republic. This strong concentration suggests the platform is actively run from that country.
AdsWorker offers no tangible products or services for sale. Its only marketable component is affiliate membership itself. Participants are encouraged to purchase one of six "business packages" to earn returns.
The compensation structure involves escalating investment tiers. The A1 package costs $100 and promises $6 weekly for 36 weeks, totaling $216. The A2 package requires $500, paying $30 weekly for a total of $1,080. A3 costs $1,000, with $70 weekly payouts reaching $2,520.
The A4 package is $2,500, promising $200 per week for a $7,200 total. The A5 tier costs $5,000 and returns $450 weekly, hitting $16,200. The highest package, A6, is $10,000, delivering $1,000 weekly for a total of $36,000 over 36 weeks.
To qualify for these promised returns, affiliates must view a set number of company-provided websites daily. AdsWorker frames this activity as an advertising service, allowing affiliates to submit their own websites to a rotator. Other affiliates then click these sites to fulfill their daily viewing requirements. This system generates no genuine engagement or valuable traffic; participants click solely to unlock their daily earnings. The advertising claim serves as a facade for the underlying financial structure.
Recruitment efforts also generate commissions. Affiliates earn 5% on any investment made by those they personally sponsor. Residual income flows through a binary structure, where each affiliate sits atop two legs. Investment volume accumulates on both sides, and affiliates earn 10% of the total volume generated on their weaker leg.
While membership is free, earning any income requires purchasing a package. The real cost of entry ranges from $100 to $10,000.
This model functions as a classic Ponzi scheme. Money from new investors pays returns to earlier investors. No external revenue source supports the promised high returns. Recruitment commissions and binary payouts further drain the incoming capital, accelerating the scheme's eventual collapse. Financial regulators globally, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, consistently warn against investment programs that guarantee high, fixed returns with little or no risk, especially when combined with a lack of transparency and a focus on recruitment.
The administrators will likely shut down AdsWorker and disappear long before the 36-week maturity period for all investments concludes. They will vanish with any remaining funds, leaving most participants with significant losses and no prior warning. Victims of similar schemes should report their losses to their national financial authorities and consider contacting law enforcement agencies like the FBI.