After his profiting from the
Crowd1
Ponzi scheme came to an end, Mark Seyforth re-launched Cforth in May 2022.

BehindMLM
reviewed Cforth
in October 2022, at the time noting the majority of Cforth’s website traffic originated from the Philippines.

Today traffic to Cforth website has dropped to just a few thousand visits a month. This has prompted Seyforth to reboot the MLM side of Cforth as StoplightGo.

I’ll preface by stating if StoplightGo sounds convoluted and confusing, it’s because it is. As far as I can tell, StoplightGo is just an excuse to re-re-launch Cforth under a different name.

As per an email sent out  earlier this month announcing StoplightGo’s beta launch;

The CFORTH.com site is transitioning into an online marketplace.

We will no longer be offering new subscriptions as of March 1st.

The eGig Stores will continue to be open for purchases.

We will not be paying commissions on any new store product purchases.

Your eGig Coin has been transferred to your main wallet.

If you have money in your wallet, please cash out before the end of the month, March 31.

StoplightGo sees affiliates pay $299 and then $64.95 a month for autoship:

Bundled products are from Mark Seyforth’s various companies, transferred over from Cforth.

This generates commissions for the affiliates who recruited them, via what appears to be a five-level deep unilevel team.

I originally thought this was a matrix but there doesn’t appear to be any limit to “lanes” (unilevel tree legs).

That said, StoplightGo does have a residual 3×10 matrix, paying out up to $2.50 a month per affiliate recruited.

This matrix is company-wide, filling up as affiliates are recruited into StoplightGo.

Between the unilevel team and matrix, commissions are dependent on StoplightGo affiliates continuing to pay $59.95 a month for autoship.

This is essentially a reworking of Cforth’s Straight-line queue commissions. Instead of a straight-line queue, StoplightGo has a matrix.

Cforth paid residual commissions via a ten-level deep unilevel team. That’s been reworked to five-levels deep in favor of the 3×10 matrix.

At the core of StoplightGo is the same autoship recruitment pyramid scheme that was central to Cforth.

Retail 
is
possible in StoplightGo but isn’t a focus. Nor does it negate the majority of company-wide revenue being derived from monthly affiliate autoship fees.

Furthermore we 
already
know there isn’t any retail interest in Cforth’s products, by way of the original MLM opportunity failing to gain traction.

StoplightGo’s problematic business model brings with it the same problems Cforth had. And that should be concerning, as reboots typically don’t last as long as their predecessors.

Update 13th July 2025 – 
Cforth’s StoplightGo reboot appears to have collapsed.

BehindMLM
revisited Cforth for an updated review
in July 2025.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is StoplightGo and how does it relate to Cforth?
StoplightGo represents a rebranding initiative of Cforth's MLM operations announced in 2024. Following declining website traffic to the original Cforth platform, founder Mark Seyforth transitioned the multi-level marketing component under the new StoplightGo name, while repositioning Cforth.com as an online marketplace, discontinuing new subscription offerings.

Who founded Cforth and what was his background?
Mark Seyforth founded Cforth, having previously profited from involvement with Crowd1, identified as a Ponzi scheme. He relaunched Cforth in May 2022 after his earlier venture concluded, subsequently introducing the StoplightGo spinoff to address declining platform engagement and user traffic metrics.

What geographic challenges did Cforth face?
According to Beh


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