JubiRev Video Manager T. LeMont Silver hosted a webinar days after GoFunRewards ceased US operations due to legal advice on its "illegal" revenue-sharing model. Silver's webinar, titled "Why I believe Jubi will pass the regulatory test when it comes," ran for one hour and twenty-four minutes. JubiRev operates a business model and compensation plan nearly identical to Zeek Rewards, which the SEC shut down as a $600 million Ponzi scheme.

Silver opened the webinar for those "building the business online," specifically JubiRev affiliates not marketing to "friends and family." This targets individuals likely to perform their own due diligence, rather than those who might join blindly. Silver acknowledged that regulatory scrutiny for their business model is a matter of "when," not "if."

He then delivered a lengthy "history lesson" on Amway's legal troubles in the 1970s. Amway does not use a revenue-sharing compensation plan. Comparisons to other companies with different business models winning in court do not apply to modern "revenue-sharing" Ponzi schemes. Zeek Rewards, for example, launched in 2011.

Silver moved to the MLM binary compensation plan and its regulatory issues in the 1990s. The implication was that 2013 Ponzi schemes are new and will face similar scrutiny before vindication. This comparison is also irrelevant. "Points" style revenue-sharing MLM models are built on Ponzi schemes, which first appeared on the US regulatory radar in the 1920s.

The structure of an affiliate-funded model around points, with products distributed via an MLM company, may be new. However, the core mechanics remain the same: investors are rewarded with other investors' money, proportionate to their initial investment and continued re-investment. Silver spent the next fourteen minutes discussing MLM attorneys, consultants, their fees, and how binary flushing works. None of this addressed JubiRev or why it is not a Ponzi scheme.

At the 21:30 mark, Silver introduced Zeek Rewards and Fortune Hi-Tech Marketing (FHTM), which the FTC recently busted as a pyramid scheme. He stated Zeek Rewards "ran into some regulatory headwinds" and "abruptly stopped doing business." The SEC shut down Zeek Rewards for being a $600 million Ponzi scheme. Silver then asked, "What do you say about Fortune Hi-Tech?" FHTM did not use a Ponzi points revenue-sharing compensation plan.

Silver also mentioned YTB, another busted pyramid scheme, acknowledging it lacks a revenue-sharing model. He argued, "We could go through a litany of companies that were here in the network marketing space that are not here because of some type of regulatory issue. But, those bloggers aren't saying the industry's no good, are they?" He theorized this is "because 90% of the folks in the traditional MLM space don't make money." ScamTelegraph's analysis focuses on the mechanics and structure of an MLM company's business model and compensation plan, not individual earnings.

Almost twenty-five minutes into the webinar, no clear explanation emerged for why JubiRev is not a Ponzi scheme or why it would pass an SEC unregistered securities investigation. Silver continued to ignore JubiRev's Ponzi points business model and compensation plan, launching into a rant about affiliates "not making money" in the industry from 22:46 to 29:00. He suggested the entire MLM industry, including attorneys like Kevin Thompson, consultants, "those bloggers," and other MLM companies, wants the revenue-sharing model to fail.