Following months of misappropriating ESPN branding to shill their Ponzi scheme, Espian Global has collapsed.

Now the anonymous scammers behind Espian Global have rebooted as eOracle.

BehindMLM
reviewed Espian Global
back in March. The Ponzi scheme had a short run, lasting less than half a year.

Now if you attempt to visit Espian Global’s website, you’re redirected to eOracle.

Like Espian Global, eOracle’s website provides no verifiable information on who owns or runs the company.

eOracle represent this individual is their CEO:

The CEO is not named. The signature provided however reads “Edgar Ariel Gavilan Gonzales”.

On LinkedIn Gonzales represents he is from Colombia. Gonzales’ LinkedIn profile cites him as a “Business Developer” for M2R Technology.

M2R Technology is a dead tech company based out of Colombia.

The lack of information about Gonzales, both with respect to eOracle and otherwise, is a red flag.

eOracle’s website domain (“e-oracle.com”) was privately registered on May 31st, 2021.

Espian Global primarily targeted investors in India and Nigeria.

At the time of publication Alexa ranks India as the only notable source of traffic to eOracle’s website (67%).

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

eOracle’s Products

eOracle has no retailable products or services, with affiliates only able to market eOracle affiliate membership itself.

eOracle’s Compensation Plan

eOracle affiliates invest funds on the promise of advertised returns.

eOracle offers four investment tiers, each with seven levels within the tiers.

ECN token investment

ECN token investment + staking

ECN token investment + staking + daily ROI

ECN token investment + staking + higher daily ROI

To keep thing simple I’m going to refer to these as Plans 1 to 4.

Here are the seven levels within each of eOracle’s four investment tiers:

Plan 1 – Single $50, Ace $150, Ace Plus $350, Herald $750, Guardian $1550, Crusader $3150 and Commander $6350

Plan 2 – Single $89, Ace $267, Ace Plus $623, Herald $1335, Guardian $2759, Crusader $5607 and Commander $11,303

Plan 3 – $127, Ace $381, Ace Plus $889, Herald $1905, Guardian $3937, Crusader $8001 and Commander $16,129

Plan 4 – Single $239, Ace $717, Ace Plus $1673, Herald $3585, Guardian $7409, Crusader $15,057 and Commander $30,353

At the time of publication only returns paid across the “Single” level have been disclosed:

Plan 1 – $5 in ECN tokens monthly for 12 months

Plan 2 – $20 in ECN staked plus another $19 in ECN tokens

Plan 3 – 80 cents a day for 365 days

Plan 4 – $2 a day for 365 days

This gives you an idea of what each plan offers. Note that each Plan tier bundles what’s offered at the lower tiers as well.

Plans 1 and 2 are tied to ECN tokens and receiving more each month. Plans 3 and 4 are quoted in USD but given the “mining” ruse, are likely to pay out ECN equivalents too.

As investment level


🤖 Quick Answer

What is eOracle and its connection to Espian Global?
eOracle is a cryptocurrency project that emerged following the collapse of Espian Global, a Ponzi scheme that operated for less than six months. The anonymous operators behind the failed scheme rebranded and relaunched under the eOracle name, redirecting Espian Global's website traffic to the new platform.

Who manages eOracle according to available information?
eOracle's website lacks verifiable ownership details. However, documentation identifies Edgar Ariel Gavilan Gonzales as CEO through signature records. Gonzales's LinkedIn profile indicates Colombian origin and lists him as Business Developer for M2R Technology, a defunct technology company.

What were the characteristics of Espian Global's operations?
Espian Global operated as a Ponzi scheme lasting approximately five months before collapse. The operation involved misappropriation of ESPN branding for


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