FortiCard fails to provide verifiable ownership or executive information on its websites.

FortiCard operates from three known website domains:

h5.forticards.com – privately registered on September 8th, 2023

forti-card.com – privately registered on September 11th, 2023

h5.forticard.xyz – privately registered on September 9th, 2023

While ForiCard does provide a list of executives on its active website, they are represented by made-up names and AI-generated avatars.

Of note is FortiCard’s official FaceBook page being managed from Thailand and the UAE:

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.

FortiCard’s Products

FortiCard has no retailable products or services.

Affiliates are only able to market FortiCard affiliate membership itself.

FortiCard’s Compensation Plan

FortiCard affiliates invest tether (USDT). This is done on the promise of advertised returns:

VIP1 – invest 6 to 500 USDT and receive 1% to 1.5% a day

VIP2 – invest 300 to 2000 USDT and receive 1.7% to 2% a day

VIP3 – invest 800 to 5000 USDT and receive 2.3% to 2.7% a day

VIP4 – invest 2000 to 10,000 USDT and receive 2.9% to 3.3% a day

VIP5 – invest 5000 to 30,000 USDT and receive 3.5% to 3.9% a day

FortiCard investments run from 7 to 60 days. The longer an affiliate invests for the higher the ROI rate.

FortiCard pays referral commissions on invested USDT down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):

Specific referral commission rates on each level are not disclosed.

Joining FortiCard

FortiCard affiliate membership is free.

Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum 6 USDT investment.

FortiCard Conclusion

FortiCard is yet another “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.

FortiCard’s task ruse is baloney about lending:

Lending invested funds corresponds with FortiCard affiliate investors logging in to “click a button”.

The more they invest, the more videos FortiCard affiliates have to click buttons.

Clicking the button as required qualifies FortiCard investors for daily returns as advertised.

Beyond that clicking a button inside FortiCard does nothing, there is no external revenue. All FortiCard does is recycle newly invested funds to pay earlier investors.

Examples of already collapsed “click a button” app Ponzis using task-based ruses are 
AI Robots

Gucci VIP
 and 
Car USDT
.

Since 2021 BehindMLM has documented 
hundreds of “click a button” app Ponzis
. Most of them last a few weeks to a few months before collapsing.

“Click a button” app Ponzis disappear by disabling both their websites and app. This tends to happen without notice, leaving the majority of investors with a loss (inevitable Ponzi math).

As part of a collapse, “click a button” Ponzi scammers often initiate recovery scams. This sees the scammers demand investors pay a fee to access funds and/or re enable withdrawals.

If any payments are made withdrawals remain d


🤖 Quick Answer

What are the main red flags identified in FortiCard's operational structure?
FortiCard exhibits several concerning characteristics: private domain registrations across multiple websites, unverifiable ownership information, executives represented by AI-generated avatars and fictional names, and Facebook management from Thailand and UAE. The company lacks legitimate retailable products or services, operating primarily through affiliate recruitment mechanisms typical of pyramid schemes.

When were FortiCard's primary domain names registered?
FortiCard's three known domains were registered within a brief timeframe in September 2023: h5.forticards.com on September 8th, h5.forticard.xyz on September 9th, and forti-card.com on September 11th. All domains utilize private registration, obscuring ownership details and preventing transparent identification of responsible parties.

How does FortiCard represent its executive leadership to the public?
FortiCard presents executive information exclusively through


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