A pair of serial scammers who previously ran the collapsed Ilgon Ponzi scheme have resurfaced with a new cryptocurrency MLM operation called Mosaic Alpha. The scheme, which launched last November, mirrors their old playbook exactly: no real products, fake returns, and a shell company structure designed to evade regulation.

Attila Vidakovics and Peter Molnar appear as co-founders on Mosaic Alpha's website. Both men ran Ilgon, which BehindMLM exposed in June 2021 before it imploded along with its attached ILGON cryptocurrency token. The total damage from Ilgon remains unknown, but victims lost substantial sums to these operators. Now they're back with a new scheme under a different name.

Mosaic Alpha operates from Hungary but obscures this by claiming governance under British Virgin Islands law—a known tax haven with virtually no MLM fraud oversight. The company cites a Canadian shell company called Evo Dynamic LLP as its corporate entity. No legitimate address appears on their website. This layering of jurisdictions is textbook fraud concealment.

The operation generates revenue through the cryptocurrency token KDX. Affiliates invest tether (USDT) into seven different KDX packages ranging from $100 to nearly $25,000. Money flows into Mosaic Alpha's coffers immediately, but participants are told their tokens lock for 120 days. After that waiting period, Mosaic Alpha supposedly releases KDX at a guaranteed rate of 1.25% weekly returns.

This is pure fiction. The returns cannot be sustained. They exist only on paper and only as long as new money keeps flowing in from fresh recruits. Once recruitment slows, the entire structure collapses. Investors who buy in at higher tiers take the biggest losses.

The recruitment component confirms this is an MLM, not an investment. Affiliates earn commissions by bringing in other investors. There are no actual products to sell. Nobody outside the scheme uses KDX for anything legitimate. The entire mechanism exists to separate people from their money.

The scheme shows signs of already planning its exit. Evo Dynamic LLP, the same Canadian shell company, also appears in the footer of a website called Novalus Prime, currently sitting in prelaunch. Novalus Prime shows up in Mosaic Alpha's own marketing materials. This is the hallmark of a reboot operation already in development. When regulators close in on Mosaic Alpha, Vidakovics and Molnar will simply relaunch under a new name with the same infrastructure already waiting.

Investors putting money into Mosaic Alpha are funding the personal enrichment of two men with a documented history of running failed crypto schemes. The promised returns won't materialize. The tokens will either become worthless or the entire operation will vanish. These are the only two possible outcomes with this operation.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who are the operators behind Mosaic Alpha?
Attila Vidakovics and Peter Molnar, listed as co-founders of Mosaic Alpha, previously operated the collapsed Ilgon Ponzi scheme. Both men were exposed by BehindMLM in June 2021 when Ilgon imploded, causing substantial financial losses to victims through its associated ILGON cryptocurrency token.

What is Mosaic Alpha's operational model?
Mosaic Alpha functions as a cryptocurrency MLM operation that launched in November, employing the same structure as its predecessor Ilgon. The scheme features no legitimate products, promises unrealistic returns, and utilizes a shell company framework designed to circumvent regulatory oversight and enforcement actions.

How does Mosaic Alpha obscure its jurisdiction?
Despite operating from Hungary, Mosaic Alpha claims governance under British Virgin Islands jurisdiction. This jurisdictional ob


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