Flavio Dallabrida, operating from Brazil, runs the MTKline scheme, a subscription advertising scam disguised as multi-level marketing. Domain records list Douglas Darlan Massuda Dallabrida as the contact for the operation. This model relies entirely on recruitment rather than genuine product sales.

MTKline's own FAQ page reveals the core business model. When asked about member earnings, the company states income begins as soon as members promote and refer new participants through an affiliate link. No mention appears of actual product sales.

The operator behind MTKline has a history with similar ventures. He previously participated in OneDollarRiches and LaunchEasyMoney. He also ran PTCline, another matrix-based advertising MLM. The naming convention between PTCline and MTKline suggests a repeat of past strategies.

The company offers no tangible products. Members pay for access to an internal ad rotation network. There, they can place three text ads for viewing by other members and site visitors. MTKline also provides digital downloads like software, scripts, graphics, and e-books, supposedly with resale rights. In practice, participants buy redistribution rights for generic digital products already available to everyone else in the scheme.

The compensation plan centers on a 3x8 matrix structure. A member sits at the top. Three positions branch below, then each of those splits into three more, continuing eight levels deep. Commission payouts scale by level, starting at $7.05 for level one and increasing to $12,137.85 at level eight.

But the math on MTKline's website contains an error. The company claims level eight pays $7,557.45. Their own commission breakdown shows the correct amount should be $12,137.85. This represents a discrepancy of approximately $4,580, either from a miscalculation or an unstated cut.

The structure itself makes profitability difficult for most participants. Reaching level eight requires filling 6,561 positions across all levels. The vast majority of members never recruit enough people to advance beyond the first or second level. Those who profit often join early and recruit aggressively, not through any legitimate business activity.

Subscription advertising schemes function this way. They extract money from new recruits under the guise of participation. The "product"—ad placements that generate minimal clicks and digital downloads with little genuine demand—serves only as a legal facade. Real revenue comes from membership fees and the recruitment chain.

Dallabrida has followed a pattern: start a matrix scheme, watch it collapse, then rebrand and restart. MTKline marks the fourth iteration. Participants who join late or lack an existing network typically lose money. The only consistent beneficiary remains the operator at the top.