A shadowy operator in Nevada is quietly running a $20-a-month pyramid scheme disguised as a business opportunity, with no actual products and commissions paid solely from recruiting new members.

Multi Stream Funnel operates almost entirely in the dark. The company provides zero information about its ownership or management on its website. When you visit multistreamfunnel.com, you hit nothing more than an email capture page designed to harvest contact information.

The domain registration traces back to Ryan Carlson at a residential address in Nevada, registered in December 2015 and updated in December 2016. But Carlson operates out of Utah, where he's built a track record promoting other MLM schemes. His Facebook wall advertises TVC Matrix, a recruitment-based operation, and Speed Feeder, a Ponzi cycler scheme. The reason his Nevada registration address differs from his Utah residence remains unexplained.

Here's how the scam works: Affiliates pay $20 monthly to join. That's it. There are no products to sell, no services to market, no legitimate business activity. Members pay their $20 to buy the right to recruit others into paying $20. The company bundles a lead generation platform with membership to create the illusion of value.

The commission structure is pure recruitment math. When you recruit someone, you earn a $1 commission on their $20 fee. That leaves the company and you pocketing money from members who will never make it back. The company uses what it calls a "1-up model" with unilevel compensation—meaning you sit at the top of your downline, and every person you personally recruit falls under you. Their recruits go one level deeper, their recruits another level, and so on indefinitely.

But here's the trap: you must pass your second recruitment commission upline to whoever recruited you. So does everyone below you with their second recruit. This ensures the person at the top of any chain captures escalating commissions while the vast majority of new recruits will never recoup their $20 monthly fee, let alone turn a profit.

The scheme includes a rule designed to squeeze more money from desperate participants: if you stop paying $20 a month, you lose access to any $20 commissions you've earned. Those commissions automatically pass up to your upline sponsor. Members can join for free, but free members cannot earn commissions—they exist purely to inflate recruitment numbers and create pressure on paying members to upgrade.

This is a numbers game built on false promises. The mathematics of recruitment schemes demand exponential growth. A $20 monthly fee means you need to recruit people who can each recruit people who can each recruit more people. The pyramid collapses when the supply of recruitable people runs out, which it always does. When that happens, everyone except the people at the very top loses their monthly fee with nothing to show for it.

Multi Stream Funnel is not a business opportunity. It's a transfer of money from the bottom of the pyramid to the top, dressed up in affiliate language and hidden behind a anonymous website.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Multi Stream Funnel and how does it operate?
Multi Stream Funnel is a pyramid scheme operating from Nevada, charging $20 monthly membership fees with no legitimate products or services. Income derives exclusively from recruiting new participants rather than retail sales. The operation maintains minimal transparency, utilizing only email capture pages for recruitment.

Who operates Multi Stream Funnel?
Ryan Carlson, based in Utah, is the operator behind Multi Stream Funnel. Domain registration traces to his residential Nevada address from December 2015. Carlson has previously promoted other MLM schemes including TVC Matrix and Speed Feeder through social media platforms.

What warning signs indicate Multi Stream Funnel is illegitimate?
Red flags include absence of real products, compensation tied solely to recruitment, anonymous ownership structure, minimal website information, and reliance on email capture pages. The operator's history promoting multiple MLM schemes and use of residential registration


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