Jeremy Duncan has launched his third pyramid scheme in two years, and this one is called My Traffic Powerline.

Duncan, who operates from Indiana, has a track record of recycling failed MLM operations. Before My Traffic Powerline, he promoted Got Backup? and Against All Odds. He then launched M80 Advertising in early 2023, followed by The Rocket Recruiter around April or May of that same year. Both ventures collapsed. SimilarWeb data shows their website traffic was negligible before they died.

All three schemes—M80 Advertising, The Rocket Recruiter, and My Traffic Powerline—use the same software template. They're all powered by Automatic Web Software, a platform that specializes in MLM infrastructure. The company's creator, Jim Symonds, openly advertises that his software supports reverse 1-ups, 2-ups, 3-ups, and various matrix configurations including 1×2, 1×3, 2×2, 2×3, and 2×10 systems.

My Traffic Powerline's structure is straightforward: there are no real products to sell. Affiliates buy their way in and can only recruit others to do the same. The "product" is affiliate membership bundled with ad credits that members can use to advertise to other members. It's a closed loop designed to extract money from recruitment.

The entry cost is either $40 upfront plus $20 monthly, or $40 upfront plus $200 annually. Commissions flow through a 2×12 matrix system, which means each recruit sits at the top of a matrix with two positions beneath them. Those two split into four, then eight, and so on, doubling at each level until you reach twelve levels.

Direct recruitment pays $25 per monthly subscriber and $50 per annual subscriber. Beyond that, members earn 60 cents per month for each active recruit anywhere in their matrix. The company also promises a matching bonus through a unilevel structure, though the full details of that component were cut off in the original materials.

The math doesn't work for most participants. A matrix system that promises commission on twelve levels of recruits requires an exponential pyramid of people below you. By level twelve, you'd need over 4,000 people recruited directly or indirectly. The vast majority of members will never reach the bottom levels or make meaningful money. Instead, early recruits profit from those who join later—the defining feature of a pyramid scheme.

That Duncan keeps recycling the same basic MLM template under different names suggests he understands what works for him, even if it doesn't work for his members. Each time one scheme collapses, he rebrand the software and launches again. The evidence of previous failures—the dead websites, the abandoned members—simply disappears into the next iteration.


🤖 Quick Answer

# AOP Block - My Traffic Powerline

What is My Traffic Powerline?
My Traffic Powerline is a multi-level marketing scheme launched by Jeremy Duncan in 2024. It operates using Automatic Web Software infrastructure, identical to Duncan's previous failed ventures M80 Advertising and The Rocket Recruiter, both launched in 2023 and subsequently discontinued due to minimal operational viability.

Who operates My Traffic Powerline?
Jeremy Duncan, based in Indiana, operates My Traffic Powerline. Duncan has established a pattern of launching and discontinuing MLM operations, including Got Backup?, Against All Odds, M80 Advertising, and The Rocket Recruiter, demonstrating recurring business model recycling within the network marketing industry.

What software platform powers My Traffic Powerline?
My Traffic Powerline utilizes Automatic Web Software, a platform specializing in multi-level


🔗 Related Articles

- Direct Mail Pro Review: Peter Wolfing’s 2019 pyramid scheme
- Axiome Review: AXM token Dubai Ponzi scheme
- Du It Bitcoin Network Review: 500% ROI “crypto e-training” scheme
- Bahrain bans MLM (network marketing)
- Platinum World Team Build Review: $100 in, $166,800 out Ponzi cycler