MyNyloxin Review: Cobra venom and revenue-sharing

A sketchy network marketing operation that kept reinventing itself finally latched onto a pain relief product derived from cobra venom.

Nutra Pharma Corporation owned Nyloxin, an over-the-counter pain reliever. In 2012, they handed off the entire MLM marketing operation to True Cash Network, a company with a checkered history of jumping from one product scheme to another.

The Text Cash Network, as it was originally called, started in 2011 with a savings and voucher network. Affiliates weren't charged to join, but they had to watch five SMS ads daily to keep their accounts active. New recruits brought in $1.50 per head. The company kept advertising commissions vague, offering no specifics at launch. Brett Hudson ran the operation as president, though the company didn't initially disclose this on their website.

By 2012, the coupon scheme was dead. The company pivoted hard toward Nyloxin and rebranded as True Cash Network. Management had shifted too. A Nutra Pharma press release from October 2013 quoted Dalton Johnson as CEO, praising Nyloxin as "a wonderful opportunity for our distributors."

In that same year, another MLM called Noca Now emerged, claiming to focus on Noca Cola and tea products. But digging into the compensation plan revealed something telling: multiple references to TCN's structure. Noca Now had simply grafted itself onto TCN's existing matrix. The website still exists, but the opportunity is essentially dead.

True Cash Network showed a pattern of desperation. They'd found a struggling product and a company willing to outsource its entire sales force to them. Within months, they'd rebranded again, expanded their distributor portal under MyNyloxin.com, and planned a media blitz across internet, radio, and television.

By the time the company regrouped as True Cash Network in 2013, leadership had changed hands again. Steve Gewecke appeared as the new president on the MyNyloxin website, marking yet another turnover at the helm.

This is the hallmark of a deteriorating operation: constant management changes, repeated product pivots, and a business model dependent on recruiting rather than actual sales. True Cash Network proved it would attach itself to anything—vouchers, cola, tea, cobra venom extract—if it meant keeping the recruitment machine spinning. The company cycled through leadership like a shell game, trying to stay ahead of scrutiny.

What remained consistent was the core mechanism: get distributors in, collect fees or force product purchases, pay commissions primarily for recruitment rather than retail sales. Nutra Pharma may have genuinely believed in Nyloxin, but they'd handed their product to an operation with no track record of sustained success. The fact that Noca Now crashed and burned while True Cash Network kept searching for the next product tells you everything you need to know about where the real money flowed.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is MyNyloxin and its connection to network marketing?
MyNyloxin is an over-the-counter pain relief product derived from cobra venom, originally owned by Nutra Pharma Corporation. In 2012, the company transferred its MLM marketing operation to True Cash Network, a company with a history of transitioning between various product schemes and business models.

What was the original business model of True Cash Network?
True Cash Network, initially called Text Cash Network, launched in 2011 as a savings and voucher network. Affiliates joined without fees but watched five daily SMS advertisements to maintain active accounts. The company earned $1.50 per new recruit referral.

Why has True Cash Network been considered controversial?
True Cash Network operated with vague commission structures and repeatedly shifted between different product schemes. The company demonstrated inconsistent business practices, lacking transparency in affiliate compensation details during its early


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