MyRightAd operates as a purported advertising platform with no identifiable owner and no legitimate products, primarily targeting Indian audiences. Hong Kong's corporate registry holds no record of "MyRightAd, H.K," a company cited in its privacy policy. The platform functions as a Ponzi scheme, paying recruits for signing up others.
The website sits on a shared hosting server, alongside dozens of other sites also aimed at Indian users. Its domain was registered on June 28, 2012, with hidden registration details. This anonymity marks a primary warning sign for any multi-level marketing operation.
The company sells no actual product. Instead, MyRightAd requires recruits to buy an "AdStation" for $100. Members can purchase up to five of these. MyRightAd never explains what an AdStation does, offering only vague claims about it being a mobile advertising platform. The website shows logos of major brands, implying partnerships that do not exist. No advertising agreements or specific details are ever disclosed, only brand images and promises.
The compensation structure relies entirely on new member payments. Recruits earn money in two ways: by recruiting others and by purchasing AdStations.
MyRightAd uses a binary commission system for recruitment. Each recruit sits at the top of two branches. The company pays $10 for every pair of new recruits added—one on the left, one on the right. This payment is calculated daily, capped at $1,000 per day, representing 100 pairs. Such a model demands indefinite recruitment acceleration, which is unsustainable.
The AdStation scheme promises fixed returns. Buying one AdStation for $100 guarantees a $6 weekly return for 22 weeks. This totals $132, a 32 percent return. The promised returns increase with more AdStations. Two AdStations pay $7 each weekly, totaling $308. Three AdStations pay $8 each weekly, for a total of $528. Four AdStations pay $9 each weekly, reaching $792.
These guaranteed returns on undefined digital products are fictional. No legitimate advertising platform offers investors fixed weekly payouts. The money flowing to early recruits comes directly from later recruits buying AdStations, not from any actual business revenue.
MyRightAd operates with zero transparency, no verifiable business operations, and revenue generated solely from new member payments. It functions as a textbook Ponzi scheme, disguised with tech jargon and hidden behind privacy walls. Anyone considering joining should ask: if this business were real, why would they hide who owns it?
