Ken Labine is running a pyramid scheme. He calls it NFPT, and he's asking people to join for free, recruit others who also join for free, and somehow make $51,852 a year. The math doesn't work. Nothing is being sold. No products reach customers. Yet Labine promises $10 commissions per recruit and claims positions will be worth $77,777 each once one million people sign up.
This is Labine's move after OneCoin. He was a prominent promoter for that multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme. When it collapsed, he deleted his videos and never explained his role in defrauding investors. He then bounced through DagCoin and peddled nutritional supplement chews via APLGO before disappearing from social media in early 2022. Now he's back with NFPT.
On April 15th, Labine uploaded a presentation to YouTube that essentially admits what NFPT is. The compensation structure uses a 10×10 matrix—Labine incorrectly claims it has only four levels, which tells you something about his math skills. Affiliate positions get branded as "franchise businesses" to dress up the operation. Recruitment is everything. There are no actual products.
The scheme relies on artificial scarcity. Only Canada and Nigeria are active markets at the moment, Labine says. Free entry lowers barriers. Weekly prize draws dangle rewards for signing up more people. This is how he's building momentum.
But here's where Labine hits a wall: he won't explain how any of this generates money. He says he'll reveal the secret only after one million affiliates join. That's the bait. Until then, he's vague about everything except the payout numbers he's dangling.
The obvious problem is this. If no one is buying anything, commissions have to come from somewhere. Logic says they come from the affiliates themselves. But Labine claims there are no fees. You can't pay commissions with zero revenue. The contradiction is intentional. It's designed to keep people from asking hard questions until they're already in.
From a regulatory angle, NFPT violates basic disclosure requirements. The FTC Act mandates that consumers receive information about how money flows through these schemes. Canada's Competition Bureau should be applying similar standards. Labine hasn't provided those disclosures.
His history makes the pattern clear. Labine was a face of OneCoin promotion for years. He built an audience on that scheme. When it imploded, he went quiet—not to reflect, but to move on to the next opportunity. DagCoin didn't stick. APLGO faded. Now NFPT.
Labine isn't trying to build a legitimate business. He's building an email list. The weekly prize draws are the mechanism. People enter hoping to win, but they're getting added to a contact list. That list has value to him whether NFPT succeeds or fails. If enough people sign up, he has leads for his next scheme.
Realistically, NFPT won't hit one million affiliates. The scheme is too transparent once you look at it. But Labine doesn't need it to work. He just needs enough people in long enough to extract value and move on. That's the pattern. That's the play.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is NFPT and who is Ken Labine?NFPT is a recruitment-based scheme promoted by Ken Labine, offering membership without product sales. Participants earn commissions from recruits rather than legitimate sales, with claimed annual earnings of $51,852 and position values of $77,777 upon reaching one million members.
What is Ken Labine's history with similar schemes?
Labine was a prominent promoter for OneCoin, a multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme. Following its collapse, he promoted DagCoin and nutritional supplements via APLGO before disappearing in early 2022, subsequently reappearing with NFPT.
How does NFPT's compensation structure function?
NFPT promises $10 commissions per recruit with no actual product sales. Members join without payment and recruit others similarly, relying entirely on
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