Nissan Denies Kairos Partnership, Exposing Common Ponzi Scheme Tactic
Nissan just called out Kairos Technologies for lying about them. The Turkish automaker issued a formal statement last month denying any business relationship with the company, directly contradicting claims Kairos and its affiliates have been making for years.
The lie is a textbook move in the Ponzi playbook. Scammers get credibility by name-dropping real companies. They ask: would a Fortune 500 company partner with us if we were fraudulent? It's manipulation dressed up as logic.
Kairos Technologies made big claims. The company and its network of affiliates said Kairos delivers cloud services to Bosch, Sony Playstation, Nissan Motors, and Hamé. These assertions spread widely. They appeared on Facebook pages, in marketing materials, in pitches to potential investors. The repetition made the claims sound real.
Nissan found out and pushed back hard. In a press release, Nissan Turkey specifically addressed Kairos's Facebook posts claiming the company provides data protection services for Nissan. The statement was blunt: no agreement exists between the two companies. Not for data protection. Not for international contracts. Nothing.
The absurdity is striking. Why would Nissan, worth billions of dollars, trust its data to a small Ponzi operation? Yet that's exactly what Kairos claimed. The company banked on the assumption that people wouldn't ask questions. Many didn't.
When Kairos got caught, it didn't come clean. Instead, the company sent out an email in late 2015 blaming its affiliates. The message claimed participants in the Kairos affiliate marketing program shouldn't be naming corporate clients. They were doing it anyway due to "misunderstanding," Kairos said, and the company was "working on correction."
That's misdirection. Kairos never admitted to fabricating the partnerships. It never said the corporate clients didn't exist. It just blamed the messengers for talking about what the company had invented in the first place.
The strategy works because people want to believe. They see a name like Nissan attached to an investment opportunity and their skepticism evaporates. They think: this must be legitimate. Why else would Nissan be involved?
That's the trap Kairos set. That's the trap countless Ponzi schemes set every day.
Without proof from Kairos itself, there's no reason to believe the company actually works with any third parties at all. Nissan has already said so. The company's statement is the proof people need. Kairos lied. And now everyone knows it.
🤖 Quick Answer
Did Nissan confirm a partnership with Kairos Technologies?No. Nissan issued a formal statement denying any business relationship with Kairos Technologies, contradicting claims the company and its affiliates had made for years about delivering cloud services to the Turkish automaker.
What tactic did Kairos Technologies allegedly employ?
Kairos Technologies allegedly used a common Ponzi scheme strategy by falsely claiming partnerships with established Fortune 500 companies including Bosch, Sony Playstation, Nissan Motors, and Hamé to gain credibility with potential investors.
How did the false partnership claims spread?
The assertions made by Kairos Technologies and its affiliate network circulated widely across multiple platforms, including Facebook pages and marketing materials, establishing apparent legitimacy through association with recognized international corporations.
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