A Florida company is selling $299 boxes loaded with software that streams copyrighted content without permission—and paying people to recruit others into the scheme.
NuWayTV operates as a multi-level marketing venture where affiliates earn commissions by selling stream boxes and recruiting downlines. The company keeps its ownership deliberately obscured. The NuWayTV website lists no names, no leadership team, nothing that would identify who runs the operation.
Dig into the domain records and a picture emerges. NuWayTV.com was registered in April 2015, but the registration is hidden behind privacy protections. Backtrack through the records and you find the original registrant: Dan McWright, using a Florida address that matches the one currently listed on the NuWayTV website under "Healthy Investments Inc., d/b/a NuWayTV." McWright lists himself as CEO of NuWayTV on his LinkedIn profile, making him the apparent owner.
McWright's history reads like a catalog of affiliate marketing ventures. His LinkedIn shows involvement with FGXpress starting in 2012. His personal marketing websites reveal he's been affiliated with Dynamic Impact, Cool Trader Pro, LifePharm, Global Hangout, Rain, and American Dream Nutrition. None of this appears on the NuWayTV website.
The product itself is straightforward: a $299 box preloaded with Kodi software. Kodi is open-source media software, but NuWayTV's version comes configured to access unlicensed copyrighted streams out of the box. The company's marketing claims the box provides "unlimited content" from broadcast networks like NBC, CBS, and ABC without commercials. Those networks publish streams on their websites legally only with ads intact.
The compensation structure follows MLM form. Affiliates buy boxes and sell them—either to retail customers or to recruits. To stay active and earn commissions, an affiliate must sell at least one box every six months. Commissions flow through a unilevel system where recruits are stacked directly under the person who signed them up. Those recruits can recruit others, who stack on the next level. The structure pays out through nine levels of recruitment.
The mechanics of a unilevel system are simple: recruit people below you, they recruit people below them, and theoretically the structure goes nine levels deep. How much money actually flows to any given affiliate depends on sales volume across the entire chain.
What makes this operation problematic is what it's actually selling. Streaming copyrighted content without permission is illegal. Selling devices specifically configured to do so is even murkier legally. The company isn't selling people a media player—it's selling them an illegal streaming appliance. And it's using MLM recruitment to move those devices.
The hidden ownership, the affiliate history, the questionable product legality, and the recruitment-focused compensation plan all fit a pattern familiar to regulators and fraud investigators. Whether authorities will act is another question.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is NuWayTV and how does it operate?NuWayTV is a Florida-based company selling $299 streaming boxes containing software that distributes copyrighted content without authorization. Operating as a multi-level marketing scheme, it generates revenue through box sales and affiliate recruitment commissions, while maintaining obscured ownership through privacy-protected domain registration linked to Dan McWright.
What legal concerns surround NuWayTV's business model?
NuWayTV faces significant legal exposure through unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material and operation as an unregistered multi-level marketing enterprise. The deliberate concealment of company ownership and leadership, combined with commission-based recruitment structures, raises regulatory red flags under FTC and intellectual property law.
How does NuWayTV's recruitment structure function?
NuWayTV compensates affiliates through dual commission streams: direct sales of $299 streaming
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