A man running bitcoin scams is now running another bitcoin scam.

Antonio Soto Cortes registered the domain for Only 1 Week on January 16th, 2017. He hid his identity from the website itself, but affiliate materials list him as CEO. His Facebook profile places him in Málaga, Spain.

Before launching Only 1 Week, Soto promoted Richmond Berks, a Ponzi scheme. He also pushed Win and Live, a pyramid scheme. Then came Five2BTC, a cash gifting operation, and CommHubb, another pyramid scheme. Now he's running Only 1 Week, a three-tier bitcoin gifting matrix that operates exactly like the schemes before it.

Only 1 Week has no products. There's nothing to sell to customers, no service anyone actually needs. Affiliates simply market the membership itself. Join the scheme, and you're paying to play in a system designed to enrich people above you.

Here's how it works: newcomers must gift at least 0.03 bitcoin to participate. That money flows upward through three phases, each with matrices sized 1×2 or 1×3. In Phase 1, you gift 0.03 bitcoin and theoretically receive it from three people below you. In Phase 2, the amounts jump to 1 bitcoin or 3 bitcoin depending on the matrix. Phase 3 scales to 5 bitcoin or 15 bitcoin.

Every time someone cycles out of a matrix, Only 1 Week takes a cut. Phase 1 costs the company 0.03 bitcoin. Phase 2 costs 1 bitcoin. Phase 3 costs 5 bitcoin. That fee gets split between Only 1 Week's operations and whatever affiliate recruited you, paying them a referral commission for dragging in fresh money.

The math is simple: this collapses. Matrix cyclers require endless recruitment to sustain payouts. Once recruitment slows, the matrices can't fill. People who join late lose their bitcoin. People who join early and get lucky might withdraw before the collapse. Everyone else donates their money to Soto.

Soto clearly learned from his previous ventures. Each one promised easy money through recruitment. Each one paid early participants with money from people joining behind them. Each one eventually imploded, leaving thousands out of pocket.

Only 1 Week follows the identical formula. The company name itself is telling—it suggests fast cycles, quick profits, get in and get out before it crashes. Except most people never get out. They watch their bitcoin disappear as recruitment dries up and the gifting stops flowing.

Only 1 Week isn't a business. It's a wealth transfer mechanism that moves bitcoin from new recruits to Soto's preloaded admin accounts and to whoever got in early enough to catch money before the collapse. Call it what it is: a theft scheme dressed up in cryptocurrency language.


🤖 Quick Answer

Who is Antonio Soto Cortes and what schemes has he operated?
Antonio Soto Cortes, based in Málaga, Spain, registered Only 1 Week in January 2017. He previously promoted multiple fraudulent schemes including Richmond Berks (Ponzi), Win and Live (pyramid), Five2BTC (cash gifting), and CommHubb (pyramid scheme) before launching his current bitcoin gifting matrix operation.

What is the business model of Only 1 Week?
Only 1 Week operates as a three-tier bitcoin gifting matrix with no actual products or services. Participants pay membership fees without receiving goods or legitimate services in return. Affiliates market only the membership scheme itself, making it fundamentally a pay-to-play operation similar to previous pyramid structures.

Why is Only 1 Week classified as a scam?
Only 1 Week lacks


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