Ash Mufareh's Latest Scheme: A Social Network to Hide the Pyramid Underneath
OnPassive is launching a social network called O-Net, and it's really just another con dressed up in new clothes.
The company's founder, Ash Mufareh, isn't even bothering to pitch it himself. That job fell to Mike Ellis, OnPassive's longtime "founder," who let slip what O-Net actually is: a Trojan horse to pull people into OnPassive's failing ecosystem.
"You're not inviting them into OnPassive, you're inviting them onto a social network," Ellis said in a pitch to affiliates. Once people sign up, he explained, the company won't talk about OnPassive at all. They'll just market O-Net as a superior platform, then quietly push OnPassive's products on these new users later.
O-Net will be free to join. That's where the real money starts flowing—directly into OnPassive's pocket when the company converts free users into paying customers.
This is the same playbook Mufareh has used for years. What OnPassive originally sold as "a profound business platform run by artificial intelligence" turned out to be nothing but knockoffs of existing services. Many of OnPassive's products are clones of offerings from Global Domains International, an MLM company Mufareh was promoting a decade ago.
The problem is obvious: OnPassive's products cost money. Free alternatives already exist and work fine. So why would anyone pay for OnPassive's versions? Because they're trapped in the pyramid, that's why.
Ellis claims Mufareh built O-Net because existing social networks weren't "secure, private or ethical." Let's unpack that.
On security: OnPassive recently had a crypto offering leak to affiliates through email. On privacy: OnPassive won't sell user data directly, but as an MLM company, it harvests leads from every O-Net signup. That's the same predatory tactic, just a different target.
As for ethics, Mufareh's record speaks for itself.
He was a promoter of TelexFree, a Ponzi scheme. OnPassive prepped its launch through GoFounders, a straightforward matrix pyramid. Nearly three years later, affiliates who signed up have nothing to show for it. Just promises. Always just promises.
But the worst part reveals Mufareh's true character. When BehindMLM exposed GoFounders and OnPassive as a pyramid scheme, Mufareh didn't defend his business with facts. He impersonated the investigative site instead. He built a fake website using BehindMLM's name, filled it with propaganda, and pushed it out to his followers.
That's what passes for ethics in Mufareh's world.
One search for "onpassive," "gofounders," or "ash mufareh" returns page after page of curated marketing spam—all created to bury the truth under an avalanche of self-serving noise.
O-Net isn't innovation. It's a distraction. It's another layer between Mufareh and accountability.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is O-Net in relation to OnPassive?O-Net is a social network platform launched by OnPassive, designed to attract users through free access. According to internal communications, it functions as an entry point to OnPassive's ecosystem, with users initially unaware of the parent company's involvement before being introduced to OnPassive's products.
Who leads OnPassive and its new ventures?
OnPassive was founded by Ash Mufareh. Mike Ellis serves as the company's longtime representative and has promoted O-Net to affiliates, explaining its role as a recruitment mechanism for the broader OnPassive platform.
How does O-Net's marketing strategy differ from traditional OnPassive promotion?
O-Net is marketed as an independent social network platform rather than directly promoting OnPassive. Users are initially engaged through the network itself, with OnPassive's products and services introduced later to established members of the
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