Ovaba promises payment for simple internet use, yet its operations remain shrouded in secrecy. The company's domain registration lists "OB Organisation" at 777 Success Building in Chicago, VN 11111. This address combines an Illinois city with a Canadian postal code, suggesting it is entirely fabricated.
No public information exists regarding Ovaba's ownership or leadership. This lack of transparency raises immediate concerns about the organization's legitimacy. An anonymous operation with a fake address gives little reason for trust.
The company sells no actual products. It offers no software or services. Members join free, then recruit other members. This recruitment forms the entire business model. Ovaba pays $1 per month for each person in a member's recruitment network, structured as a 5x5 matrix. A member must personally recruit five people to qualify for any commissions.
Ovaba also claims to "pay users to surf" the internet, but details on how this works are largely absent. Typically, "paid to surf" schemes involve website owners paying a company for advertising. The company then serves these ads to members, who earn small amounts for viewing them. The real money in such models flows to the advertising websites, not to the individual surfers.
This raises a central question Ovaba never answers: where does the money come from? The company makes vague promises about monthly income for life. Members get paid to recruit. They get paid to surf. This supposedly generates thousands of dollars for participants.
The math fails quickly. Ovaba claims members receive indefinite monthly payments from their entire network. If the company's only income comes from advertising clicks and memberships, and members generate those clicks, Ovaba effectively moves money from one pocket to another. No new wealth is created.
Multi-level marketing schemes often rely on rapid recruitment. Some early participants might earn money before the system collapses, but most others lose out. Ovaba's complete lack of ownership transparency, its product-free recruitment structure, and its vague income promises align with a classic recruitment scheme.
The broader claims border on insulting. Ovaba states three major companies launched it and that "internet marketers" believe it will revolutionize the web. It promises a changed world and a flow of money. None of this is credible from an anonymous operation with a fake address and no clear revenue model.
Free membership means little when the actual cost is the time spent recruiting others into a system that will not pay them either. Major tech companies do not share advertising revenue with users, a fact Ovaba itself notes. Schemes promising to do exactly that warrant extreme suspicion.
The company's silence on who runs it and how money actually moves through the system is not mysterious. It is calculated. When the operators remain unknown, accountability becomes impossible.
