A ghost company is quietly preparing to launch another gifting scheme, with the man behind it having a well-documented history of running nearly identical Ponzi operations.
PayMeForward sits on a "coming soon" landing page, promising to launch in June 2015. The website reveals nothing about who owns or operates it. The domain was registered March 29, 2006, but the registration is locked to private. The real giveaway is hidden in the technical details: PayMeForward uses the nameservers of NewGenerationTraffic.com, a domain registered November 1, 2008 under the name Peter Wolfing. For Wolfing to control both domains' nameservers means he has administrative access to both. PayMeForward is his operation.
Wolfing first caught attention in 2012 running Turbo Cycler, a $200-$1000 matrix-based Ponzi scheme. Since then he's launched Business ToolBox and Ultimate Cycler, nearly identical matrix cycler schemes both launched in October 2014. His most recent venture before PayMeForward was National Wealth Center, a $25 to $3500 cash gifting scheme that launched in July 2014. That operation itself was a reboot of an earlier gifting scheme called Infinity 100, also his creation.
The timing of PayMeForward's prelaunch suggests National Wealth Center is already failing. Wolfing appears to be recycling affiliates from the collapsing scheme into his newest operation.
PayMeForward operates as pure gifting with no actual products or services. Affiliates don't sell anything. They recruit other affiliates and collect "gift" payments.
The mechanics are straightforward. Affiliates fill 2×2 matrices—two positions on the first level, splitting into six positions across the second level. Complete a matrix, get paid, and cycle into the next tier up. PayMeForward offers seven tiers total.
At the bottom: $25 matrices. Buy a position for $35, fill it, collect $100, move to the $50 tier.
The $50 tier costs $50 per position, pays $200 on completion, cycles to $100.
The $100 tier: $100 entry, $400 payout, cycles to $200.
At $200: positions cost $200, payout is $800, moving to the $400 tier.
The $400 tier requires $400 per position, pays $1600, cycles to $800.
The $800 tier takes $800 per position and pays $3200.
Then comes the final tier, where the math breaks down. Each tier requires recruitment, which becomes geometrically harder as you move up. Eventually there aren't enough recruits left to fill the matrices. When recruitment dries up, the whole structure collapses and everyone at the bottom loses their money.
Wolfing has run this exact model multiple times. Each scheme promises the same cycle—invest, recruit, cash out, move up. Each one fails for the same reason: there's a finite number of people willing to join, and the structure demands exponential growth to sustain itself.
PayMeForward is the same operation with a new name, waiting for another wave of desperate affiliates from his previous failed schemes.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is PayMeForward and its connection to Peter Wolfing?PayMeForward is a gifting scheme registered in 2006 that was set to launch in June 2015. Technical analysis reveals the domain uses nameservers controlled by Peter Wolfing, a operator previously involved in similar matrix-based schemes like Turbo Cycler, indicating his administrative involvement in the operation.
What evidence links PayMeForward to fraudulent activity?
PayMeForward operates as a ghost company with concealed ownership and private domain registration. Its connection to Peter Wolfing, who has a documented history of running Ponzi-style matrix operations, combined with its secretive structure and "coming soon" status, indicates characteristics consistent with fraudulent gifting schemes.
How does PayMeForward's structure resemble previous schemes?
PayMeForward follows the gifting scheme model previously
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