A software company that builds Ponzi scheme infrastructure is accusing another fraudster of stealing its code. Welcome to the criminal underworld of online scams.

ProXScripts, an India-based outfit founded in 2012, sells Ponzi scripts to con artists running multi-level marketing schemes. Their flagship product, ProXCore, costs $207 and lets administrators fleece victims through fake investment plans, matrix cyclers, and revenue-sharing schemes. The company openly brags about helping clients "laugh all the way to the bank."

Now ProXScripts says Drew Burton, owner of My 24 Hour Income, stole a pirated copy of ProXCore instead of paying for it.

In an email sent to My 24 Hour Income affiliates, ProXScripts accused Burton of theft and illegal software piracy. The company claimed it had been monitoring his activity and warned members to withdraw their money immediately, saying the operation would soon shut down due to legal action. ProXScripts added My 24 Hour Income to its "wall of shame" webpage, promising to post proof and screenshots of alleged scamming.

The timing is suspicious. The My 24 Hour Income website went offline on January 9th, displaying only an "under maintenance" message. Burton attributed this to routine server migration. That same day, during a webinar, Burton told participants that earnings had been unusually low on January 8th.

This isn't a case of a legitimate company protecting its intellectual property. ProXScripts exists solely to enable fraud. Their entire business model depends on supplying criminal software to con artists. Their marketing materials boast about dominating the HYIP and network marketing script market—industries built on mathematical impossibility and inevitable collapse.

The accusation against Burton reveals something darker about online fraud: when one criminal operation turns on another, it's rarely about justice. ProXScripts isn't trying to protect consumers or report Burton to authorities. They're protecting their market share and their fee structure. If Burton is running My 24 Hour Income on stolen code, ProXScripts loses a customer. That's the only real crime they care about.

For the people who put money into My 24 Hour Income believing they could earn passively, this internal scammer-on-scammer conflict offers no consolation. They've already lost. Whether Burton used legitimate code or pirated it changes nothing about the fundamental con: unsustainable returns require constant new recruits, and those recruits are always going to lose money.

ProXScripts' warning to withdraw funds carries an unintended irony. The company helped build the trap. They just weren't the ones profiting from this particular batch of victims.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is ProXScripts and what services does it provide?
ProXScripts is an India-based software company founded in 2012 that develops and sells Ponzi scheme infrastructure to fraudsters. It offers scripts enabling multi-level marketing scams, including its flagship product ProXCore, which facilitates fake investment plans and revenue-sharing schemes at a cost of $207.

Who is Drew Burton and what are the accusations against him?
Drew Burton is the owner of My 24 Hour Income platform. ProXScripts accused him of software piracy and theft, alleging he obtained an unauthorized copy of their ProXCore script instead of purchasing it through legitimate channels.

What types of fraudulent schemes do these Ponzi scripts enable?
The scripts facilitate multiple fraud mechanisms including fake investment plans, matrix cyclers where victims pay for positions in hierarchical structures, and revenue-sharing schemes designed to deceive participants about


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