Steven Seppinni's Latest Scheme: Prosper Everyday Recycles Failed Investment Fraud

Steven Seppinni is back in the game. The serial entrepreneur behind the collapsed Malibu Mastermind investment scam has launched Prosper Everyday, a new MLM operation that appears to repackage old content from his previous failed ventures.

Prosper Everyday operates through Digital Door, LLC, with Seppinni named as founder and CEO. The company registered its domains in mid-2015—joinprosper.com on September 16 and prospereveryday.com on July 18. Both registrations are hidden behind privacy shields, a common tactic for operators wanting to avoid scrutiny.

Seppinni's track record speaks for itself. He launched Everyone Prosper, a social network MLM, back in 2012. Then came Malibu Mastermind in early 2014, a failed investment scheme that promised massive returns. Now Prosper Everyday offers the same playbook: expensive digital courses and training programs aimed at people desperate to make money fast.

The product line ranges from $100 entry-level courses to a $12,000 "Multi-Millionaire Mastery" three-day workshop. In between sit "Purpose, Passion and Profits" for $500, "Membership Millions" for $2,500, and "Video Marketing Mastery" for $5,000. Each course promises the earth: thousands earned monthly, exclusive marketing secrets, membership site success, video training mastery. At least one product page video still carries Malibu Mastermind logos, suggesting Seppinni simply recycled old content rather than creating anything new.

The compensation structure reveals how Prosper Everyday makes its real money: recruiting. While the company offers a 50% retail commission on sales to non-affiliates, the actual income stream flows through three mechanisms designed to reward recruitment over retail sales.

The straight-line cycler requires affiliates to buy $100 positions in a queue, then recruit two others to do the same. Once three positions are filled, a $500 commission pays out when ten more positions below enter the system. It's a mathematical chain letter dressed up as a business.

Power Profit Lines, Seppinni's name for residual commissions, pays $500 to $5,000 through a unilevel structure. Under this model, every recruit an affiliate brings in sits directly beneath them on the organizational chart, with commissions flowing up through layers of recruitment.

The numbers don't work for most people. These schemes never do. Seppinni has been operating variations of this model for over a decade. Malibu Mastermind failed. Everyone Prosper faded. Yet here he is again, selling hope to the desperate through Prosper Everyday, with private domain registrations and recycled training videos.

History suggests this won't last either. But by then, Seppinni will have collected the real money—from people who paid thousands for courses and recruitment dreams that never materialized.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is Prosper Everyday and its connection to previous ventures?
Prosper Everyday is an MLM operation founded by Steven Seppinni through Digital Door, LLC. The company registered domains joinprosper.com and prospereveryday.com in mid-2015. It reportedly recycles content from Seppinni's earlier failed ventures, including Everyone Prosper and Malibu Mastermind, both associated with investment fraud allegations.

Why are domain registrations hidden behind privacy shields?
Privacy shields obscure ownership information and registration details. This tactic commonly prevents public scrutiny and regulatory investigation. It allows operators to maintain anonymity while operating potentially problematic business models without transparent accountability to customers or authorities.

What was Malibu Mastermind and when did it launch?
Malibu Mastermind was an investment scam launched by Steven Seppinni


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