A murky Florida company is launching its third cryptocurrency scheme, and this time it's called QuickSilver.

The operation has no public information about who runs it. Quick Silver Global LLC, registered through a UPS store address in Florida, owns the domain quicksilver.me, registered in December 2018. But that's where transparency ends.

Digging deeper reveals the real story: QuickSilver is the latest spinoff from ISN Coins, a company that's already failed twice. ISN Coins founder and CEO Matt Barkes created Mint Builder in 2017 as a bitcoin spinoff. Both ventures appear dead—their websites rank around 3-4 million in traffic, the digital equivalent of a ghost town.

Now Barkes is back with QuickSilver, which ISN Coins markets on their website as a "new way to acquire assets." Marketing affiliates began pushing the prelaunch in May, and the pattern is identical to what came before.

Here's how the scheme works: Affiliates buy coins through an online storefront and recruit others to do the same. There are three autoship tiers. The cheapest option costs $42.30 monthly for two coins. The middle tier runs $233.60 for a Premium Challenge Package plus four coins. The top option is $360.50 for the package plus ten coins. That breaks down to $21.15 per coin.

To earn commissions, affiliates must buy or sell at least one coin monthly. The real money comes from recruitment, not retail sales.

The compensation structure ties payouts to "personal points." Selling a Premium Challenge Pack—to either a retail customer or a recruited affiliate—generates 40 points. Each coin purchased by the affiliate themselves generates 10 points.

Hit 40 monthly points and you earn $20 per Premium Challenge Pack sold. Reach 100 points and that jumps to $50 per pack. The math is deliberately opaque, but the incentive is obvious: recruit aggressively.

Residual commissions add another layer. Affiliates who sell two Premium Challenge Packs to recruits within their first 90 days unlock ongoing payments. With 40 personal points monthly, they pocket $10 for each pack their recruits sell to retail customers. It's a cascading system designed to reward those at the top.

This structure has all the hallmarks of a multilevel marketing operation. Affiliates' primary income comes from recruitment fees dressed up as autoship purchases, not from actual retail demand for coins. The monthly purchase requirements lock people into spending even when they're not making sales.

ISN Coins has already tried this twice. Mint Builder failed. The original venture collapsed. Now, three years after registering the domain, Barkes is relaunching under new branding with the same business model.

For people recruited into QuickSilver, the odds are brutal. Most affiliates in MLM structures lose money. Those at the bottom subsidize commissions for those above them through their required purchases. Without a genuine retail customer base—and there's no evidence QuickSilver has one—the whole operation becomes a transfer of cash from new recruits to existing members.

It's the same game with different packaging. The company name changed. The founder remained the same.


🤖 Quick Answer

What is QuickSilver and its connection to ISN Coins?
QuickSilver is a cryptocurrency scheme launched by Quick Silver Global LLC, a Florida-based company registered through a UPS store address. It represents the third cryptocurrency venture linked to ISN Coins founder Matt Barkes, following the failed Mint Builder project from 2017, marketed as a new asset acquisition platform.

Who operates QuickSilver and what transparency issues exist?
QuickSilver Global LLC operates the scheme with minimal public disclosure regarding its management structure. The domain quicksilver.me was registered in December 2018, but comprehensive operational transparency remains absent, raising concerns about accountability and regulatory oversight.

What is the track record of ISN Coins' previous ventures?
ISN Coins' previous cryptocurrency projects, including Mint Builder launched in 2017, appear defunct with websites ranking approximately 3-4


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