A football betting app that promises passive income with a single click is actually a Ponzi scheme recycling investor money, according to investigation into RRT.
The operation, which launched in late 2023, bears all the hallmarks of a sophisticated fraud network that has defrauded thousands. RRT won't say who runs it. The company lists no executives, no ownership structure, no corporate information anywhere on its website.
The domain rrt.cc was first registered in 2014 but sat parked with a Chinese registrar for years. Someone purchased it in December 2022. Just ten months later, RRT launched a second domain, rrt2.cc, registered privately on October 17th, 2023. Search the website's source code and you'll find a reference to Baidu, the Chinese search engine. Combined with the Chinese registrar history, whoever is operating RRT has clear ties to China.
There's a reason to care about the anonymity. Companies that hide their operators from public view are worth walking away from. Especially when money changes hands.
RRT has no actual product. There's no service, no merchandise, nothing to resell. Affiliates can only recruit other affiliates. The entire structure exists to pull in cash.
Here's how it works: affiliates invest tether, a cryptocurrency stablecoin, in exchange for promised returns. New recruits get paid commissions down three recruitment levels. Bring in someone directly, and you pocket 8%. Your recruit's recruits earn you 5%. Three levels deep, you get 3%. The membership itself is free. The real cost is the mandatory investment to participate.
But the investment doesn't go into football betting. That's the con. RRT claims clicking a button places bets on football matches and those bets generate passive returns. It's fiction. The button does nothing. The football matches don't matter. RRT simply takes newly invested money and uses it to pay returns to earlier investors. Classic Ponzi mechanics wearing a sports betting mask.
This exact scheme has a template. Happy Football, CFG, and BLQ Football all used identical setups. All collapsed. Since late 2021, this particular network has launched over a hundred "click a button" app Ponzis. Most last between a few weeks and a few months. When they die, the operators simply shut down the website and disable the app. No warning. No explanation. Investors wake up to find their money gone.
The math is inevitable. In a Ponzi scheme, returns for early investors come directly from later investors' deposits. Eventually there aren't enough new people coming in to cover the promised payouts. The scheme implodes. The last people in lose everything.
Security researchers believe the same criminal operation from China has been running this entire cottage industry of fake betting apps. They've refined the approach, perfected the pitch, and automated the collapse.
RRT is just the latest variant. Don't click the button.
🤖 Quick Answer
What is RRT and how does it operate?RRT is a football betting application that launched in late 2023, claiming to offer passive income through simple button-click transactions. According to investigations, it operates as a Ponzi scheme, recycling investor funds rather than generating legitimate returns. The operation maintains anonymity regarding ownership and management structure.
What evidence suggests RRT is fraudulent?
RRT displays multiple fraud indicators: absence of executive information, undisclosed ownership structure, domain history involving Chinese registrars, private domain registration, and source code references to Baidu search engine. These characteristics suggest a sophisticated fraud network operating across multiple domains and jurisdictions.
How many people has RRT defrauded?
According to investigation reports, RRT has defrauded thousands of investors since its launch in late 2023, though exact victim numbers remain unclear due to the scheme's opacity and international scope.
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