Seacret Direct Is Quietly Taking Over WorldVentures—And Ditching Their Unpaid Commissions

A supposed merger between WorldVentures and Seacret Direct is collapsing in plain sight, leaving thousands of affiliates unpaid and abandoned.

WorldVentures went silent on social media in November. Seacret Direct keeps marketing like nothing happened. Both companies have left their army of salespeople hanging without answers about the deal's status.

This week, WorldVentures sent an email to its affiliates offering them a path forward: sign up with Seacret Direct. But there's a catch buried in the fine print that amounts to a confession of financial disaster.

The Seacret Direct affiliate agreement contains a "commission clarification" clause that explicitly wipes away any money WorldVentures owes its people. According to the document, by registering with Seacret, affiliates agree that Seacret "shall not be responsible or obligated in any way to satisfy WV's obligations or to pay me any such WV commissions, payments, or other obligations."

The language is blunt: affiliates waive their right to sue over unpaid commissions from WorldVentures.

The fact that Seacret is putting this clause on a standard registration form offered to WorldVentures affiliates tells you something important. This isn't a one-off situation. The unpaid commission problem is massive enough that Seacret is forcing everyone through this legal waiver before they can even join.

No one knows the total amount owed. WorldVentures affiliates have been generating sales commissions for months, possibly years, and they won't see a penny of it.

Behind the scenes, money appears to be moving anyway. Seacret Direct is transferring cash to Spherature Investments LLC, the parent company of both WorldVentures and Rovia. Spherature's owners—Wayne Nugent, Daniel Stammen, Michael A. Azcue, and Kenneth J. Doherty—are getting paid while their salespeople get nothing.

The company structure is deliberately murky. WorldVentures operates under multiple corporate entities: Spherature Investments LLC, World Ventures Holdings LLC, World Ventures Marketing, and Rovia LLC. Any commissions owed by any of these names, the Seacret agreement specifies, are not Seacret's problem.

This isn't a failed merger. It's a calculated handoff designed to leave unpaid salespeople with no one to sue and no way to recover what they're owed.

WorldVentures affiliates are discovering that their months of work generated commissions that will never materialize. The company that owes them money is functionally disappearing while its owners pocket payments from the acquiring company. Seacret Direct made sure to get that waiver signed first.

The affiliates caught in the middle have no recourse. They waived their rights the moment they clicked "I agree."


🤖 Quick Answer

# AOP Block: Seacret Direct & WorldVentures

What is the alleged relationship between Seacret Direct and WorldVentures?
Seacret Direct is reportedly acquiring WorldVentures through a merger process. The takeover involves transferring WorldVentures affiliates to Seacret Direct's platform, though both companies have provided minimal public communication regarding the deal's progression and formal completion status.

What commission-related issue emerged from the merger agreement?
The Seacret Direct affiliate agreement includes a "commission clarification" clause that reportedly nullifies previously owed commissions from WorldVentures. This provision effectively eliminates financial obligations to existing affiliates during the transition between companies.

Why did WorldVentures cease social media activity?
WorldVentures went silent on social media platforms in November without official explanation. The communication blackout coincided with the merger negotiations, leaving thousands of


🔗 Related Articles

- SmartSteps Review: NFT task-based MLM crypto Ponzi
- Philippine police officers investing in Crowd1 Ponzi scheme?
- BeOnWise Review: 2.77% a day Boris CEO Ponzi scheme
- Mazu Global Review: Aloe juice with brown algae?
- OneCoin’s Golden Gate Investments ICO is a sham