Union Business Online, registered owner of the Unetenet website domain since March 12, 2009, lists an address at 3691 Route 9, Cold Spring, New York 10516. That location, however, appears as a solitary warehouse building with no tenant directory identifying either Unetenet or Union Business Online.

The Unetenet website provides no information on its owners or operators. Visitors can only submit an email address or log in as an affiliate. Such an opaque structure raises questions for any multi-level marketing company.

Unetenet's website does not list any retail products or services. Its Terms and Conditions, translated from Spanish, state that "All affiliates with any Unetenet package must pay a subscription fee and a monthly or yearly discount for Active Members to be considered." These subscriptions appear to be the sole offerings affiliates can market within the Unetenet opportunity. The refund policy also ties access to "products and services" directly to these subscription fees.

The company does not make its compensation plan public on its website. This structure likely centers on recruiting new affiliates and investment into "franchise plans."

Unetenet affiliates earn direct recruitment commissions for each new paid affiliate they enroll. These commissions are $30 for a Basic affiliate, $40 for a Basic Annual, $50 for a Premium, and $100 for a Premium Annual affiliate.

Higher commissions are available for "International Director" ranked affiliates. To qualify, an International Director must personally recruit at least three other International Director-qualified affiliates. They must also fill the first six levels of their matrix for a minimum of 12 consecutive months. These premium commissions vary based on the percentage of Premium affiliates filling the qualified matrix. An affiliate with 40% Premium affiliates receives $50,000. This payout escalates to $100,000 for 50%, $250,000 for 60%, $500,000 for 70%, $750,000 for 80%, and a top-tier $1,000,000 for 90% Premium affiliates.

Unetenet also pays matrix commissions, structured using a 5x5 matrix. The heavy reliance on recruitment fees and the absence of verifiable retail products suggest a business model focused on affiliate acquisition over genuine sales.