Wazzub entered pre-launch in late 2011, promising members $1 a month for each recruit. The company made a significant point of its "profit sharing phenomenon." This initial payment structure, however, was quietly scrapped within months. Wazzub then rephrased its compensation around a "success sharing phenomenon," offering 50% of company-generated profits.

Wazzub initially set May 15, 2012, as the date for member payments. This deadline shifted to June 15, 2012. A May 25 webinar confirmed members would not receive payments on the adjusted June 15 date either.

The company stated it generated only about $2,000 in May. Its net profit for the month was negative. This meant no profit existed to share with members.

Wazzub claims over six million members. The $2,000 May revenue equates to roughly 0.03 cents generated per member. This amount did not cover Wazzub's operating expenses, so payments ceased.

Prospects for the July 15 pay date appear unlikely to improve. Alexa estimates show perfectinter.net's traffic increased by 59% in June compared to May. Most of this traffic, however, originates from African nations.

Australia ranks as the first recognized Western country for traffic at position 35. Finland sits at 12. Most countries above Australia in traffic volume are unlikely to generate substantial revenue from advertisers or global e-commerce, which forms the bulk of Wazzub's income model.

Out of Wazzub's claimed six million-plus members, the company reported "thousands" as fake accounts. Only about 30,000 members, or 0.5%, qualified to earn commissions.

Members were first told they only needed to sign up and use perfectinter.net to earn commissions. The requirement later changed, demanding members recruit at least three individuals five generations deep in a unilevel structure and submit proof of identity documents for Wazzub's verification.