Mareks Pavlovskis is listed as the registered owner of the Weenzee.com domain, which appeared on August 15, 2018. This registration uses a virtual office address in London, UK. The Weenzee website itself offers no information about its operators or corporate structure.

Pavlovskis has no verifiable external connection to Weenzee beyond this domain record. Whether he is a real individual remains unconfirmed. This lack of transparency about ownership is a common red flag in investment schemes. Regulators worldwide frequently warn against anonymous financial platforms.

Weenzee initially focused its marketing efforts across Asia, according to its official YouTube channel. Current website traffic data shows a shift, with Brazil accounting for 27% of visitors, Iran 13%, and India 4%. A "Grand Opening" video, uploaded to the company's YouTube channel, shows an event purportedly held in Berlin, Germany. Individuals speaking with distinct European accents feature prominently in this footage. The use of a German registrar for the domain name might also point to central or eastern European origins for the operators.

The Weenzee platform offers no tangible products or services for retail sale. Its affiliates market only the opportunity to join Weenzee and invest. This structure means no external revenue supports the promised returns.

Affiliates invest funds to acquire WNZ points. These points are not publicly traded on any exchange. Weenzee's owners unilaterally set the internal value of WNZ points. New investors purchase these points at whatever value the administrators dictate at the time.

Once acquired, WNZ points are "parked" with Weenzee for periods ranging from 30 to 365 days. The advertised daily returns vary by investment term. A 30-day investment promises 0.73% daily. This rate increases to 0.88% for 60 days, 0.91% for 90 days, 0.95% for 180 days, and peaks at 0.99% daily for a 365-day term.

The scheme incorporates a rank progression system designed to boost daily returns. A "User" (basic investor) receives the base rates. Advancing to "User+" requires investing at least $100 and generating $300 from a downline of 10 or more investors, adding a 1% daily bonus. Higher ranks, such as "Leader Pro," demand a personal investment of at least $50,000 and the generation of $10,000,000 from a downline exceeding 5,000 investors. This top rank offers an additional 15% daily return.

This multi-tiered structure links investor returns directly to the recruitment of new participants and the funds they bring in. Such a model is characteristic of a Ponzi scheme, where payouts to earlier investors rely entirely on capital from later investors. Without an actual product or service generating external revenue, the system inevitably collapses when new investor funds cease.

Potential investors should exercise extreme caution with platforms that conceal their operators, offer high, fixed returns, and require recruitment for increased payouts. The Financial Conduct Authority in the UK, for instance, frequently issues warnings against unauthorized firms promoting such schemes.