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Rx Kid
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Nov 21, 2005
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I am not really sure how many people have already heard of this. It is a very new thing to me and it seems very legit but was looking to see if anyone has done it with success or failure. Here is how it works though for those of you that have not heard of it. It is a website where you can buy "upgrades" for six dollars a piece and can buy anywhere from one to a thousand of these upgrades. Each day for twelve days you have to autosurf the internet through their webpage for approximately five minutes. For each day of the twelve days you do this 12 percent of your original investment is deposited back to you. For every day that you do not surf they take away twelve percent of what you put in. It is a very simple thing to do each day. I personally click a button take a quick shower, come back and it is done. All of this is advantageous because at the end of twelve days you have 144 % from what you started with.

The first day you give them a hundred dollars(for example's sake we will pretend this is evenly divisible by six since you can't buy partial "upgrades.") Your hundred dollars will be gone and you will have no money in your account. After you surf on this day though, you will have twelve dollars, after the second day, twenty four dollars. After twelve days (if you surf every day) you will have 144 dollars. You can invest up to six thousand dollars in which case you would make 2600 dollars every 12 days. After the money is deposited back you may do what you want, keep investing or walk away. This seems way to good to be true but for now im going to believe it. My personal plan is to make what i started with pull it out and invest my profits so I can't get fucked over. Any thoughts on this? Experience? If this sounds interesting to you and want to talk about it with me more feel free to reply, if you would like to start now you can use this link:

http://www.12dailypro.com/?ref=334834

I am also not trying to get free money(well I am, but only kind of) they pay you a certain percentage each time you refer someone, I would appreciate if you used this link because it will give me referal money if/when you were to buy your upgrades, you can also pitch the idea to your friends and get there referall money

* I am in no way affiliated with this site, I am just someone looking to earn some extra cash and felt that I would be enlightening people here on a possible way for them to do that too and i do acknowledge that in the process i am making money off of you making money*

hope everyone has a great night:toast:
 
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Rx Kid
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Nov 21, 2005
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Big Money Maker....Very Little Work

just trying to get some more people to see this, i think/hope it is a great way to make some money, if you have any questions you can email me at my address from the rx jehiggs@davidson.edu
 

Rx Kid
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Nov 21, 2005
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an "upgrade" is just the unit they use, like someone buying a stock or anything like that, i too thought that it was a pyramid scheme to begin with, but with this place, i am surfing twelve web pages a day for thirty seconds each, this is the five minutes of work you have to do each day. so basically they are paying you to give other websites more hits, which im guessing makes them more money, so they need you to hit the sites, so they too can make more money, but if people have other info, id love to hear about it, im somewhat skeptical but figure after twelve days i can take my original input out and just compound the profit, if i do get scammed somehow, which i dont foresee happening, i have come away with no money lost and if it lasts long enough, i will have made money, just my thoughts, have a good day
 

New member
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Nov 4, 2005
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I took a look at the site and it all seems very suspicious. From what I can gather, they claim to make money by hiring people to surf client sites in order to boost traffic and bolster search engine placement, paying a 12 percent non-compounded return daily.

This raises more red flags than a May Day parade in Moscow.

I certainly wouldn't tell a person how to spend their own money, but trying to make a test withdrawal of some profits might not be a bad idea.
 

New member
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Nov 1, 2005
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This is legit!

I understand that a lot of people when they hear about this will think that it is a scam. However, I have been doing this for about 5 months now, and it has been foolproof. I started off by putting in a small amount of money, and it worked. I eventually put in the maximum amount of $6,000, and it still worked. Essentially, if you put the maximum amount in for an entire year, you will make around $72,000 per year. Yeah, it seems ridiculous, but I have already made over $20,000 thus far.
 

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You've made $20,000 in five months? For spending five minutes a day online? This sounds like the very definition of a pyramid scheme: People at the bottom level invest money to pay the people at higher levels. It all works well until not enough new investors can be recruited, then it crashes.

Have you tried getting a withdrawal on any substantial part of that $20K?
 

Rx Kid
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Nov 21, 2005
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after reading peroushdy's post it makes me feel much more comfortable about my situation, i know i cant answer it for him, but i think he would have to have gotten the money back, from what ive seen, you would have to pull out the money each time, so my guess would be he has seen all of these returns in his bank account
 

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Higgory is right. Once the 12 day period is up, it goes immediately into your bank account and then you redeposit another set of upgrades.
 

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It looks like the pyramid may have collapsed. This is from a posting on the 12dailypro site:

We Are Being MisRepresented - by Charis - 12dp Admin at 2006-02-03 07:17:42
We have recieved notice that a group of 12daily Pro members who are students at a Utah university have created and have been promoting a website to fellow students, that falsely claims we are investment opportunity and urging students to contact them if they want to place an investment with our company. They have also been handing out business cards with our name on them. These students may have also given the impression that we are a pyramind scheme of sorts, which we cannot in adctuality be beccause we offer only a simple one level referral program.

Our terms clearly state that 12dp is not an investment opportunity and we have never presented it as such.

It seems that there are multiple sites and groups of our members doing similiar things. This has created a very difficult situation for us. None of these things were approved or sanctioned by our program.

Due to questions being raised, we want to be proactive in cooperating with any authorities that may want to ask questions. We feel at this time, it is best that we stop accepting upgrade purchases while we attempt to prove to whoever may question, exactly what our business model is and is not.

We are unsure what this will mean for the future of the program, but we want you to know we will do our best to communicate what is happening to you. We will also be formulating a refund strategy should that become necessary.

Our funds remain frozen with StormPay so we have no idea at this point how long that refund process will take.

Please know we are going to do all we can to prove that all we have done here is offer people a effective way to promote their online businesses and earn by engaging with the advertising of other members.

We will post news items as we have more information. Should the site need to be taken down for any reason as a result of these matters, you can still contact us by fax if needed. 1-866-308-0133

As I have supported and worked for you all over the past 10 months, I hope that I can count on your support in this matter as well.

Thank you.
 

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Mar 5, 2005
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YourAllAmerican, do you know exactly what's going at 12dp? Before you jump to any conclusion, please do a good research about the company. Let me give you some info. Try to get into the forum that dedicated for all 12dp members, you don't have to be one just to surf in there. Look around to see if there are any negative about the company. Also check out the "I got pay" section and see how many people got paid for the last 10 months. Ever heard of a company called StormPay? Check that out also to see how they screw up other people? What is the relationship between 12dp and StormPay?
Before you make any judgement, you should check everything out because there are alot of people on this forum know what's going on.
 

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I did spend some time checking things out. I went and looked through the forum and looked around other discussions and sites on the Web, those talking about 12dailypro and Stormpay. I'm aware of the fallout between te two companies.

After looking into 12dailypro, my opinion is that it's almost assuredly a pyramid scheme, and you CAN get paid in a pyramid scheme if you get in early enough. It's when the base gets too large to sustain itself that it breaks down, meaning the people who get in last don't get paid.

I suppose it's possible 12dailypro will get things together and find a way to pay more people, but it wouldn't be a shocker if they don't.
 

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I work in the digital currency industry, which shyster operations like 12DP pollute. These deals are very very very obviously nothing more than Ponzi schemes. This hasn't prevented a cottage industry from springing up around them, and it has been suprisingly persistent over the seven years or so that I have observed it. One would think that people would eventually get a little smarter.


Phaedrus
 

The Dude Abides
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Sep 21, 2004
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Here u go didnt take long

SEC Alleges Internet Ponzi Scheme
Freeze of Assets Is Sought
After Offer of 44% Return
For Looking at Online Ads

By MARK MAREMONT
February 27, 2006; Page C8

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed a court action seeking to freeze the assets of 12DailyPro, and the agency is accusing the Web site and its operator of running an Internet Ponzi scheme that the SEC said has raised more than $50 million from more than 300,000 investors who were promised huge profits on their money.
The asset-freeze motion, filed late Friday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles, seeks to have a receiver appointed to oversee the operations of 12DailyPro and its parent, LifeClicks LLC, according to an attorney familiar with the filing. The Internet company's operator, a Charlotte, N.C., woman named Charis Johnson, has agreed to the proposed order, according to the attorney. The filing wasn't available immediately through the court's electronic documents service.
A judge has yet to rule on the proposed order but judicial approval is considered likely.
Started last spring, 12DailyPro promised "members" that they could earn 44% returns on their money in just 12 days simply by viewing Web advertisements. Thousands of people from all over the world put up membership fees of as much as $6,000 every dozen days. For a while, some got the profits promised. But early this month, 12DailyPro essentially shut down after its primary online-payment processor, StormPay Inc., froze the company's funds, saying it had been alerted that 12DailyPro may have been conducting a fraud.
The SEC said the amount of investor funds voluntarily frozen by StormPay was about $50 million, the attorney familiar with the filing said, although it is unclear whether the full amount is still available. The SEC also is seeking to freeze about $1.9 million of funds transferred from 12DailyPro to bank accounts controlled by Ms. Johnson.
The 12DailyPro site was among the largest of dozens of so-called autosurf Web sites on the Internet. With names such as Auto.ExchangeTrade.com and Vegasurf.com, the sites ride a legitimate trend -- the surge in Internet advertising -- by promising generous returns to members who agree to view their ads. Most also let members advertise their Web sites to each other.
Autosurf sites can be legitimate, while some promise such huge profits that critics accuse them of running Ponzi schemes. Named for Charles Ponzi, an Italian immigrant to the U.S. who gained notoriety early in the 20th century, a Ponzi scheme is a fraud that promises huge returns to investors but pays them with money from subsequent investors rather than from revenue generated by business.
An attorney for 12DailyPro and Ms. Johnson couldn't be reached for comment. Ms. Johnson released a statement on the 12DailyPro Web site saying her company planned early this week to announce "a compromise" with authorities that "will lead to the resolution of this matter and the beginnings of an accounting and refund process." In the past, Ms. Johnson has maintained that 12DailyPro was a legitimate operation, and she blamed its woes on a commercial dispute with StormPay.
A key figure in the shutdown of 12DailyPro was Barry Minkow, a former carpet-cleaning executive who was convicted of securities fraud in the 1980s before he turned to helping regulators and investigators detect other frauds.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and various state officials also are investigating 12DailyPro.
 

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