This is a version of Pyramid Scheme Scam.
Trisonet 'Christian Wealth Community' Pyramid Scheme
Trisonet presents itself as a faith-driven community where members ("citizens") can supposedly achieve "godly wealth" by joining and recruiting others into the program. New members must buy a digital asset called "Gkwth" to start, and then face strong pressure to recruit six more people within six weeks to maintain their benefits. The scheme heavily uses religious messaging, fake testimonials, and staged prize giveaways (such as claiming to win iPads, which are actually cheap tablets) to build trust and attract more recruits. In reality, participants only lose money while early organizers profit.
What’s different in this version
These traits set this message apart from the usual pattern.
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Uses religious faith and community language to disguise a classic pyramid scheme.
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Requires participants to pay upfront and recruit others within a set timeframe.
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Heavily promotes fake giveaways (such as iPads) and staged testimonials.
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Staff and supposed winners are often the same people or leaders of the scheme.
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Connected to multiple similar organizations and domains with shifting online identities.
How this scam works
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You are invited to join a group or opportunity that promises quick, guaranteed, or 'special' returns, often using phrases like 'community wealth,' 'blessings,' or 'exclusive club.'
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You are told you must pay a membership fee or buy into a 'starter kit' or digital asset before taking part.
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To earn rewards, you must recruit more people, who must also pay similar fees. The cycle continues, with each new participant pressured to find others.
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Sometimes, the scheme is disguised as a faith-based group, investment club, or self-improvement program to appear more trustworthy.
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Fake testimonials and staged success stories are used to convince you that real people are making money.
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As the scheme grows, it becomes harder for new members to recruit enough people. Eventually, payments dry up and most people lose their money.
✓ Do this
- Be cautious of any group or opportunity that requires you to pay money upfront and then recruit others to earn rewards.
- Look for clear signs of real products or services being sold. If there aren't any, it's a major red flag.
- Ask independent people for advice before investing any money or recruiting others.
- Search the internet for the group name and the words 'pyramid scheme' or 'scam' to see what comes up.
- Report the scheme to your local authorities if you think you or someone you know has been targeted.
✗ Avoid this
- Don’t pay money just to join a group or program that promises you’ll make money for recruiting other people.
- Don’t feel pressured to involve your friends, family, or church if you’re not completely sure the opportunity is legitimate.
- Don’t trust testimonials or 'winners' you see online—they may be staged or paid promoters.
- Don’t give out your personal information if something feels off, especially if the group is secretive about its founders or business.
Verbatim excerpts from the scam
Exact lines from emails or messages—searchable text so you can compare wording.
- 1 Excerpt 1“TrisoNet Community is a Community where every citizen is wealthy through the power of TrisoNet Asset (Gkwth). Should you be interested to be one of our citizens? Then click on Get Started…”
- 2 Excerpt 2“The pioneer partner agrees with the mandatory selling of a minimum of 6 units… to 6 different persons within the first 6 weeks.”
- 3 Excerpt 3“All rewards are guaranteed by Godly wealth and community blessings.”