In the 48 hours since:
Aundray Russell, the CEO and co-owner of Vyb, deleted his Facebook account, and Vyb lost its payment processor.
Megan Lynch, a co-owner of Vyb, hosted a “meltdown” webinar that mainly relied on religious affinity fraud, and the company’s website has been taken down.
Let’s move on to Tyga Pay, Vyb’s previous payment processor; Although Tyga Pay was not mentioned in our analysis, we did see that Vyb was teaching affiliates how to get around fraud protections:
Tyga Pay was contacted by Danny de Hek, well known as YouTube as the Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger.
Tyga Pay notified Hek.
Using our site for pyramid schemes or matrix programs is against our terms and conditions.
TygaPay stopped processing Vyb’s payments until their “compliance team” looked into the matter further.
Co-owner Megan Lynch told affiliates that Vyb was switching to bitcoin exclusively on January 27.
Furthermore,
Lynch said that Vyb was “preparing to move to a bigger … Amazon server” as the cause of the problems. Vyb’s Chief Marketing Officer, Toni Morick, advised affiliates who continue to have problems with Vyb payments to get in touch with their bank’s fraud department.
Vyb’s “thevyb.io” website was taken down earlier today:
The adversary will always come while you’re accomplishing something amazing.
We’re making some little adjustments here and there, but no matter how hard they try, no one can stop brilliance. No weapon developed against us will succeed.
Neither a “enemy” nor “weapons” exist. Several service providers have taken action against Vyb for prelaunching with an unlawful business strategy that defrauds customers.
Lynch continues by drawing a comparison between the Underground Railroad and Vyb, an MLM pyramid scam.
I have not promoted Vyb in any way. I grabbed my phone and sent texts to everyone I knew. Thus, similar to the Underground Railroad, we met underground.
I’m not sure how Lynch’s daily webinar promotion of Vyb qualifies as “doing nothing.”
AI comes next in Lynch’s arsenal of justifications for why Vyb is a pyramid scheme.
Anything you see online shouldn’t concern you. It’s not me if you hear sounds. It’s artificial intelligence. They already know what’s going to happen [on] February 17th, which is why they are AI’ing my voice because they love me so much.
Vyb isn’t a Ponzi scam, at least not based on what has been made public thus far. However, everything is connected to hiring, thus it’s undoubtedly a pyramid system.
Pastor Carlos is being brought on by her in violation of Lynch’s use of religious affinity fraud to promote Vyb.
Lynch says she hadn’t talked to Carlos “in years” before choosing to start a pyramid scheme, and she says he’s “new in her faith.” Carlos, however, allegedly contacted her unexpectedly and asked her to “pray on [the] business.”I didn’t get scared, did I? I sensed it in my spirit, therefore it didn’t.
Carlos continues to misrepresent the truth regarding pyramid schemes while serving as a pastor.
Look at Megan You must realize that many people believe that everything you do is intended to do harm to others. However, you are here to assist people, not to harm them.
As a result, many individuals are unaware of your motivations, objective, or heart behind your activity. in support of this mission.
Rubber-stamping pyramid scam in the name of God is the best way to describe the remainder of Carlos’ tirade. Carlos exhorts the webinar attendees to “get on in” to Vybe, saying that “God has called them to do it.”
We’ll keep you informed if there are any new developments.