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Zionix Global Loses Two Domains, Misleads Investors on Reboot

Zionix Global company logo representing the report on Zionix Global losing two domains and misleading investors about its reboot.

On October 26, 2025, Zionix Global, a rebranded iteration of the collapsed Zater Capital MLM crypto Ponzi scheme, lost control of its .net domain, which was placed on “clientHold” status by its registrar, rendering it inactive in the DNS, per ICANN rules. The original zionixglobal.com domain, registered July 17, 2025, was redirected to the .net version (registered August 7, 2025) but has not been reinstated, suggesting it too may no longer be under control, per. This follows a pattern of instability for the scheme, which rebranded from Zater Capital in July 2025 under Jenna Zwagil, after original promoter Ron Cartey vanished in August 2025, per DeCripto.org.

Deceptive "Maintenance" Announcement Hides Domain Switch

Instead of disclosing the domain losses, Zionix Global emailed investors on October 27, 2025, claiming a “System Maintenance & Server Optimization Update” due to “exponential growth,” assuring “full functionality soon,” per. In reality, the company registered a third domain, zionixglobal.ai, on October 26, 2025, and announced the switch on October 28 without explanation, per. This misdirection aligns with Ponzi tactics to retain investor trust amid operational failures, as the new .ai domain points to the same hosting infrastructure, per. A scheduled webinar with Zwagil on October 31, 2025, may address the issue, but transparency is unlikely given the scheme’s history, per.

Zionix Global's Fraudulent Roots and Global Warnings

Zionix Global operates as an MLM Ponzi, promising AI-powered trading returns funded by new investor funds, with a Wyoming shell company registration lacking investment licenses, per DeCripto.org. Linked to prior scams like Eaconomy, Iqonic, and AkashX (fraud warning by New Zealand’s FMA in May 2025), it targets desperate recruits with high ROIs, per. Traffic to Zionix sites is low, with similarweb data showing negligible visits, primarily from the U.S., Germany, and the UK, per. The scheme’s reboot attempts, including international events in Dubai (October 2025) and Thailand (January 2026), aim to sustain recruitment, per BusinessForHome.org.

Investor Risks and Regulatory Outlook

Zionix Global exemplifies ongoing crypto Ponzi risks, with potential for sudden collapse as domains fail and affiliates dry up, per. Investors should immediately withdraw funds and report to authorities like the SEC via sec.gov or CFTC at cftc.gov, per. Bitcoin (BTC) ($113,234) and Ethereum (ETH) ($4,070) remain stable, per CoinMarketCap, but avoid similar schemes promising unrealistic yields. Diversify into USDC or ETH with stop-losses below BTC’s $112,000, per TradingView. Follow @TheBlock__ on X for fraud alerts. As regulatory scrutiny intensifies under SEC Chair Paul Atkins, schemes like Zionix may face shutdowns by 2026, per.

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