DGPT fails to provide ownership or executive information on its website.

DGPT has three known website domains:

  1. dgpt.club – registered with bogus information on August 27th, 2024
  2. ai.dgpt.club – DGPT app access
  3. dgpt.cloud – privately registered on July 7th, 2023 (already abandoned)

Of note is DGPT’s .CLUB website domain being registered through the Chinese registrar Alibaba (Singapore).

Additionally if we check the source-code of DGPT’s website support page, we learn it runs on the Meiqia platform:

Whoever is running DGPT very likely has ties to China.

DGPT has already attracted the attention of financial regulators. The Central Bank of Russia issued a DGPT pyramid fraud warning on October 1st, 2024.

As always, if an MLM company is not openly upfront about who is running or owns it, think long and hard about joining and/or handing over any money.

DGPT’s Products

DGPT has no retailable products or services.

Affiliates are only able to market DGPT affiliate membership itself.

DGPT’s Compensation Plan

DGPT affiliates invest tether (USDT). This is done on the promise of advertised returns:

  • RTX4090 – invest 100 USDT and receive 110 USDT over 10 days
  • L40S – invest 100 USDT and receive 160 USDT over 1 month
  • RTX6000 – invest 100 USDT and receive 230 USDT over 2 months
  • A5000 – invest 500 USDT and receive 1500 USDT over 3 months
  • A100 – invest 2000 USDT and receive 10,000 USDT over 5 months
  • H100 – invest 5000 USDT and receive 35,000 USDT over 7 months

DGPT also offers “accelerator” investment plans:

  • Primary Text Task – invest 50 USDT and receive 1.6 USDT a day
  • Accelerator 2 – invest 100 USDT and receive 3.4 USDT a day
  • Accelerator 3 – invest 200 USDT and receive 7 USDT a day

DGPT pays referral commissions on invested USDT down three levels of recruitment (unilevel):

  • level 1 (personally recruited affiliates) – 5% to 8%
  • level 2 – 3% to 6%
  • level 3 – 1% to 4%

The more an affiliate invests and convinces other to invest, the higher their referral commission rate.

Joining DGPT

DGPT affiliate membership is free.

Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires a minimum 50 USDT investment.

DGPT Conclusion

DGPT is yet another “click a button” app Ponzi scheme.

DGPT’s Ponzi ruse is AI cloud computing.

DGPT encourages users to connect the arithmetic power of idle personal devices (e.g., mobile phones and computers) to the platform, converting them into rentable arithmetic resources.

This allows individual users to earn income by renting out idle arithmetic power, while enterprises can rent this arithmetic power to meet large-scale computing needs.

The assigned task in DGPT is clicking a button to help train AI. This sees DGPT affiliate investors log in daily to “click a button”.

The more a DGPT affiliate invests the more times a day they have to click the button. Clicking the button the required amount of times daily qualifies DGPT investors for daily returns.

If that makes no sense it’s because it doesn’t. Clicking a button inside DGPT’s app does nothing, there is no external revenue. All DGPT does is recycle newly invested funds to pay earlier investors.

Examples of recently collapsed “click a button” app Ponzis are Nykaa MallFresnillo PLC USDT and Lime Mall.

If you’re wondering what’s up with DGPT having two website domains, it appears the original .CLOUD domain Ponzi collapsed.

Tracking invested funds on the blockchain, Decripto claims DGPT’s original Ponzi took in around $10 million. Now the DGPT scammers are back on a second domain for another bite.

Since 2021 BehindMLM has documented hundreds of “click a button” app Ponzis. Most of them last a few weeks to a few months before collapsing

“Click a button” app Ponzis disappear by disabling both their websites and app. This tends to happen without notice, leaving the majority of investors with a loss (inevitable Ponzi math).

Organized crime interests from China operate scam factories behind “click a button” Ponzis from south-east Asian countries.

In September 2024, the US Department of Treasury sanctioned Cambodian politician Ly Yong Phat over ties to Chinese human trafficking scam factories.

Through various companies he owns, Phat is alleged to shelter Chinese scammers operating out of Cambodia.

Regardless of which country they operate from, the same group of Chinese scammers are believed to be behind the “click a button” app Ponzi plague.