Solar Group’s new Ponzi ruse is Aerostatica zeppelins
Solar Group’s “slavyanka motor” Ponzi ruse appears to have run its course.
On August 7th, Solar Group revealed its new Ponzi ruse – Aerostatica zeppelins.
Solar Group’s original Ponzi ruse was built around idolizing Dmitry Duyunov as an inventor.
Duyunov was conspicuously absent from Solar Group’s recent event. They did however present a new group of old men investor types;
Presently Solar Group’s Aerostatica zeppelins don’t appear to exist outside of AI-generated images.
Why exactly the world needs Solar Group’s Aerostatica zeppelins or how there’s any money to be made is unclear.
What we do know is Solar Group hopes to rinse investors out of $100 million over the next three to five years.
This is on the promise of Solar Group generating a billion in revenue over the same period.
As of July 2024 SimilarWeb was still tracking ~137,000 monthly visits to Solar Group’s website.
90% of Solar Group’s website traffic originates from Russia, followed by 5% from Finland and 1% from the US.
The Central Bank of Russia are typically on top of MLM crypto Ponzis targeting Russians. As of yet though Russia’s top financial regulator has yet to issue a Solar Group fraud warning.
Zeppelin scams are cool. Imagine the size of these monsters and how can it impress “investors”.
How it (not) works was last shown from German company “Cargolifter” which goes boom in 2002.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CargoLifter
Interisting what amount of money they have burnt over 8 years. Now our Russian scammers want do it for only $100 million. Not even good luck can help.
See CargoLifter’s problem was they actually tried to build the zeppelins.
Had AI-generated user content been where it is now back in 1996, they could have just put out some videos… something something ChatGTP, something something Nvidia – infinity venture capital funds to burn.
Decent enough grift that launched at the wrong time. RIP.