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

Instead, visitors to BuildGiver’s website are presented with low-effort AI-generated slop:

A marketing video featured on BuildGiver’s website is an unlisted video hosted on a YouTube channel named “BuildGiver”. If we look at the channel description, we find a FaceBook group link:

The linked FaceBook group is named “Focus Invite Codes”. The group is private with one admin; “Roem BuildGiver”.

On the Roem BuildGiver profile we find more BuildGiver marketing:

The profile has been renamed at least three times and has been used to promote scams for over a decade.

If we look at the photo history of the profile we find its owner:

On Roem Emverda’s correctly named FaceBook profile we find more BuildGiver marketing:

Instead of being honest and owning up to owning and running BuildGiver, Emverda appears to be publishing “creator” updates using the initials “M.R.”:

Scams Emverda promoted prior to launching BuildGiver include Focus (failed crypto social network), Empower Life (pyramid scheme) and OnPassive (securities fraud):

The SEC sued OnPassive and founder Ashraf Mufareh for fraud in 2023. Mufareh settled with the SEC for $32 million in August 2025.

As per his FaceBook profile, Emverda is based out of California in the US. It’s assumed this is where Build Giver is also being operated from.

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.

BuildGiver’s Products

BuildGiver has no retailable products or services.

Promoters are only able to market BuildGiver promoter membership itself.

BuildGiver’s Compensation Plan

BuildGiver promoters gift funds to whoever recruited them. This qualifies them to receive gifting payments from subsequently recruited promoters.

BuildGiver hides gifting payment amounts and specific compensation plan details from consumers.

BuildGiver’s marketing references “phases”:

In gifting schemes this typically pertains to matrices and multiple gifting tiers (i.e. each “phase” requires a higher amount gifting payment to enter).

Joining BuildGiver

BuildGiver promoter membership is free.

Full participation in the attached income opportunity requires undisclosed gifting payments.

BuildGiver Conclusion

There’s not much to BuildGiver. It’s an illegal gifting scheme run by a serial promoter of fraudulent schemes.

The secrecy surrounding BuildGiver, from hiding gifting payment details and Roem Emverda hiding behind an alias is testament to the illegal business model.

In an attempt to justify fraud, BuildGiver uses “donation” terminology. The scheme also refers to its business model as “private activity giving”.

This pseudo-compliance does not legalize BuildGiver’s gifting scheme.

MLM gifting schemes operate using pyramid scheme business models. Charges related to gifting schemes in the US are wire fraud, tax evasion and/or FTC Act violations.

Gifting schemes in the US are regulated and prosecuted by the FTC, USPS, IRS and DOJ.

As with all MLM gifting schemes, once promoter recruitment dries up so too will gifting payments.

This will see those at the bottom of BuildGiver, i.e. those who haven’t scammed others to recoup their losses, lose money.

Math guarantees that, at any given time, the largest group in a gifting scheme prior to collapse is those who haven’t recouped buy-in payment.

It should be noted that BuildGiver marketing cites the launch of “2 companies”:

This suggests that, in addition to BuildGiver, Roem Emverda might intend to launch another scam simultaneously.