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

JAUSD operates from two known website domains:

  • jausd.io – privately registered on June 1st, 2024
  • jausd.net – privately registered on May 31st, 2024

If we click on the support section of JAUSD’s website, we learn it runs on the Meiqia platform.

Meiqia is a Chinese software company based out of Beijing. This suggests whoever is running JAUSD has ties to China.

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.

JAUSD’s Products

JAUSD has no retailable products or services.

Affiliates are only able to market JAUSD affiliate membership itself.

JAUSD’s Compensation Plan

JAUSD affiliates invest tether. This is done on the promise of advertised returns:

There are eight investment tiers in JAUSD, however specific details are not provided.

Ditto details on JAUSD’s three levels of referral commissions.

Joining JAUSD

JAUSD affiliate membership is free.

Full participation in JAUSD’s income opportunity requires an undisclosed minimum investment in USDT.

JAUSD Conclusion

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

JAUSD’s “click a button” Ponzi ruse is quantitative trading:

The presented ruse is JAUSD affiliates log in and click a button (the more invested the more the button needs to be clicked).

Clicking the button purportedly generates revenue via quantitative trading, which for some reason JAUSD shares a percentage of with affiliate investors.

If that makes no sense it’s because it doesn’t. Randoms clicking a button in an app doesn’t trigger quantitative trading.

In reality clicking a button inside JAUSD does nothing. All JAUSD does is recycle newly invested funds to pay earlier investors.

JAUSD is part of a group of “click a button” app Ponzis that have emerged since late 2021.

Examples of already collapsed “click a button” app Ponzis using the same quantitative trading ruse include GSTAIQDusery and edX AI.

Including JAUSD, BehindMLM has thus far documented over a hundred “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).

The same group of Chinese scammers are believed to be behind the “click a button” app Ponzi plague.