I saw my cousin deposit $2,500 into Seokore Technology Inc last month. She showed me the dashboard — green numbers, ‘daily returns’, a sleek website registered in New York in 2024. She said it felt ‘legit’. I didn’t say anything then. But two weeks later, she couldn’t withdraw $87 in ‘profits’. And now? Her $2,500 is gone. Not locked. Not delayed. Gone.
Where Your Money Actually Goes
Let’s cut the marketing fluff. Seokore Technology Inc does not trade crypto. It does not run AI bots. It does not hold ‘long-term wallets’ full of Bitcoin or Ethereum. What it holds is a single wallet — and every dollar you send goes straight into it.
You deposit $1,000. They credit your account with $10 — a ‘1% daily return’. That $10 didn’t come from trading. It came from the $1,000 deposited by the person who signed up 37 minutes before you.
You feel good. You add another $500. Then you tell your sister. She deposits $3,000. Her $3,000 pays your next three ‘returns’. Your cousin’s $2,500 paid the ‘profits’ for the first 12 people who joined after her.
This isn’t investing. It’s redistribution — with theft baked in at the top.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — And It Screams Fraud
They advertise ‘daily percentage returns’ — but never specify how much. Let’s assume the lowest plausible claim: just 1.2% per day. That’s what many copycat platforms use to sound ‘conservative’.
Compound that: 1.2% daily = (1.012)365 ≈ 84.7x growth per year.
So $1,000 becomes $84,700 in 12 months.
Now ask yourself: What real-world asset — crypto, stocks, real estate, venture capital — delivers 8,370% annual returns? None. Not even close. The S&P 500 averages 7–10% yearly. Even the wildest bull runs in Bitcoin peaked at ~300% in a single year — and crashed 75% right after.
If Seokore were real, it would be the most profitable enterprise in human history — quietly operating out of a New York registration shell with no auditors, no exchange listings, no public treasury, and zero verifiable trades.

‘Long-Term Investment Platform’? No. It’s a Bucket With a Hole.
Think of Seokore’s wallet like a bucket with a hole in the bottom. Every time someone deposits money, they pour water in. The ‘returns’ you see are just splashes — temporary surface-level gains. The founders skim off the top (they take fees on every deposit, often 5–10%). The rest gets redistributed downward — until the inflow stops.
And when it stops? The bucket empties. Fast. Withdrawal requests stall. Support goes silent. The domain expires. The ‘New York registration’ turns out to be a $199 filing with no physical office, no licensed custodians, no compliance officers — just a name, a logo, and a promise designed to look expensive.
It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.” — Charlie Munger
Who Really Profits?
You don’t. Your cousin doesn’t. The people who joined last week definitely don’t.
The only ones who profit are Brett Ross Primack and whoever controls Seokore Technology Inc. They get fees on every deposit — say, 7%. So for every $10,000 wired in, they pocket $700. Clean. Untraceable. Offshore-friendly.
That’s why they push ‘minimum deposits’ ($250, $500, $1,000) — not to ‘start small’, but to maximize fee volume while minimizing scrutiny. That’s why they hype ‘limited-time bonuses’ and ‘VIP tiers’ — to rush deposits before skepticism sets in.
There is no vault. No portfolio. No strategy. Just one wallet, a spreadsheet, and a countdown until the last deposit clears — and the founders vanish with the entire pool.
If you’ve sent money to Seokore Technology Inc: act now. Contact your bank. File a dispute. Report to the FTC and CFTC. Don’t wait for ‘customer support’ to reply — they won’t. They’re not building something. They’re harvesting.
You deserve better than a bucket with a hole. Don’t let them fill it — only to watch it drain.
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