Let’s cut the noise. You got a message — maybe on WhatsApp, maybe in a DM, maybe even from someone you haven’t talked to in years — saying: ‘Use code act859911 on Temu and get kr1,000 off… plus 30%… plus up to 90%… and oh yeah — if you refer friends, you earn crypto.’
Wait.
Temu is an e-commerce app. A discount code on Temu doesn’t pay you in Bitcoin. It knocks kr200 off your hoodie order. So why does act859911 keep showing up alongside words like ‘referral bonus’, ‘crypto’, and ‘guaranteed daily returns’?
Because it’s not about Temu.
It’s a Trojan horse. The real product isn’t clothes. It’s you — your money, your contacts, your trust.
Here’s the question nobody asks (but should): If this thing actually prints money — why do they need me?
Think about it. If someone had a system that reliably made 1% profit every single day — no volatility, no risk, just pure, predictable gain — what would they do?
They’d mortgage their house. They’d max out credit cards. They’d beg their grandma for her pension fund. They’d borrow from banks at 6% and pocket the difference. Because 1% daily compounds to 3,778% per year. Let’s do the math:
Start with $1,000.
At 1% per day, after 365 days: $1,000 × (1.01)365 = $38,778.
After 3 years? $1,000 × (1.01)1,095 ≈ $5.7 MILLION.
No investor — not Buffett, not Soros, not some guy who learned ‘crypto’ from a TikTok ad — sits on that kind of edge and then spends $20,000 on Facebook ads targeting Norwegians looking for kr1,000 off a sweater.
They don’t.

But pyramid schemes do. Because pyramids don’t make money from products or trading or algorithms. They make money from *you signing up*, then *your friend signing up*, then *their cousin wiring $500* — and that new cash pays the ‘returns’ to the people who joined two weeks earlier.
That’s why ‘act859911’ shows up with fake urgency (‘limited time!’), fake legitimacy (‘verified user!’), and fake generosity (‘kr1,000 off — plus crypto!’). It’s bait. The ‘discount’ is meaningless. The real ask is hidden in the fine print: ‘Refer 5 friends and unlock your crypto wallet.’ Translation: Bring in more money so the last round of investors gets paid — and so the operators skim 20% off the top.
And let’s be brutally honest: if your ‘investment platform’ needs cold outreach, influencer shills, and discount-code branding to attract users — it’s not a business. It’s a transfer mechanism. From your bank account to theirs.
Warren Buffett once said: ‘Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago. There are no shortcuts.’
There are no shortcuts. There is no secret code. There is no kr1,000-off coupon that unlocks passive income. Real wealth is built slowly — with patience, consistency, and boring things like index funds, emergency savings, and avoiding anything that promises ‘guaranteed daily returns’ while hiding behind a shopping app’s logo.
‘act859911’ isn’t a discount code. It’s a red flag wearing camouflage.
I’ve watched three cousins lose rent money to versions of this. One thought she was ‘testing’ it with $200. She withdrew once — got paid. Then tried $2,000. No payout. Account ‘under review’. Support vanished. Same script. Same lie. Different code.
Don’t be the person who Googles ‘how to recover money from act859911’ after it’s too late.
Ask the obvious question next time: Why do they need me? If the answer involves recruiting, urgency, or crypto ‘bonuses’ tied to a shopping promo — walk away. Fast.
You deserve better than a scam dressed as a sale.
Expose scammer


















