Let’s cut the fluff.
There’s a thing circulating online called URGENT NEED OF PARTICIPANTS!.
It looks like a student survey. It talks about AI tools. It says it’s for a Master’s thesis. It even promises confidentiality.
Then — buried in the fine print, or whispered in DMs, or slipped into a follow-up message — comes the kicker: 7% daily returns.
Seven. Percent. Every. Single. Day.
Pause. Breathe. Ask the question nobody’s asking:
If this thing really prints 7% every day — why does it need YOU?
Not your brain. Not your opinion. Not your ‘valuable feedback.’ Your money. Your $500. Your rent money. Your emergency fund.
Think about it. 7% per day compounds to 1,443% in one month. Do the math:
$500 × (1.07)30 = $500 × 7.61 = $3,805 in 30 days.
Do it again the next month? You’re at nearly $29,000.
Do it for 12 months? You’re not just rich — you’re untouchable. You’re printing more money than most hedge funds see in a decade.
So tell me: if someone had that kind of edge — a real, working, risk-free 7% daily machine — would they be begging strangers to fill out a Google Form?
No.
They’d mortgage their house. They’d max out credit cards. They’d beg their grandma for her pension. They’d go to banks with spreadsheets and term sheets — not TikTok comments.
The truth is simple: no legitimate strategy delivers 7% daily without insane risk — and zero legitimate strategy needs your participation to keep running.
This isn’t investing. It’s redistribution. New deposits pay old withdrawals. That’s not finance — it’s arithmetic with a smiley face.

And don’t let the ‘thesis’ cover fool you. Real academic research doesn’t promise returns. Real researchers don’t ask for your bank details ‘to verify eligibility.’ Real students don’t DM you with links after you click ‘submit.’
This is a costume. A very convincing one — because it wears the clothes of legitimacy: academia, tech buzzwords, anonymity, ‘confidentiality.’ But costumes don’t earn compound interest. People do. And the only people earning here are the ones collecting your cash before the music stops.
Ray Dalio once said: ‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’
Translation? Just because the first three payouts cleared doesn’t mean the fourth will. Just because someone sent you $35 last Tuesday doesn’t mean they’ll send $37.50 next Tuesday. It means they’ve successfully hooked you — and now they’re waiting for you to add more, refer friends, or go all-in.
Here’s the cold, hard test: walk away for 30 days. Don’t log in. Don’t check the dashboard. Don’t refresh. Then come back.
If it’s still paying — and growing — without you lifting a finger? Maybe, just maybe, it’s real.
But if the ‘dashboard’ goes dark… if the ‘support team’ stops replying… if your ‘daily return’ turns into a ‘system maintenance notice’ — then you’ll know exactly what URGENT NEED OF PARTICIPANTS! actually needed:
Your trust. Your money. And your silence until it was too late.
Don’t wait for the collapse. Walk away now — while you still can withdraw.
You didn’t sign up for a thesis.
You were recruited for the exit liquidity.
That’s not education.
That’s extraction.
So ask yourself — one last time — before you type in your card number:
Why do they need me?
If the answer isn’t ‘they don’t,’ then close the tab. Right now.
Expose scammer


















