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The Ponzi Scheme Puzzle : A History And Analysi... -

: Collapse occurs when withdrawals exceed new deposits or the pool of recruits dries up. 🕰️ Historical Milestones

If you’d like to dive deeper into a specific area, tell me: (like Madoff, MMM, or Bitconnect) Mathematical models of collapse Psychological tactics used to lure victims I can then provide a detailed breakdown of those mechanics. The Ponzi scheme puzzle : a history and analysi...

The history of Ponzi schemes is a century-long "puzzle" of psychology, misplaced trust, and the mathematical certainty of collapse. Named after Charles Ponzi, these schemes survive by using funds from new investors to pay "returns" to earlier ones, rather than generating actual profit. 🧱 The Architecture of the Scam : Promise of high returns with little to no risk. : Collapse occurs when withdrawals exceed new deposits

: Promised a 50% return in 45 days via international reply coupons. He raked in $15 million in months before the math failed. Named after Charles Ponzi, these schemes survive by

: People trust investments that their friends or community leaders endorse.

: Fraudsters use "proprietary strategies" or technical jargon to discourage deep questioning.

: Collapse occurs when withdrawals exceed new deposits or the pool of recruits dries up. 🕰️ Historical Milestones

If you’d like to dive deeper into a specific area, tell me: (like Madoff, MMM, or Bitconnect) Mathematical models of collapse Psychological tactics used to lure victims I can then provide a detailed breakdown of those mechanics.

The history of Ponzi schemes is a century-long "puzzle" of psychology, misplaced trust, and the mathematical certainty of collapse. Named after Charles Ponzi, these schemes survive by using funds from new investors to pay "returns" to earlier ones, rather than generating actual profit. 🧱 The Architecture of the Scam : Promise of high returns with little to no risk.

: Promised a 50% return in 45 days via international reply coupons. He raked in $15 million in months before the math failed.

: People trust investments that their friends or community leaders endorse.

: Fraudsters use "proprietary strategies" or technical jargon to discourage deep questioning.