Make Money Fast, often stylized as MAKE.MONEY.FAST, is a seminal chain letterscam that emerged in 1988 as one of the first widespread pyramid schemes propagated via electronic mail on Usenet newsgroups. Written by an anonymous author using the name Dave Rhodes, who claimed in the letter to be a student at Columbia Union College in Takoma Park, Maryland, the letter promised recipients the ability to earn thousands of dollars quickly by participating in a simple exchange of small payments and further distribution of the message itself.[1][2][3] It exemplifies early internet fraud, relying on the novelty of digital communication to amplify its reach exponentially while delivering financial losses to the vast majority of participants.[4]The scheme's mechanics followed a classic pyramid structure: recipients were directed to send $1 in cash to each of the five names listed at the top of the letter, remove the top name from the list, shift the remaining names up, add their own name to the bottom, and then post copies of the updated letter to 10 bulletin boards or mail to 100 new people.[2]Rhodes introduced the letter with a personal anecdote, claiming he had netted over $50,000 within 60 days after his car was reposessed and he faced financial desperation, urging others to "keep a copy of this file for yourself" to track potential earnings.[2] This promise of rapid wealth creation masked the inherent unsustainability of the model, where early participants might receive payments from later recruits, but the chain inevitably collapsed as recruitment slowed, leaving most individuals out of pocket without returns.[4]Beyond its financial deception, Make Money Fast became infamous for overwhelming early online networks, earning the moniker of a "text virus" due to its prolific spread and the server resources it consumed through repeated postings.[1] Variations and imitators proliferated throughout the 1990s, adapting the format to include fabricated stories of hardship or success to heighten emotional appeal, which further clogged Usenet and contributed to the evolution of internet etiquette norms and anti-spam policies.[4] As an illegal pyramid scheme under U.S. law, it highlighted the vulnerabilities of nascent digital communities to fraud, influencing broader regulatory discussions on electronic commerce and consumer protection in the pre-web era.[1]
Overview
Description
Make Money Fast, stylized as MAKE.MONEY.FAST, is an electronic chain letter created in 1988 that promises recipients quick wealth through minimal effort.[1] The scheme instructs participants to send $1 to each of the top five names on a provided list of ten, remove the top name, shift the remaining names up one position, add their own name at the bottom, and post the updated letter to numerous others via email or Usenet postings.[2] Proponents claim this process generates thousands of dollars—often cited as over $50,000 within weeks—by leveraging the exponential spread of the letter among networks of contacts.[4]Classified as a get-rich-quick scheme, Make Money Fast operates on pyramid principles, where earnings depend on continuous recruitment of new participants rather than the creation of legitimate products or services.[5] Unlike sustainable business models, it relies on an ever-expanding base of senders, with early joiners potentially profiting at the expense of later ones who receive little to no returns as the chain saturates.[6] This structure exemplifies classic chain letter fraud, disguised as an opportunity to build rentable mailing lists but ultimately unsustainable due to mathematical limits on growth.[4]The letter gained infamy in the 1990s for flooding Usenet newsgroups and early email systems, becoming one of the first widespread forms of internet spam.[7] By the mid-1990s, it overwhelmed discussions in unrelated forums like rec.humor, prompting user backlash, cancellations, and even dedicated countermeasures to curb its propagation.[1] Its persistence highlighted vulnerabilities in decentralized online networks, influencing later spam mitigation efforts.[7]
Mechanism
The "Make Money Fast" chain letter functions as a pyramid scheme through a structured process designed to propagate itself via participant recruitment, promising financial returns based on incoming payments from downline members. Upon receiving the letter, which includes a list of ten names and addresses, the participant sends $1 to each of the top five names, incurring a total cost of $5. They then remove the top name from the list, move the other nine names up one position, add their own name and address to the bottom to maintain a ten-name list, and post the updated letter to 10 bulletin boards to continue the chain.[2]This mechanism relies on an exponential growth model to generate the promised returns, where each participant theoretically receives $1 from every subsequent recruit who has them in the top five positions. The letter claims that posting to 10 boards can lead to rapid multiplication of responses—for example, potentially thousands at early cycles building to millions—but this growth quickly outpaces the global population at level 6 (over 1 million participants), leading to claims of earning more than $50,000 within a few cycles as money flows upward.[2]The scheme's spread depended on network effects in early internet communities, particularly Usenet newsgroups, where crossposting to multiple forums allowed rapid dissemination to thousands of users with minimal effort from participants.[7]Despite these theoretical gains, the model is inherently unsustainable due to recruitment saturation: the required number of new participants grows exponentially, quickly outpacing available contacts, leaving later entrants unable to recoup their $5 investment while early participants may profit disproportionately.[8]
History
Origins
The "Make Money Fast" chain letter originated in 1988, created by Dave Rhodes, a student at Columbia Union College (now Washington Adventist University), a Seventh-day Adventist institution in Takoma Park, Maryland.[9][10] The letter's narrative framed it as a personal story of financial desperation following events like a car repossession and bill collectors in September 1988, positioning it as a simple forwarding scheme to generate income.[10][4]The letter first appeared on Usenet in 1988, originating from a Columbia Union College student account.[9] This electronic dissemination marked an adaptation of traditional paper-based chain letters, which had circulated for decades prior, often promising luck, prayers, or charitable donations in exchange for replication and mailing.[11] Unlike its paper predecessors, the "Make Money Fast" version incorporated a pyramid structure requiring monetary contributions to named recipients while encouraging mass electronic forwarding to bulletin boards and newsgroups.[10]This emergence coincided with the expansion of ARPANET in the late 1980s, which facilitated the development of early email systems and Usenet, enabling rapid, low-cost distribution without the logistical constraints of physical mail.[12] By exploiting these nascent digital networks, the letter quickly proliferated among academic and technical communities, highlighting the vulnerabilities of emerging online communication infrastructures to viral content.[9]
Spread and Evolution
By 1994, the "Make Money Fast" chain letter had achieved widespread proliferation across early internet platforms, particularly through Usenet newsgroups such as rec.humor and via email, transforming from occasional postings into a persistent form of spam that flooded discussions despite user complaints and attempts to suppress it.[4][7] Initially posted under the subject line "MAKE.MONEY.FAST," it leveraged the interconnected nature of Usenet to spread rapidly, with users reporting frequent resurgences even after cancellations, as the scheme's pyramid structure encouraged forwarding to multiple recipients.[4] This dissemination was facilitated by the growing accessibility of online bulletin boards and email systems in the early 1990s, marking it as one of the first digital chain letters to exploit network effects on a large scale.[7]Around 1995, the letter began evolving into notable variations that attempted to enhance its credibility and profitability, such as claims of endorsement from a "retired lawyer" to lend legal legitimacy or schemes involving the sale of $5 "reports" on money-making methods, which participants were instructed to purchase and distribute.[10] These adaptations shifted the focus from simple cash transfers to pseudo-business models, like the "Report Chain Letter," where senders promised exponential returns by ordering and reselling informational packets, thereby disguising the underlying pyramid mechanics.[13] Such mutations reflected cultural adaptations to online skepticism, incorporating testimonials and altered narratives to sustain propagation amid increasing user awareness.[4]The scheme reached its peak in the mid-1990s, coinciding with the rapid expansion of internet access and email adoption, resulting in extensive circulation across Usenet and early web forums, though exact figures are elusive due to the decentralized nature of the platforms.[14] Its ubiquity contributed to early anti-spam discussions, where it became a focal point for developing netiquette norms, including the establishment of "cancel-on-sight" policies for repetitive spam and the broader recognition of unsolicited bulk email as a network abuse.[7] By the 2000s, the proliferation declined significantly with the introduction of spam filters and automated moderation tools, which effectively curbed its visibility and reduced forwarding rates.[14]
Content Analysis
Original Letter
The original "Make Money Fast" chain letter, first circulated in late 1988 and early 1989, was structured as a multi-page document designed to hook recipients with a blend of personal storytelling, step-by-step guidance, and assurances of legality. It opened with a casual greeting, "Dear Friend," followed by an introduction from its purported author, "Dave Rhodes," who positioned himself as a relatable everyman transformed by the scheme. This section set an informal, confessional tone, drawing readers in with empathy for financial struggles before promising escape through easy participation.[4]The core testimonial from "Dave Rhodes" formed the emotional centerpiece, recounting his dire circumstances in September 1988—car repossession, relentless bill collectors, job loss, and depleted unemployment benefits—contrasted against his rapid ascent to wealth. He described using his Apple computer and modem to discover the "system," leading to luxuries like a ten-day tropical cruise for his family in January 1989, a cash purchase of a Lincoln Town Car in February, and construction of a Florida home featuring a private pool, boat slip, and bay views. The narrative culminated in the claim that he "will never have to work again," appealing directly to readers' aspirations for financial independence and framing the letter as a proven path from desperation to abundance.[4][2]Subsequent sections outlined instructions for participation, emphasizing simplicity and low risk to lower barriers to entry. Recipients were directed to send $1 cash to each of the five individuals listed on the accompanying roster, remove the top name from the list, shift the remaining names up one spot, and insert their own name and address at the bottom (position five). They were then urged to produce and post at least 200 copies via computer bulletin boards or mail, using the subject line "MAKE.MONEY.FAST" to maximize visibility. The letter included a sample list of five names and addresses, representing early participants in the pyramid, with the promise that adherence would yield $50,000 or more within 60 to 90 days due to exponential replication. The forwarding plea closed with a motivational note on the "honesty and integrity" of past participants, imploring readers not to disrupt the process to avoid missing out on rewards.[2]Key excerpts amplified the letter's persuasive power through bold claims of immediate prosperity and time-sensitive urgency. A prominent opening assertion declared the potential for massive returns, akin to "You are about to make at least $50,000 in less than 90 days," underscoring the scheme's supposed efficiency and scale. Tactics evoking superstition and momentum, such as "Don't break the chain," created psychological pressure by implying that inaction would forfeit luck and income, a holdover from traditional chain letters repurposed for monetary gain.[15]Rhetorically, the letter masterfully exploited appeals to greed via fabricated testimonials of quick success, including stories from diverse participants like a college student who claimed to have earned $640 in just one week by following the plan. These anecdotes lent an air of authenticity and relatability, suggesting the system worked for ordinary people without special skills. To deflect skepticism, it incorporated pseudo-legal disclaimers referencing U.S. Code sections, such as Title 18, Sections 1302 and 1341, misleadingly presented as endorsements of postal lotteries rather than prohibitions on fraud. The overall tone was enthusiastic and conversational, peppered with emphatic capitalization (e.g., MAKE.MONEY.FAST) to mimic excitement and urgency, while portraying the scheme not as a chain letter but as a legitimate "mailing list service" or business opportunity.[2]
Variations
Following the original chain letter's structure of soliciting small payments and redistributing copies, post-1990s adaptations introduced altered narratives to evade detection and appeal to new audiences. One prominent example is the 1995 "lawyer" variant, which claimed authorship by a retired attorney on a fixed income seeking extra funds, instructing recipients to send $5 to a listed name, add their own to a rotation of five spots, and distribute to at least 200 others.[16] This version framed the scheme as a simple favor rather than a business opportunity, while some iterations added sales of supplemental reports, such as a $5 guide titled "National Lottery Secrets," to generate additional revenue.[4]Other mutations diverged further by promising returns through investments in stocks or participation in multi-level marketing (MLM) programs, often rephrasing the pyramid mechanism as legitimate networking or opportunity sharing.[17] These versions updated names and details to appear fresh, with adaptations for fax machines in the early 1990s and email by mid-decade, allowing quicker dissemination while maintaining the core list-based payment cycle. For instance, MLM-inspired variants mimicked legitimate companies like Amway, requiring upfront fees for recruitment lists that funneled commissions upward.[4]Distribution methods shifted from Usenet newsgroups, where the scheme proliferated in the early 1990s via posts in groups like rec.humor, to bulk email lists in the late 1990s, enabling mass forwarding without physical mailing costs.[7] By 2000, over 100 variants of money chain letters like "Make Money Fast" had been documented, with many recycled in non-English languages including French, German, Spanish, and Russian to target international recipients.[17]
Legality
Postal Regulations
In the United States, chain letters such as the "Make Money Fast" scheme violate federal postal laws, particularly Title 18 U.S.C. § 1302, which prohibits the mailing of any letter, package, postal card, or circular concerning a lottery, gift enterprise, or similar scheme.[18] These schemes are classified as illegal lotteries because they require consideration—such as money or items of value sent by participants—and offer a prize in the form of potential future returns that depend on chance, namely whether subsequent recipients continue the chain.[19] Additionally, Title 18 U.S.C. § 1341 criminalizes the use of the mail to execute any scheme or artifice to defraud, applying to "Make Money Fast" variants that promise financial gains through misleading promises of exponential returns.[20]The U.S. Postal Inspection Service has long deemed chain letters a form of gambling scheme, with precedents dating to 1935 when inspectors ruled the widespread "send-a-dime" chain letter illegal under postal lottery and fraud statutes during its peak circulation.[21] By the 1990s, as "Make Money Fast" proliferated through both mail and early electronic means, the Service issued public warnings against participating in or distributing such letters, emphasizing their illegality and potential for investigation.[22]Enforcement actions included postal inspectors issuing complaints and halting operations, as seen in cases where distributors of chain letter schemes faced scrutiny and discontinuation orders following investigations.[23]Penalties for violations can include fines under Title 18 or imprisonment for up to two years, or both, with civil penalties adjusted for inflation and potentially reaching thousands of dollars per offense depending on the scope of the scheme.[18] Although specific seizure records for "Make Money Fast" mailings in the 1990s are limited, the Postal InspectionService has authority to seize mailings deemed fraudulent, contributing to broader efforts against pyramid-like distributions during that era.[24]Internationally, similar prohibitions exist; in the United Kingdom, chain letters with pyramid elements are illegal under the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008, which prohibit unfair commercial practices including pyramid promotional schemes.[25]
Digital and Email Considerations
The transition of the "Make Money Fast" (MMF) scheme to digital formats in the 1990s introduced new legal challenges under electronic communication laws, particularly regarding unsolicited commercial emails that promote pyramid structures. The CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, enacted by the U.S. Congress, regulates commercial electronic mail messages by prohibiting false or misleading header information, deceptive subject lines, and failure to provide opt-out mechanisms.[26] MMF variants, often disseminated via email with promises of quick wealth through chain forwarding, violate these provisions by using misleading headers like "Easy Money Opportunity" and lacking clear identification as advertisements, while also evading opt-out requirements through automated replication.[27]Early internet etiquette standards further underscored prohibitions against such practices. The RFC 1855 Netiquette Guidelines, published in 1995 by the Internet Engineering Task Force, explicitly condemned the forwarding of chain letters via electronic mail, stating they are forbidden on the Internet and could result in revocation of network privileges.[28] This reflected broader Usenet and early email community norms against disruptive bulk messaging. In contemporary settings, major email providers enforce similar bans through terms of service and anti-spam filters; for instance, Google's policies for Gmail prohibit sending unsolicited bulk or commercial emails that could be perceived as spam, including chain-based promotions, with violations leading to account suspension.Enforcement of these digital regulations has targeted analogous schemes, though no specific prosecutions directly involving the original MMF letter have been documented. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) pursued multiple actions in the 2000s against internet pyramid operations using email distribution, such as the 2000 shutdown of Five Star Auto Club for misrepresenting earnings in unsolicited messages and the 2002 issuance of warning letters to over 2,000 spammers promoting chain-letter frauds.[29][30] These cases established precedents for addressing deceptive email pyramids under the FTC Act's unfair practices clause, with MMF-like schemes often referenced in FTC educational materials on cyber fraud.[31]Globally, the European Union's ePrivacy Directive (2002/58/EC), adopted in 2002, imposes stricter controls by requiring prior consent for unsolicited commercial communications via email, effectively restricting MMF-style distributions without explicit recipient approval.[32] This has led to widespread blocking of such emails by European service providers and enforcement actions under national implementations, contrasting with U.S. opt-out models and highlighting jurisdictional barriers to cross-border dissemination.[32]
Cultural and Social Impact
Parodies and Satire
The "Make Money Fast" chain letter scheme inspired numerous parodies in the 1990s, which inverted its promises to emphasize the legal consequences of participating in pyramid schemes. Other humorous takes emerged from online communities, such as Mike Jittlov's ASCII-art-laden parody posted to newsgroups like alt.fan.mike-jittlov in the early 1990s. Titled "MakeMoneyFast," it promised absurd earnings like $600,000 per day through repetitive tasks such as pressing the space bar, while facetiously claiming tax-free income and psychic endorsements, all under the guise of a "perfectly legal" operation.[33] These spoofs often exaggerated the original letter's mechanics, such as mailing dollar bills to a rotating list, to underscore their futility and risk.In online culture, the scheme became a staple of internet folklore, featured in fact-checking resources like Snopes.com since the late 1990s as an exemplar of viral hoaxes and spam.[34] Parodies like these contributed to the scheme's notoriety by associating it with ridicule, thereby raising awareness of chain letters as fraudulent and diminishing their perceived credibility among savvy internet users.[34]
Legacy in Spam and Fraud Awareness
The "Make Money Fast" (MMM) chain letter scheme, originating in the late 1980s and proliferating via Usenet postings in the early 1990s, marked a seminal moment in spam history by exemplifying the mass distribution of unsolicited commercial messages across thousands of newsgroups. This widespread flooding of digital forums, often under subject lines like "MAKE.MONEY.FAST," overwhelmed users and administrators, directly catalyzing the creation of killfiles—user-configurable filters to block specific posters or topics—and early automated spam detection tools.[35] The scheme's persistence also contributed to the formalization of the Usenet Death Penalty (UDP), a community-enforced policy involving mass cancellations and site blocks against egregious spammers, setting precedents for collaborative anti-abuse measures in online spaces.[36]In terms of educational legacy, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has incorporated warnings about chain letter pyramids, including variants akin to MMM, into its consumer protection resources since the late 1990s, emphasizing their deceptive nature and high risk of financial loss. For instance, FTC actions in 1998 targeted online pyramid promoters, banning participation in such schemes and requiring consumer redress to highlight the fraud's mechanics.[37] These guides, updated regularly, serve as foundational materials for public awareness campaigns, illustrating how recruitment-focused models collapse and leave most participants in debt, thereby fostering broader digital literacy on scam recognition.[31]The scheme's influence extends to modern anti-fraud efforts, where it is cited as an early archetype for enduring scam tactics. As of 2024, cybersecurity analyses reference MMM-style chain letters as precursors to cryptocurrency investment frauds, which often mimic pyramid structures by promising exponential returns through referrals; the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) reported $16.6 billion in total cyber-enabled fraud losses in 2024, with over $6.5 billion from cryptocurrency investment scams alone.[38] This historical parallel informed legislation like the 2003 CAN-SPAM Act, which addressed the economic burdens of unsolicited bulk email—including "make money fast" promotions—by imposing opt-out requirements and penalties, with spam-related costs estimated at up to $10 billion annually in the early 2000s.[39]Quantitatively, while direct figures for the original MMM are elusive due to its pre-digital tracking era, its reach via Usenet—estimated to affect tens of millions of users through cross-postings—underscored the scale of early spam proliferation. Indirectly, it inspired a lineage of schemes contributing to broader losses; FTC data indicate investment scams alone caused over $5.7 billion in losses in 2024, part of total reported fraud exceeding $12.5 billion that year, building on prior years' trends since 2016.[40][41]