Carlos Oestby is a very well-known MLM scammer who runs the MetFi Ponzi scheme. The review below will show you why you shouldn’t invest in him or any of his businesses.
About MetFi (Carlos Oestby’s Primary Venture)
A MetFi private meeting took place on December 19, 2022, at the Address Sky View Hotel in Dubai. Carlos Oestby was there. He is a well-known name in network marketing and used to be a Black Diamond of Organo Gold. “The Millionaire Coach” is what people call him.
In 2016, he left Organo Gold to join Coinspace, which was a Ponzi scheme that only worked for a short time. Those who fell for it lost money. Their promise still stands: “Our passion is meeting and exceeding customer expectations.”
Coinspace mined cryptocurrencies, but the most interesting way they made money was by selling packages to new members. In 2017, the financial authorities in Malta and Italy told buyers that Coinspace did not have permission to do business in Malta or Italy, and they warned them to be careful about this scam. It’s always bad everywhere.

If you search “Carlos Oestby Coinspace” on Google, you can still easily find videos of this scumbag going on and on about “company vision,” “incredible opportunity,” and his usual tricks. Here’s a picture of him at the secret meeting.
Carlos Oestby uses typical network marketing phrases in the Instagram story of a participant, such as “You have to find your purpose” and “You have to find you why.” These idiots, who don’t know anything about cryptocurrencies, built their business on this vague and old talk. I won’t talk about the rude words I’ve seen, like “full on-chain transparency” or “delivers on time.”
I only know about CoinMarketCap. I have no idea what a “market cap” is. Should I add that Kava, which has a market cap of more than $250 million and a volume of $7.5 million in the last 24 hours, is currently ranked 100 on the first page of CoinMarketCap as I write this article?
The MetFi is a SCAM, and that much money probably couldn’t be made with it. When you look at the Instagram photos of most MetFi scammers, who are mostly Italian, and see nice cars and trips to faraway places, you might wonder where they get all their money. They have never started a business and don’t know how to do so.
They trick people so they can keep living the way they do. They go to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, often or live there. MLM says that Dubai is the center of MLM scams around the world. Don’t fall into their trick when evaluating a cryptocurrency project, and always “Do Your Own Research.”
Fake DMCA tactic of Carlos Oestby
Fraudsters like Carlos Oestby are making more and more false copyright claims against Google. This is not what the DMCA is for.
These fake DMCA takedown notices are sent by fake copyright owners or third parties who have been given permission by the real copyright owners to send the notices on their behalf. According to the fake complaints, the people who want the websites to be taken down are their rivals. They sometimes report a single copyright violation and then ask that a website take down hundreds of links because of it.
Copyright owners can use DMCA takedown requests to get websites that break their rights taken down from a certain web server. For Google, a DMCA takedown usually means that an illegal website has to be taken off of its search engine.
In the Lumen database, which keeps track of requests to remove material from the internet, there are a number of red flags that can be used to tell bad-faith takedown requests from legal ones. For example, news organizations and study firms have found takedown requests from organizations that have nothing to do with content that is illegal.
Some of these fake requests also use the name of the third-party company that the copyright holder usually uses to make these requests instead of the name of the copyright holder.
A request to take down content does not start the automatic removal of the content. Search Google has stopped a lot of these fake takedown requests, but they are still out there. Every month, tens of millions of requests to take down content are made, but some of them are false and get through.
Bad faith Asking for a DMCA takedown is not a new thing. This has been a problem with Google search and the internet as a whole for a long time, from legitimate copyright holders making false takedowns to people trying to trick the search engine into taking down negative reviews or stories about a person or business. Even takedowns that were made by bots are being filed. It looks like a lot of people are taking advantage of the system.
The new wave of takedown petitions is different because the people who file them pretend to be the real copyright owners in order to hurt the companies of their competitors. How big of a problem this could be on the internet soon will rest on how successful these fake removal requests are.