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FTC halts Genesis Tech subscription scheme network over hidden recurring charges

Published
Score
11

Why it matters

The Federal Trade Commission has obtained a temporary federal court order halting what it describes as a sprawling subscription-fraud operation run by Genesis Tech and related companies. According to the FTC's complaint, the network lured consumers with free or discounted offers, then enrolled them in auto-renewing subscriptions, charged them without authorization, and made cancellation difficult or impossible. The case targets 15 corporations and eight individuals, including Genesis Tech founder-CEOs Vladimir Mnogoletny and Vasily Ulianov, along with co-defendants Stamatis Skianis, Oksana Kucher, Iryna Oleksyn, Olga Garbuzenko, Rostyslav Ivanitsa, and Viktoriia Savchuk. The network marketed products including MadMuscles, Harna, Unimeal, Nebula, PDF Guru, and Lumi through deceptive landing pages that buried subscription terms, added unauthorized or duplicate charges, and obstructed cancellation requests.

The FTC alleges Genesis Tech operated through a concealed corporate structure using shell companies and offshore entities, continuously creating new companies and products to evade enforcement. Between early 2023 and mid-2025, the apps generated nearly $250 million in global revenue. Connected PayPal accounts processed nearly $700 million in the 12 months ending in September 2025. The federal court order immediately froze the enterprise's operations while the case proceeds.

The action represents a significant consumer-protection crackdown targeting how subscription apps exploit gaps in app-store policing. The FTC alleges violations of the FTC Act and the Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act (ROSCA). Attorneys should monitor the case for developments on asset recovery, individual liability outcomes, and whether the court's preliminary injunction withstands challenge—particularly given the defendants' apparent use of international corporate structures to shield assets.

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