Introducing The Federation: The World’s Largest Information Network For OnlyFans Agency Owners

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We even have our own fancy flag

Once you’re in the blackhat community long enough, there’s no denying it: you ARE going to get scammed.

Everyone gets scammed at least once by a savvy social engineer.

That feeling of, “Oh shit, did this person just pull one over on me?” is an awful feeling.

Realizing that you just sent someone several hundred dollars – or more – and you’re not going to get that amazing thing they promised you is not fun.

While I’ve said many times that getting scammed is a right of passage, the fact of the matter remains: it’s bad for business.

As the owner of a large Telegram group, unironically providing a “safe space” to talk shop, socialize, and do business is my primary concern.

And I think I can safely say that other group owners feel the same way.

With the proliferation of popular new Telegram groups for OnlyFans management, I started wondering: Why isn’t there a group for group owners?

We could identify scammers, share ideas, and help each other keep our own groups clean and tidy.

Then I thought, “Should I make one?”

I sat on the idea for about a week, too nervous to do anything about it.

  • Would other group owners think it was a good idea?
  • Would they even want to join?
  • Would they be hostile and attack the idea?
  • Would I get laughed off for not being “big” enough?

Eventually, I got over my fear and made the group.

And thus, The Federation was born.

The biggest coalition of Telegram group owners in the OFM industry, the Fed aims to provide a safe environment for OFM professionals to learn, network, and do business with one another.

In this article, I am going to explain how and why the Fed was created, what the rules are, and what this means for the community as a whole.

The Birth Of A Nation

Just over a month ago, my private Simp Hunters Telegram group was sitting at a paltry 120 members.

My original plan with the group was to keep it small, private, and only containing people that knew what they were doing.

This SOUNDS like a good idea, but the reality of the situation is that people are going to go where the action is.

All things being equal, there is less action in a group of 120 people than there is in one with 1000.

I clung to this idea of “private and high quality” for WAY too long.

The lightbulb moment for me was when when I started promoting my lead magnet.

As part of the funnel, I offered users who opted in the chance to join a new Telegram group that I created.

I would get around 10 optins a day – mainly from the popup on this blog – and I’d say around 80% of those would convert into new group members.

While it was nice to see that the funnel was working, this new group posed 2 major problems:

  1. Most of the people in the group were brand spankin new to OFM
  2. I was the only one who could answer their stupid newbie questions

A few weeks later, I had an idea: what if I combined the group of newbies with my private one?

Despite being full of people who had no idea what they were doing, the new group was actually more active than the old one.

I saw huge potential in the new group – but being the only one in the group who could answer their questions was a responsibility that I wasn’t ready to handle.

So now I had 2 groups:

  1. One full of killers and OFM superstars
  2. One full of people who had no idea what they were doing

I remember thinking one day, “Man, these newbies sure would get a lot of benefit from being able to ask their stupid newbie questions in my private group.”

Eventually, I decided to make a change.

I shut down the newbie group, funneled everyone to the private group, and started promoting the sh*t out of it at every opportunity.

A few hours after I made the announcement, my good buddy BTZ sent me a message congratulating me on the pivot.

“You made the right choice with your group.”

My other bestie, @accountstealth, also sent me a DM – letting me know I could promote my group in his.

Five minutes after posting, the group had already grown by 100 members.

Currently sitting at 1100 and change, it’s now one of the largest Telegram groups for OnlyFans agency owners in existence.

While I’m perfectly satisfied with my decision to open the group up to the public, I quickly became faced with a problem I never had to deal with in my private group: scammers.

My private group was full of people that I’d hand-picked and personally invited.

I made it a point to personally welcome EVERYONE in my small group through a direct message.

I wanted to know exactly who they all were.

Doing the same thing for a public group is just plain impractical.

As happy as I am that people are joining the group, I don’t have the bandwidth to start 10-20 conversations with new people per day.

The result is that scammers end up slipping through the cracks.

A week or so after opening my group, I got another message from BTZ.

“Use this command in your group. Razvan created it to share bans in between groups. Ask him how to implement it.”

The command was some weird Telegram nonsense, so I DMed Razvan for more detailed instructions.

I ended up downloading a TG bot called “Rose” – a nifty little tool for managing groups.

One of Rose’s commands was a category called “Federations.”

By joining a federation (small f), group owners could share bans across their groups with a special command.

If you’re active in any Fed groups, then you’ve probably seen the term “fedban” thrown around. We’ll come back to fedbans in a moment.

After playing with Rose for a little bit, I had some questions, but it was like playing a game of phone tag.

Razvan and BTZ are both busy guys, neither of whom have “answering questions from Yalla Papi” placed very high on their list of priorities.

That’s when I got the idea: what if I created a group for group owners?

Playing on Rose’s “federation” feature, I named the group “The Federation” and started inviting group owners I had a personal connection with.

Razvan, Nek, BTZ, and @accountstealth were the first through the door – followed quickly by SourceCode, CJ, Twixy, Leon, Eli, Robin, and a few marketplace owners.

The Fed currently stands at 17 members, each of us with at least one group or channel.

What Is The Purpose Of The Fed?

At first, the conversations in the group were pretty basic.

Someone would get a report of a group member scamming. We’d analyze the situation, give our opinion, and then decide on whether or not there should be any punishment..

Most of the initial cases were pretty straightforward.

I’ll tell you this: being in the Fed has exposed me to many of the popular scams in the OFM community.

In no particular order, they are:

  1. Selling fake models
  2. Selling fake methods
  3. Selling fake services

Scammers are very simple people. All they do is sell fake stuff, eat hot chip, and lie.

So here’s the question you’ve probaby been asking yourself: what is the purpose of the Fed?

To answer that question, you have to understand the mentality of group owners.

Your average OFM Telegram group owner has 3 main characteristics:

  1. They like to do things their own way
  2. They see value in running their own community
  3. They usually offer products or services for sale in the OFM world

Group owners are the quintissential entrepreneurs: we are hustlers who like making our own rules.

We don’t like the lack of freedom that comes from NOT being in charge.

This leads to some very spirited discussions inside the Federation group chat – let me tell you.

But 99% of the time, we come to an understanding because we ALL have the same priority: providing a frictionless environment for people to learn, socialize, and network with one another.

The REASON for this – aside from genuinely enjoying being a part of the OnlyFans agency owner community – is because we want people to be comfortable in our groups.

If people are comfortable, then it’s more likely they will spend money on one of our services.

BTZ has his model market, Razvan has his TikTok coaching, and @accountstealth has his Reddit services.

At their core, groups are essentially nothing more than environments for group owners to host their “show” so that we can elegantly pepper in “commercials” to help sell our sh*t.

Why else do you think we would deal with the headache of moderating a group?

Yes, it’s fun to be the boss and be the center of attention (if desired), but the real reason we run groups is so that we have an unrestricted platform to market our services.

I can’t speak for EVERY group owner in OFM out there, but that is the case with Fed members.

Even His Lordship OBH, The Ginger Menace, $200 Conditioner Connoisuer, and Bane Of Low IQ Newbies, notorious for introducing his YouTube videos with the claim of “I don’t sell a course,” eventually began selling a chatting service and membership to a premium Telegram group.

Regardless of what they say, nobody is exempt from the desire to eventually leverage their community for profit.

And if you think about it, aren’t the BEST groups are the ones where the group owners have the MOST to lose?

If your group is responsible for bringing you a couple hundred bucks and some laughs, you probably aren’t going to work too hard to moderate it.

But if your group is part of your overall marketing machine that pulls in 6 figures a month, then you are going to do everything you can to make sure the people in that group follow the rules.

THIS is the frame through which Fed members view our cooperation.

At its core, the Fed is just a way to make it easier for all of us to blacklist scammers and people with bad intentions.

Federation Rules And Regulations

Currently, there are only a few hard and fast rules for the Fed:

  1. Scammers receive an irreversible lifetime fedban
  2. Chronic Bad Business Practices (lots of refunds, bad reviews, not delivering, etc) is grounds for fedban
  3. Scraping groups for members to add to your own group is not allowed
  4. Direct messaging (spamming) group members to promote or sell is heavily frowned upon
  5. No selling without approval from individual group owners
  6. No overly disruptive behavior (group-specific)

Each of these rules is more or less agreed upon by Fed members, though we still take things on a case by case basis – especially if the accused is an active member of the groups.

Let’s go over these one by one.

Scammers Receive An Irreversible Lifetime Ban

Yes, we’ve all been scammed.

Yes, it’s part of the game.

And yes, getting scammed will do wonders to rapidly increase your street smarts and awareness.

That said, it is not a “net gain” by any means, and there is a zero tolerance policy for scammers.

Scammers will have their accounts fedbanned, their alts identified, and will be recieve a lifetime ban from any and all Federation groups and channels.

We take this very seriously.

And to be perfectly honest, the reason we take it so seriously isn’t even because of the loss of money.

Occassionally you’ll hear of someone getting scammed for multiple thousands of dollars, but usually it’s just a few hundred.

Paying a few hundred dollars to learn the valuable lesson of “use a middleman if you don’t know the guy” is a great value.

I’ve been scammed more times than I care to admit.

Each time it was essentially the same thing:

  1. Someone offers me a deal that’s too good to be true
  2. They’re a little pushy, but I agree to the deal anyway
  3. They stop responding to messages after I pay
  4. I have to chase them down and beg them to deliver anything
  5. They keep stringing me along until I give up

Meanwhile, they are out running the same scam on other members.

All scammers know that it’s just a matter of time before their current alt is identified and they have to start over, so when they feel their mark start to get suspicious, they try to wrap up as many scams as possible before the clock ticks down.

Now, saying we don’t tolerate scammers is all well and good, but one thing I’ve realized is that we have to define WHAT a scammer actually is.

First off, let me make one thing clear: selling a sh*tty method is NOT a scam.

A scam is someone promising to provide something, taking payment, and then not providing it – plain and simple.

  • Someone sells you a model and don’t provide contact info? Scam.
  • Someone sells you TikTok sauce and doesn’t provide it? Scam.
  • Someone sells you dating app traffic and doesn’t provide it? Scam.

They sold it, they didn’t provide it, and they didn’t refund you – scam. 

Buyers can also be scammers, such as in the example in the pic above.

Everything else is open to interpretation.

Bad Business Practices – The Gray Area

Below an outright scam, we have what I call “bad business practices.”

The difference between BBP and a scam is that BBP is really just a seller who takes payment, provides a low quality or not-as-described service, and refuses to refund.

Let’s take the following two scenarios:

In the first one, a seller “sells” a model to the buyer, disappears or strings them along, and never provides the model’s contact info.

That is a scam.

In the second, a seller actually sells a model to the buyer, she flakes after a week, and he refuses a refund without a good reason.

That is BBP.

As service providers ourselves, we are willing to give our fellow capitalists the benefit of the doubt when it comes to unhappy customers.

We all understand that no matter how hard you try, you are always going to have some people who are just never satisfied.

Maybe you even gave them their money back without argument, but they still feel its fair to trash you in the groups instead of just moving on.

I’ll give you another example.

We recently got a scamming report of one decently well known individual who brands himself as a “guru” on a certain topic.

Several Fed members know this person fairly well and have dealt with him on multiple occassions.

None of us have any reason to believe he is a scammer.

Upon further investigation, it seems that the person who filed the complaint was disatisfied with the purchase of a method that they felt was overly complicated and poorly explained.

Is it a scam?

No.

Is it a perfect example of a service provider who did a poor job servicing his clients?

Absolutely.

Is it worth a fedban?

Absolutely not.

It’s these unique situations that require more investigation. Like I said, we don’t hand out fedbans lightly.

And in this specific situation, multiple Fed members have a pre-existing relationship with this person.

So not only are we willing to give someone like this the benefit of the doubt (as one service provider to another), but because of our personal dealings with him, we will even defend them from other Fed members who are out for blood.

Let’s take another example.

There is one individual who is fairly well-known in the space for being friends with a popular OFM influencer.

This friend has an awful reputation as someone who will take payment and not deliver.

I’ve never met this person (or his bestie), but I’ve heard from at least half a dozen people that he’s taken money and not come through with the goods.

But because there are so many reports – and even some of our Fed members have had experiences with him where he paid and didn’t deliver – we agreed to fedban him.

Who he is friends with is irrelevant.

Scammers deserve an instant fedban for life and are irredeemable.

We don’t want them anywhere near our communities.

Group Scrapers – Unwelcome Scavengers

The next category of rulebreakers we have is of people that scrape Telegram groups, either to promote services via DMs or to grow their own groups by adding members without permission.

This was a hotly contested issue in the group chat before we came to an agreement.

I won’t get into specifics, but one member had a pre-existing relationship with someone who was fedbanned for scraping group members from another Fed member’s group.

This offender actually committed 2 offenses: force-adding members to his group and cold DMing them a pitch for his services.

MOST of the Fed members gave their arguments against group scraping, mainly:

  1. It’s not fair to the group owners that built their groups organically
  2. It’s annoying to the communities of each respective group owner
  3. It can be considered “stealing”

The Fed member who objected to the fedban not only viewed group scraping as a minor offense, but also has business dealings with the offender.

Fedbanning him would put this particular Fed member in an awkward situation, since he still had an arrangement worked out with the offender.

The proposed solution was for each respective Federation member to ban this individual in their own groups (if they wanted to), so the one who had the deal with the offender could continue working with him without friction.

After a spirited discussion, this proposal was struck down and the fedban was upheld.

Not only that, but group scraping became justified grounds for a fedban.

Like I explained above, scraping groups is a sort of “shortcut to success” for selling services or building a group.

Nevermind the fact that groups which are made of scraped members have terrible engagement and usually go nowhere.

The point is that the one scraping the groups is in effect “stealing” the hard work of the group owners who built their group through organic means.

Now I know what you’re thinking:

“This is blackhat marketing! We break the rules all the time! What do you care if someone scrapes your group? You do worse things every day!”

That may be true, but the difference here is that the crime is against US.

It should be pretty obvious why we don’t like that.

And don’t get me wrong – before my group started to grow, I was VERY tempted to take the shortcut of using a scraping bot.

Once you understand the power of owning a group, the thought of being able to build one in 24 hours is almost irresistable.

That said, I’m very glad I did it the organic way.

My group is engaged and full of people who actually want to be there (even if I annoy them with 2-3 pinned posts per day).

While scraping groups for the purpose of adding members to your own group is a big no-no, directly DMing people trying to sell them stuff (or with a link to your new group) is a less serious offense.

Yes, getting these random DMs is annoying.

But is it worth a fedban?

That’s something we’ll have to look at on a case by case basis.

Look, it’s not that we don’t respect the hustle. Of course we do. We all got to where we are through hustling.

Many – if not all – Fed members worked in direct sales BEFORE getting into OnlyFans management.

We understand that cold messaging people can be a viable strategy for getting new customers.

That said, the issue here is that the OFM community is a breeding ground for scammers trying to take advantage of unsuspecting newbies.

Unless you are a known and active member in the chats, then we are forced to take a “guilty until proven innocent” approach to cold DMing.

  • We don’t know if your model marketplace is legit.
  • We don’t know if the adds you’re selling are real.
  • We don’t know if the chatting PDF you are pushing actually exists or not.

Bottom line: we don’t know if you’re a scammer.

But since you just popped up out of nowhere, we’ve never heard of you, and are already trying to sell stuff, then we have no choice but to assume you’re trying to rip people off.

I’ll go over it in an upcoming section, but if you want to sell, most Fed members are open to collaborations.

Disputes – Just A Part Of Doing Business

Nobody woke up one day and made The Federation in charge of resolving disputes, but we are the only ones making any attempt to keep the community safe.

So this responsibility naturally fell into our lap.

Not only that, but since all Federation members are service providers ourselves, we have the unique advantage that we have experience resolving our own disputes with unhappy customers.

The characteristics of a dispute are simple:

The seller is known and has (at least) a mostly-positive feedback score and has already tried resolving the dispute with the buyer on their own.

The fact of the matter is that in business, unhappy customers are just part of the game.

No matter how good you are, you can’t do any considerable amount of business without having at least a few people who think your service is “not worth the money.”

Of course service providers are only human – we ALL make mistakes.

When a new service is rolled out, it’s not going to be as good as it will be 3, 6, or 12 months down the line.

You may roll out a new service and it’s a complete disaster from beginning to end.

It may even be 100% your fault!

The problem comes when you either refuse to or are unable to make it right with your customer.

99.9% of the time, my personal preference for dealing with unhappy customers is to just give them their money back and never talk to them again.

Occasionally you’ll get an *sshole who buys something with the intention of immediately asking for a refund, but that’s unfortunately just part of the game.

When it comes to disputes, we look at a few things:

  • Does this seller have a good reputation?
  • Has this seller received other complaints?
  • How do they normally handle refunds?
  • What’s the specific reason for refusing a refund in this example?
  • Do they have a clear and stated refund policy visible in their group/channel?
  • Does the buyer seem like they have bad intentions?
  • If the buyer is active in the chats, how do they conduct themselves?

Note the last two points: yes, we also look at the buyer.

If someone is new, acts aggressively in the chats, and seems to have bad intentions, then ruling on behalf of the seller is an easy choice.

Unless the seller is identified as a chronic repeat offender (BBP in action), we are extremely unlikely to fedban them.

Some group owners may decide to ban that person from their group, but a fedban would be rare.

We HIGHLY encourage all buyers to resolve disputes on their own before coming to the Fed with their complaints.

Sellers, if you believe you are right, then do not let buyers bully you into doing what they want because they threaten to “go report you to the Fed” or some such nonsense.

We are not here to tell you how to run your business.

Our goal is to make it as easy as possible for everyone to run their organizations as long as they don’t break the rules.

Defining Disruptive Behavior

Another issue that is open for interpretation is the one of disruptive behavior.

Some Fed members want their groups to be as serious as possible, while others encourage memes and off topic discussion.

At the end of the day, all group owners are free to run their groups how they see fit.

It’s just assumed that we’re all going to have different preferences for our own groups.

I can’t speak for other group owners, but one rule that I have had for my own group since the beginning is “No personal attacks.”

I’m usually a pretty good natured guy, but a surefire way to set me off is chest-puffing “come at me bro” retardation.

The worst is when someone asks a question, receives a snotty answer, and the two get into an argument about who makes more money.

Witnessing conversations like that makes me want to kick my neighbor’s dog.

Now look, I’m not a fan of newbies coming into groups and asking to be spoonfed, either.

But in my opinion there’s no good reason to get into a confrontation with them.

Internet tough guy sh*t talking is pointless, stupid, doesn’t impress anyone, and irritates everybody who has to witness it.

Don’t get me wrong – I’m all for some casual trash talk, intense discussions, even arguing (if it’s done respectfully).

But there’s no place in my group for 1v1 battles of who is the tougher internet person.

That said, as much as I hate that kind of talk, I would never fedban an otherwise-legitimate OnlyFans agency owner if they did it in my group.

I’d probably just end up muting them, give them a chance to correct their behavior, and only ban them if they did it again.

Ranting aside, each group owner has their own preferences.

Some Fed members don’t like memes, some don’t like posting links, while others don’t like “looking for” messages.

At the end of the day, “disruptive behavior” is defined by each individual Fed member and will result in a regular ban, not a fedban (unless the user is disruptive in multiple groups – we’re looking at you, Hassib) – usually after multiple warnings.

It’ll be up to you to suss out each individual group and see what the official (and unspoken) rules are.

Why Selling And Self Promotion Are Not Allowed

A few months back, someone in BTZ’s group pointed out that it’s hypocritical of BTZ to forbid selling when he himself promotes his own products and services.

While this may be factually true, it’s irrelevant for 3 reasons:

  1. It’s his group and he makes the rules
  2. The reason for the “no selling” rule is so groups don’t get spammed into oblivion
  3. Many sellers are actually scammers in disguise

If we remove the “no selling” rule, within 48 hours the groups will be a nonstop spamfest of people trying to promote their sh*t.

As I already mentioned, unknown entities have a “guilty until proven innocent” label unless proven otherwise.

If we allowed selling, it would be an open invitation for scammers to wreak havoc on the groups.

Not only would there be less quality conversation, but the overall trust level of the group would drop.

And that’s bad for business. OUR business.

To that point, I feel like this would be a good time to mention that the Fed is also not a democracy. It’s a group of warlords who have agreed to cooperate in policing our communities.

And like all good warlords, we are primarily concerned with making sure our clans are not being attacked from the outside.

To reiterate, the problem with selling in groups is that it reduces the quality of the conversation and opens up too many opportunities for scammers.

All that said, there IS a way to sell in groups without your posts getting nuked immediately.

Here it is: ASK.

At the end of the day, Federation members are just regular people who run Telegram groups and sell services.

Since we all come from a sales background, we are all open to being pitched intelligently – even if we don’t know who you are.

I can’t speak for everyone, but there are very few Fed members who would NOT say YES to a cross promotion, affiliate link, or paid post in their group.

In fact, Fed members cooperate all the time with each other on different projects.

Group cross-promotions are extremely common.

As Fed members continue to expand their businesses to offer more unique services, I believe affiliate marketing will be more common as well.

I haven’t gone and asked each of them individually, but I’d be extremely surprised if any of them would turn down the opportunity to make some extra money.

It just takes a more tactful approach than trying to sneak your spam in and hoping you get some customers before it gets deleted.

It should go without saying, but things like being active in the group, contributing value to the conversations, and not causing trouble will only work in your favor.

The Federation Forgiveness Program (Limited)

In the early days of the Federation (i.e. 3 weeks ago), fedbans were handed out like candy.

After some spirited conversations, it was agreed that fedbans were reserved for scammers, scrapers, and people with bad intentions.

Some Fed members – busy with their operations – felt they didn’t have time to analyze each individual violation to see it was worthy of a ban.

With so many violations per day, many of us ban first and ask questions later.

  • Does that brand new user (with no profile picture) ACTUALLY have a Swedish model he’s giving away for free?
  • Does that guy that nobody knows with an Indian sounding name ACTUALLY have the TikTok sauce in exchange for Twitter?
  • Does that guy we’ve never seen before who’s never said anything ACTUALLY have dating app traffic for sale?

Maybe.

But 999 times out of 1000, these guys are just scammers trying to make a quick buck off some naive newbies.

However, 1 out of 1000 times, it’s a legit user who broke the rules without knowing.

Recently, we found out that a non-Federation group owner scraped the members of certain groups and added them to his own.

While we respect the hustle, we don’t appreciate having our organically-grown communities (and markets) siphoned off by someone that we don’t have a personal connection with.

This person was immediately fedbanned.

Here’s a counterexample: @accountstealth and I are friends, so we promote each other’s groups freely.

He can take as many of my group members as he wants and I won’t make a peep.

In fact, I’ll even make my OWN post in my group telling people why they should go join HIS.

I did the same thing for SourceCode when he wanted to do some cross-promotions.

He’s brilliant when it comes to hacking Tinder, but the guy couldn’t sell his way out of a wet paper bag.

Even though my group was double the size of his, I wrote him a glowing recommendation in my own group and told everyone to go over there and start engaging.

While it was technically a cross-promo, the benefit was clearly in his favor.

But he’s a nice guy – and trustworthy – so I figured it couldn’t hurt to show a little goodwill.

Plus, if I need his help in the future, now I can tap him for a favor.

However, if some RANDOM person that I don’t know tries to scrape my group so they can cold DM my members with an offer to join THEIR group, that’s a big no no.

But again, these rules were never stated publicly, so if the offense was anything other than an outright scam (not to be confused with BBP, disputes, or disruptive behavior), we are open to possibly removing the fedban.

In the example I just gave with the non-Fed group owner who force-added members to his own group, he sent a well-written appeal – highlighting that these rules were never stated and that he was a longtime member of the community – and we all voted to remove his fedban. 

If you feel you have been wrongly fedbanned, feel free to DM me or another Federation member to plead your case.

Please provide the following info:

  1. When the fedban occured
  2. Which Fed member banned you
  3. Why you were banned
  4. Why you believe the fedban should be reversed

FYI, repealing a fedban is rare.

Joining The Fed

At the time of this writing, there are 17 Fed members.

Each of us owns at least 1 group or marketplace and some people own more than one.

We are always open to accepting new members as long as they meet the following criteria:

  1. Did not grow their group via scraping and force-adding
  2. Relatively clean reputation (no history of scamming OFM people)
  3. Pleasant and easy to get along with
  4. Prioritizes professionalism and cultivating a business-friendly environment
  5. Understands the “spirit” of the Fed and agrees to abide by its rules
  6. Agrees to purge scammers immediately from their groups

Our group is new and subject to change, but this is the general idea.

Like I’ve said many times, the purpose of the Fed is NOT to throw our weight around and play the “you’re not coming to my birthday party” card.

All we want is a community built on trust and open conversation where we don’t have to worry about scammers and people with bad intentions.

None of us started our groups thinking we would all band together one day and have rules that applied to all of us.

But we all have the same goals and attitudes towards business, so it works out.

It’s hard to say whether the Fed will turn into something bigger or if it will just fizzle out over time.

Despite our differences, I believe it’s safe to say that one characteristic all Federation members share is that we think we know best.

After all, nobody starts a group because they like taking orders from other people.

We do it because the idea of cultivating a community appeals to us.

In the beginning of this article, I know I made it seem like we only do it so we can sell stuff and make money.

But it’s really more than that.

Once your group starts to grow, it takes on a mind of its own, atracting all kinds of interesting personalities that you wouldn’t have had the opportunity to meet otherwise. 

You make friends, meet business partners, and get support from people who are going through the same struggles as you.

It would be a dream come true if we could just trust that scammers and people with bad intentions would stay away. 

Unfortunately, some people only learn through violence.

And since we are the ones in charge, it’s up to us to be the violent ones.

But like it or not, the OFM industry is growing quickly. And the larger it grows, the more regulated it will become. 

Either WE can be the ones choosing the regulations, or someone else will come in and choose them for us. 

All things considered, we prefer the former.

Behave yourself, my dudes!

-YP

PS. Almost forgot, here’s a list of all the main groups currently in the Fed:

https://t.me/SimpHunters

https://t.me/utopiaof

https://t.me/OFMFreeSauce

https://t.me/SC101S

https://t.me/OFMEmpire

https://t.me/BTZRedditNetwork

https://t.me/OFMarketPlace

https://t.me/+gbE2tpEA9NU4Zjdk

https://t.me/ofmagencies

https://t.me/+F_ms1qOrLE4yZDI8

https://t.me/Ewhorld

https://t.me/cjsservices

https://t.me/beverlyofm

http://t.me/ofmodelbestdeals

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