That's simply not true, even though these types of sales do harbor a lot of scams.
1 person has limited time. They can be doing it themselves and still sell you the rights to do it too. It would be pure coincidence if the market demand fit exactly into 1 persons ability to supply it. I say 1, but this is not limited to 1 person.
Selling information is a valid transaction. It requires much less time, and the price is justified by a similar idealogy to having trade secrets. Yes I could pursue this list of 100 potentials and convert 5% of them for 50k over the next couple months OR I can sell it to someone else for 2k and do something else with my time.
If selling information is an established type of sale, then it follows that at a large enough scale of demand, someone can specialize in that sale rather than acting on the relevant information at all. And now AGAIN it would be pure coincidence if that 1 person specializing in selling only information is exactly meeting the demand for such activity. So they accept money to train others on how to sell information.
Hence the entire data broker industry.
The problem is that even though this truth exists, the trust involved is easily abusable. I don't think I need to explain how.
It isn't a pyramid scheme, but it can very easily become a saturated market where late comers end up getting no value back since there still is a very real limit on demand. But it is not good for sales for the people training others in the sale of information to acknowledge that limit, so it ultimately leads to people effectively getting scammed even without anyone explicitly trying to scam anyone.
1 person has limited time. They can be doing it themselves and still sell you the rights to do it too. It would be pure coincidence if the market demand fit exactly into 1 persons ability to supply it. I say 1, but this is not limited to 1 person.
Selling information is a valid transaction. It requires much less time, and the price is justified by a similar idealogy to having trade secrets. Yes I could pursue this list of 100 potentials and convert 5% of them for 50k over the next couple months OR I can sell it to someone else for 2k and do something else with my time.
If selling information is an established type of sale, then it follows that at a large enough scale of demand, someone can specialize in that sale rather than acting on the relevant information at all. And now AGAIN it would be pure coincidence if that 1 person specializing in selling only information is exactly meeting the demand for such activity. So they accept money to train others on how to sell information.
Hence the entire data broker industry.
The problem is that even though this truth exists, the trust involved is easily abusable. I don't think I need to explain how.
It isn't a pyramid scheme, but it can very easily become a saturated market where late comers end up getting no value back since there still is a very real limit on demand. But it is not good for sales for the people training others in the sale of information to acknowledge that limit, so it ultimately leads to people effectively getting scammed even without anyone explicitly trying to scam anyone.