ans79.com

June 21, 2026

The Main Finding

ans79.com should be treated as a high-risk, unverified earning platform.

I cannot prove from public evidence that it is a scam.

I also found too little reliable evidence to consider it a safe place for money, passwords, identity documents, or banking information.

This review reflects the public website available on June 21, 2026.

What the Website Claims

The home page says users can earn money through an “innovative platform” and begin seeing quick results from their first day.

It claims to have more than 10,000 active members, over $500,000 paid out, 300 daily registrations, and support available at all times.

It also displays a rating of 4.5 out of 5 from more than 155 reviews.

These numbers are important because they create an image of a large and successful operation.

However, the page does not explain how the money is earned, who provides the money, what users must do, or how the reported payments were checked.

There are no visible financial reports, withdrawal records, independent audits, named business partners, or links to an outside review service supporting the figures.

Big numbers without supporting records are marketing claims, not proof.

The Names Do Not Match Clearly

The website uses several different names for what appears to be the same service.

The domain is ans79.com, the main heading calls the platform “assunnah9,” and another section asks visitors why they should choose “Profit79.”

The registration page also tells users they are joining Profit79, while displaying what search results identify as an As-Sunnah Foundation logo.

A separate domain, assunnah9.com, appears to contain almost the same earning claims, member numbers, payment figures, review score, and promotional wording.

A real company can operate several brands, but it should clearly explain their relationship.

Here, visitors are not told whether ans79, assunnah9, Profit79, and As-Sunnah Foundation are legal names, product names, partners, or unrelated labels.

That lack of clarity makes it difficult to identify who would be responsible if an account were blocked or a withdrawal were refused.

The Foundation Branding Needs Verification

The registration and login pages show an image described as the As-Sunnah Foundation logo.

The public website for As-Sunnah Foundation presents itself as a source for Quran, Sunnah, Islamic learning, articles, and lectures rather than as an online earning platform.

My searches did not find a public statement on those official pages connecting that foundation with ans79.com, Profit79, or assunnah9.com.

That does not prove the logo is being used without permission.

It does mean users should contact the foundation through independently found official contact details before trusting the apparent connection.

A logo inside a registration form is not evidence of authorization.

The Review Claims Are Weak

The home page says there are more than 155 reviews, but the public page shows only one member comment.

That comment is written mainly in Bengali and says the platform gives good results in a short time.

It does not describe the work performed, the amount earned, the withdrawal method, the fees paid, or the time needed to receive money.

The person is identified only by a name and the description “assunnah9 Member.”

There is no profile, transaction record, date, video, or outside source that would allow a visitor to authenticate the testimonial.

The displayed star score also does not link to a recognised review platform.

A review number controlled and published by the website itself should not be treated like independently collected customer feedback.

The Password Reset Page Is a Serious Warning

The most unusual problem appears on the password reset address.

Instead of a clean account-recovery page matching the earning service, search indexing reveals a largely unfinished online-shop template.

That page contains categories for clothing, cameras, toys, furniture, skin care, headphones, and other unrelated products.

It also displays sample shopping-cart products, placeholder text, a generic live-chat number, an old “Kiddly-Online” copyright, and contact details unrelated to the earning platform.

The page includes “Lorem ipsum” filler text, which developers normally use before real content is written.

This looks like reused or unfinished website code.

Poorly cleaned templates do not automatically mean fraud, but they show weak quality control in a sensitive area dealing with account passwords.

A platform claiming “bank-level security” should not expose a broken or unrelated recovery experience.

Personal Data Is Requested Without Clear Protection

The sign-up form asks for a full name, an 11-digit mobile number, and a password of at least eight characters.

The accessible registration page does not show a privacy-policy link, terms of service, company identity, data-retention explanation, or consent details beside the form.

This matters because a mobile number and password can be valuable even before any financial information is entered.

People often reuse passwords across email, social media, shopping, and banking accounts.

A leaked or deliberately collected password may therefore create risks far beyond this website.

CISA explains that deceptive websites can be used to obtain private information by presenting themselves as trustworthy services.

Do not use a password here that has ever been used on another account.

The Security Statement Is Not Enough

The website says data and earnings are protected by “bank-level security measures.”

This phrase has no precise meaning unless the operator explains the actual controls.

Useful evidence would include the legal company name, security standards, independent testing, encryption details, incident-reporting process, withdrawal safeguards, and a real privacy notice.

None of those details are presented on the public home, login, or registration pages reviewed.

A secure connection symbol in a browser only protects data while it travels between the browser and the server.

It does not prove that the business is honest, that stored data is safe, or that promised earnings exist.

The Business Model Is Missing

A legitimate earning service should plainly state why users are paid.

It might pay for freelance work, advertising, product sales, surveys, referrals, investment returns, or another defined activity.

ans79.com gives no meaningful public explanation of the work, revenue source, payment calculation, minimum withdrawal, fees, eligibility rules, or dispute process.

The phrase “simple and effective system” avoids explaining the system itself.

The offer of bonus earnings during the first week adds urgency without showing how the bonus is funded or withdrawn.

The FTC warns that offers promising quick online income can be used to obtain a person’s money or personal information.

Do Not Deposit Money to Unlock Earnings

The public pages do not reveal whether ans79.com later asks users to deposit money.

That question is critical.

Some task-style earning schemes first display supposed profits and may even allow a small payment before demanding a deposit to continue working or release a larger balance.

The FTC says those displayed earnings may be fake and advises people never to pay someone in order to get paid.

Stop immediately if the platform requests an activation payment, recharge, security deposit, tax, withdrawal fee, cryptocurrency transfer, or payment to correct a negative account balance.

Do not assume an account dashboard balance represents real money.

Money is not earned until it has been withdrawn without sending additional funds.

What Existing Users Should Do

Anyone who created an account with a reused password should change that password on every other service where it was used.

Users should never share a one-time password, mobile banking PIN, card number, national identity document, recovery code, or screen-sharing access with the site’s support staff.

Anyone who sent money should save screenshots, messages, payment receipts, phone numbers, account names, wallet addresses, and withdrawal errors.

The payment provider or bank should be contacted quickly because some transfers may be stopped or disputed only within a limited period.

People who receive messages promising jobs or earnings through WhatsApp, Telegram, text messages, or social media should be especially careful.

The FTC’s April 30, 2026 guidance warns that fake recruiters may send simple online tasks and later demand deposits from the worker.

Practical Verdict

ans79.com has too many unresolved trust problems for registration or payment.

Its brand identity is inconsistent.

Its earning method is not explained.

Its large performance claims are unsupported.

Its reviews are not independently verifiable.

Its privacy and legal information are missing from the visible sign-up journey.

Its password-reset address contains an unrelated and unfinished shopping template.

The safest decision is to avoid entering personal or financial information until the operator supplies a verifiable company registration, named management, working legal policies, a detailed earning model, independently confirmed withdrawals, and proof that it is authorised to use the foundation branding.