It is a scam, of course. They were moderately successful wireless provider, but before that they had to pay people to install their hardware. Afer jumping on that crypto bandwagon and strategically providing fake potential income numbers, they can't produce equipment fast enough to sell to suckers.
This is a perfect example where "crypto" is not needed. What they have is a plain old loyalty program. You can earn points by hosting the network and passing the data, you spend points by sending your own data. But loyalty programs is 70s, it is not Web 3.0, so hard to make gullible idiots interested in it. LOL.
Also, potential earnings they advertise are all in heavily trafficked areas. If you live in the middle of nowhere, your best way to profit from it is to sell the equipment to the next sucker.