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Topic: HOW TO IDENTIFY SCAM BOUNTIES (Read 378 times)

member
Activity: 685
Merit: 14
April 26, 2019, 10:20:30 AM
#23
It's hard to know if a bounty is a scam at an early stage but it's an advantage if we'll check everything about their team and developers. They could be a scam project if the crypto press isn’t talking about them. We have to check their website as well, if it's full of mistakes then it could be a scam. You have to think twice if the reward it too good to be true. Get rid of the bounty if they are asking too much information about you and lastly, it could also be a scam if you have to pay just to pursue and withdraw your reward.

Nowadays that is no use. Look at Tezos everybody knew who they were. Look at Dan Larimer everybody knows and has met him. Look at McAfee,,, look at Craig Wright. Great guys who are real and who all have skills and everything. But they launched shitty projects that scammed people,,, and still we forget and we think just because the team and devs are real,,, does not mean anything to scam probability.

Well said bro. Contents and product is the matter on choosing the ICO. If they they have the big team may be on IEO exchange community people believe them and invest their fund by closing their eyes, but if they come to real life on ICO launch no one will not accept it.

If they have a matter on idea and product, I will invest on it else I don't.
full member
Activity: 1750
Merit: 118
April 26, 2019, 07:38:03 AM
#22
It's hard to know if a bounty is a scam at an early stage but it's an advantage if we'll check everything about their team and developers. They could be a scam project if the crypto press isn’t talking about them. We have to check their website as well, if it's full of mistakes then it could be a scam. You have to think twice if the reward it too good to be true. Get rid of the bounty if they are asking too much information about you and lastly, it could also be a scam if you have to pay just to pursue and withdraw your reward.

Nowadays that is no use. Look at Tezos everybody knew who they were. Look at Dan Larimer everybody knows and has met him. Look at McAfee,,, look at Craig Wright. Great guys who are real and who all have skills and everything. But they launched shitty projects that scammed people,,, and still we forget and we think just because the team and devs are real,,, does not mean anything to scam probability.

sure they can scam but their reputation can be badly affected but what surprises me is that why those people are still popular despite the scams  that they made ? or maybe they dont scam but they only make such negative speculations like for example mcafee ,  mcafee is popular for his negative insights about bitcoin but thats normal and that cant be considered as a seriuos crime not unlike to scamming where you are taking the peoples money  .
hero member
Activity: 2338
Merit: 953
Temporary forum vacation
April 26, 2019, 06:37:58 AM
#21
It's hard to know if a bounty is a scam at an early stage but it's an advantage if we'll check everything about their team and developers. They could be a scam project if the crypto press isn’t talking about them. We have to check their website as well, if it's full of mistakes then it could be a scam. You have to think twice if the reward it too good to be true. Get rid of the bounty if they are asking too much information about you and lastly, it could also be a scam if you have to pay just to pursue and withdraw your reward.

Nowadays that is no use. Look at Tezos everybody knew who they were. Look at Dan Larimer everybody knows and has met him. Look at McAfee,,, look at Craig Wright. Great guys who are real and who all have skills and everything. But they launched shitty projects that scammed people,,, and still we forget and we think just because the team and devs are real,,, does not mean anything to scam probability.
full member
Activity: 1330
Merit: 147
April 25, 2019, 09:30:20 PM
#20
There are many thread which give everyone an education how to avoid scammer or project scam. Such as,

1. HOW TO protect yourself from scammer

2. Safeguard your crypto investment and avoid getting scammed.

3. [Guide] Using Google Alerts to avoid getting scammed

4. 🌍 Guidelines, how to spot a scam ICO & report effectively. ✔

5. [Guide] How to detect fake token and spot scammers.

Take your time to learn those thread and lastly you will know how to avoid yourself from scammer.
hero member
Activity: 1162
Merit: 516
1BTC Welcome Bonus
April 25, 2019, 01:53:16 PM
#19
We all know that there's a lot of new campaigns that non stop of coming.
How do you identify whether its only a scam or not aside of reading their whitepaper. Is there any suggestion how to identify those scam campaigns?

Just go to the ICO site of the bounty and search for team people images there.

Once you find that images please take that to Google and search for it. If that image is available in other site with the others name you may ignore such bounties.
Then reading the site content and whitepaper contents are really matters to understand the quality of the ICO.
sr. member
Activity: 2114
Merit: 268
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
April 25, 2019, 11:35:43 AM
#18
Scam bounties maybe actually hard to define. But there are a lot of bounties that not success in the project and canceled. If that considered as scam, maybe we must pickj project that really good and have a lot of people who interested in it.
member
Activity: 218
Merit: 10
April 25, 2019, 12:26:25 AM
#17
Too many ICOs cheated, this made people lose faith in it, it's terrible. People keep cheating on each other for money !
sr. member
Activity: 2604
Merit: 338
Vave.com - Crypto Casino
April 24, 2019, 03:22:37 PM
#16
Its so hard to figure out what bounty campaign is legit  and what is not whos paying and whos not. The only way to identify good bounties is when they are managed by reputable member, and the funds are escrow so theres nothing to worry.
There are bounties too that don't have a reputable manager but legit so the only way to spot a scam bounties are searching the legitimacy of their team member know the history of the team. You can easily spot a legit team by searching their faces/names in google and always ask to their telegram/discord/twitter channel.
Searching everything about the project is always been suggested but most people do failed up to do this very basic thing thats why they have been scammed and realized
it on the end.

Scammers do really uses stock photos and spotting them out wont really be that easy if your eyes arent really meticulous into things.Always seek out for legit team members or devs,
their backgrounds and so forth.
full member
Activity: 428
Merit: 172
chenille!
April 24, 2019, 10:30:38 AM
#15
Finding a good bounty where you can be sure that's a legit one are very difficult to find. Scam ICOs are just using a bounty for free advertising when the tokens from their scam project don't cost them anything. Often they don't hire a good bounty manager because bounty managers charge ETH.
If the project has no public team and you can't see the team members and their experience in crypto I will always stay away.
But a legit ICO is no guarantee for a good bounty, so many projects are changing terms to distribute less tokens as promised to bounty hunters, even legit projects do it and that's just not fair.

I had luck to join a good bounty from IoTeX, the project is great and they did a phase one bounty where they already proved to pay out participants. IoTeX pays in ETH.
legendary
Activity: 2632
Merit: 1094
April 24, 2019, 09:29:31 AM
#14
OTT Whitepapers, fraudulent team members, no transparency, no way to check up their real office and them not abiding by the laws of their country are some ways but ultimately you can't be sure of anything. Even reputed bounty managers can't. Most projects claim to raise millions in their private sale and never disclose the details and this pulls in many investors. Then finally they claim they never reached their soft cap and vanish without reimbursing the investors so everyone ends up on the losing side. I feel to some extent the manager is responsible for this as they get to earn huge dollars and ultimately don't care to checkup the team first.
member
Activity: 630
Merit: 10
April 24, 2019, 08:59:55 AM
#13
in my opinion, I often see bounty managers with high trust and see the concept of the bounty program, the team, and partners of the program. but now the bounty program is hard to guess.
member
Activity: 322
Merit: 12
April 23, 2019, 07:10:03 PM
#12
My method for me is to look if the site is rated in icobench or icoholder .. After I will see their traffic
alexa.com and if I find anything I will go see their ad page on bitcointalk
sr. member
Activity: 2506
Merit: 368
April 23, 2019, 09:42:23 AM
#11
Its so hard to figure out what bounty campaign is legit  and what is not whos paying and whos not. The only way to identify good bounties is when they are managed by reputable member, and the funds are escrow so theres nothing to worry.
There are bounties too that don't have a reputable manager but legit so the only way to spot a scam bounties are searching the legitimacy of their team member know the history of the team. You can easily spot a legit team by searching their faces/names in google and always ask to their telegram/discord/twitter channel.
hero member
Activity: 1946
Merit: 502
April 23, 2019, 07:52:32 AM
#10
Its so hard to figure out what bounty campaign is legit  and what is not whos paying and whos not. The only way to identify good bounties is when they are managed by reputable member, and the funds are escrow so theres nothing to worry.
sr. member
Activity: 980
Merit: 294
April 23, 2019, 03:45:27 AM
#9
For finding a scam bounties you can see who is managing if it is run by a newbie then it might be a scam.
More often true. Newbie accounts don't bother if they'll have negative trust after they scammed people. Apparently, they don't have any reputation to maintain. So look out for this.

If the funds are on escrow, much better.
Yep, but this is seldomly happened in bounty campaigns.

Sometimes even how promising the project nor campaign may be, if the team behind it want to run away the money then there will be no stopping besides there's no specific law that we can file against them. All we can do is to move on.
sr. member
Activity: 1092
Merit: 271
April 22, 2019, 12:02:00 PM
#8
Check out the team, if they are real, the possibility of being a legit project is high because scammers will not use real image. Study the project more widely to learn about the product.



There are a lot of this kind of threads where people aksing the same question. Please use search button.
True. Some scammers use other known personalities photos or if not some developers with legit project and use other name with the same photos. Better find the people in their team in LinkedIn or other social medias if the name do appear to be legit or just a dummy account. Most of the scam projects found out by members here are the team. They are not real personalities and if they’re being exposed to be scams, immediately, they disappear in their Telegram channels and they cannot find explanations to answer accusations.
hero member
Activity: 1274
Merit: 519
Coindragon.com 30% Cash Back
April 22, 2019, 11:44:01 AM
#7
It's hard to know if a bounty is a scam at an early stage but it's an advantage if we'll check everything about their team and developers. They could be a scam project if the crypto press isn’t talking about them. We have to check their website as well, if it's full of mistakes then it could be a scam. You have to think twice if the reward it too good to be true. Get rid of the bounty if they are asking too much information about you and lastly, it could also be a scam if you have to pay just to pursue and withdraw your reward.
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 502
April 22, 2019, 08:14:58 AM
#6
We all know that there's a lot of new campaigns that non stop of coming.
How do you identify whether its only a scam or not aside of reading their whitepaper. Is there any suggestion how to identify those scam campaigns?

Well, for me I can indentify a scam bounty campaign when their allocation to their bounties were too huge like say they allocate to bounties worth $50,000,000. And also their team member were not real which is cannot determine when you were going to search. And for the last when a bounty manager will get negative due to its campaign that he was manage was a scam
How can you predict the scam bounties based on token allocation? Normally they will allocate number of tokens so if the price of token is very cheap then the value might be higher.But if you are good at evaluating the project team you can find the scammers 90% if you are not then try scam accusations section where most of the scam projects will get listed soon after they launched.
full member
Activity: 460
Merit: 100
April 22, 2019, 04:22:36 AM
#5
We all know that there's a lot of new campaigns that non stop of coming.
How do you identify whether its only a scam or not aside of reading their whitepaper. Is there any suggestion how to identify those scam campaigns?

Well, for me I can indentify a scam bounty campaign when their allocation to their bounties were too huge like say they allocate to bounties worth $50,000,000. And also their team member were not real which is cannot determine when you were going to search. And for the last when a bounty manager will get negative due to its campaign that he was manage was a scam
hero member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 504
March 30, 2019, 05:35:27 PM
#4
We all know that there's a lot of new campaigns that non stop of coming.
How do you identify whether its only a scam or not aside of reading their whitepaper. Is there any suggestion how to identify those scam campaigns?
If the funds are on escrow, much better.
Some bounties held their funds on escrow and that's safety net that they are going to pay. And if the manager is known for promoting scams, you should getaway from him/her.
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