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Topic: How to recognize scam - page 18. (Read 3159 times)

full member
Activity: 406
Merit: 100
January 04, 2018, 11:51:51 AM
#67
You can recognize a scam by carefully reading if there are reports about it having an unusual behavior. If a website doesnt have a ( https:/ ) in front, before the actual name of the website, it might be a phishing scam.
Really? Interesting to know! Why so?
full member
Activity: 630
Merit: 103
January 04, 2018, 11:20:26 AM
#66
You can recognize a scam by carefully reading if there are reports about it having an unusual behavior. If a website doesnt have a ( https:/ ) in front, before the actual name of the website, it might be a phishing scam.
full member
Activity: 406
Merit: 100
January 04, 2018, 11:17:14 AM
#65
lot of airdrop was a scam. the project always without a motive and has no whitepaper to read.. sometimes it was to good to be true with what they said about the token. using a new brand account also look cannot be trust.
Yes there are many airdrops and many scam to attract investors. In these you have to be good about it in searching the good ones. Also with ico check the feedback about their project if good or not.

I agree. You have to be very attentive
member
Activity: 728
Merit: 10
December 28, 2017, 01:27:23 PM
#64
How to recognize a scam site is to pay attention to the offer of a bid site given the intent of the reason or not, how the system works whether clear and logical, and lastly how long the site was standing.
full member
Activity: 350
Merit: 100
December 28, 2017, 01:08:00 PM
#63
Just like in airdrop for example, If i want to join the air drop , Ill make sure to read all detail about airdrop, and check the project manager, I preferred to join if campaign manager are in high rank mode or else if he or she falls to newbie or jr member, it makes me bother an ask question about, Does the campaign manager is reliable,? If there i find answers to my queries then ill go on:)
sr. member
Activity: 774
Merit: 250
December 28, 2017, 12:48:14 PM
#62
lot of airdrop was a scam. the project always without a motive and has no whitepaper to read.. sometimes it was to good to be true with what they said about the token. using a new brand account also look cannot be trust.
Yes there are many airdrops and many scam to attract investors. In these you have to be good about it in searching the good ones. Also with ico check the feedback about their project if good or not.
full member
Activity: 346
Merit: 100
December 28, 2017, 12:43:44 PM
#61
lot of airdrop was a scam. the project always without a motive and has no whitepaper to read.. sometimes it was to good to be true with what they said about the token. using a new brand account also look cannot be trust.
legendary
Activity: 2660
Merit: 3012
Top Crypto Casino
December 28, 2017, 12:29:19 PM
#60
Quote
- A founder and a team are not open.

A project founder must be always motivated, but sometimes answering the same questions from curious people (not investors) becomes tiring and exhausting, that's why a good project should have a staff responsible for comunicating with potential customers.

Quote
- Spending a lot of money on marketing isn't always show professionalism.

Marketing will attract more investors, big projects invest large amount of money to reach as many customers as possible.

Quote
- You know nothing about a founder. And you cant find any information about him/her.

Some projects require anonymity. We don't know who Satoshi Nakamoto is but we all use Bitcoin.

Quote
- They don't have a readymade product.

The product should be ready or at least at 50% to ensure developers seriousness.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 254
December 28, 2017, 11:24:25 AM
#59
Recognising scam does not have to be a rocket science or what ones needs a form of dictionary to get an explanation on. Its just simple as ABC.

A. Don't get greedy because that is he beginning of getting scammed.

B. When you get greedy, don't be in a hurry because in the process of waiting you might get clarification.

C. If B fails, go back to A and you are sure to be protected to aarge extent.
member
Activity: 168
Merit: 11
December 28, 2017, 11:21:01 AM
#58
As a newbie I thank you for this thread because of right now there is a lot of scam going on in bitcoin. some of it are the fastest way to earn in bitcoin. so thank you for the ideas on how to recognize scam.
member
Activity: 168
Merit: 10
December 28, 2017, 11:09:33 AM
#57
Hello everyone!

Today I've read a couple of articles and I've noticed that the most people are used to label each ICO as a scam. That is not fair, I know. Especially when you work in a startup launching ICO and do your best to make a project successful. However, having worked in ICO industry I learned how to recognize a scam just from one conversation with a Founder. I don't know how to explain this feeling. Probably, my subconscious translates knowledge, but I could not say a have a large experience.

So I decided to make a list of scam signs: (and this is just my own opinion)

- A founder and a team are not open.

Talking with a founder is always nice. They are usually full of energy and ready to talk about their project for hours. No matter how tired he/she is: when one is asking about a project, a founder starts talking about it with eyes burn with a fire. No matter who you are. When a founder deflects, tries to escape and avoids it makes you think that he/she just can't tell you anything important. What is more, it is crucial talking to a team. When a team member doesn't know how to answer a simple question about a product, it is also a bad sign.

In case of the lack of opportunity to visit an event and to talk to a team, you always can contact a founder and a team online. They should be open and answer patiently all your difficult questions. Even if you ask it every minute.

- Spending a lot of money on marketing isn't always show professionalism.

Just think. A company needs ICO to raise money for a company development. Isn't it a little bit queerly when an unknown company is too fancy. How? And Why? Why do they need ICO if they already have money on expensive advertisement? I don't know too  Huh

- You know nothing about a founder. And you cant find any information about him/her.

Always google the founder. Always. And now I'm not talking about his/her FB page. I'm talking about his experience, education, photos, events he took part in. A founder should not be a mysterious person who came from nowhere. His background should be open to everyone.

- They don't have a readymade product.

Let's make a sober recognition. The competition is high. In the end of 2017 - the beginning of 2018 you just can't appear with an idea and ask for money. You need to develop your product before ICO. It should not be an amazing one. It could be just prototype. But investors need something real. They need to touch and try your product. However, just 16% of all ICO has a product.

And what do you think about it? What are your signs of a scam?

I have some YouTubers that I trust and recommend coins.
I also check the projects on ICObench, I can see reviews and ratings over there from different expert. Plus check the BitcoinTalk ANN and they website. You will learn a lot for there about the project and the team.
member
Activity: 616
Merit: 10
December 28, 2017, 11:06:46 AM
#56
Hello everyone!

Today I've read a couple of articles and I've noticed that the most people are used to label each ICO as a scam. That is not fair, I know. Especially when you work in a startup launching ICO and do your best to make a project successful. However, having worked in ICO industry I learned how to recognize a scam just from one conversation with a Founder. I don't know how to explain this feeling. Probably, my subconscious translates knowledge, but I could not say a have a large experience.

So I decided to make a list of scam signs: (and this is just my own opinion)

- A founder and a team are not open.

Talking with a founder is always nice. They are usually full of energy and ready to talk about their project for hours. No matter how tired he/she is: when one is asking about a project, a founder starts talking about it with eyes burn with a fire. No matter who you are. When a founder deflects, tries to escape and avoids it makes you think that he/she just can't tell you anything important. What is more, it is crucial talking to a team. When a team member doesn't know how to answer a simple question about a product, it is also a bad sign.

In case of the lack of opportunity to visit an event and to talk to a team, you always can contact a founder and a team online. They should be open and answer patiently all your difficult questions. Even if you ask it every minute.

- Spending a lot of money on marketing isn't always show professionalism.

Just think. A company needs ICO to raise money for a company development. Isn't it a little bit queerly when an unknown company is too fancy. How? And Why? Why do they need ICO if they already have money on expensive advertisement? I don't know too  Huh

- You know nothing about a founder. And you cant find any information about him/her.

Always google the founder. Always. And now I'm not talking about his/her FB page. I'm talking about his experience, education, photos, events he took part in. A founder should not be a mysterious person who came from nowhere. His background should be open to everyone.

- They don't have a readymade product.

Let's make a sober recognition. The competition is high. In the end of 2017 - the beginning of 2018 you just can't appear with an idea and ask for money. You need to develop your product before ICO. It should not be an amazing one. It could be just prototype. But investors need something real. They need to touch and try your product. However, just 16% of all ICO has a product.

And what do you think about it? What are your signs of a scam?





I remember last day when I participated the bounty campaign of an ICO. At the end of the token sale, the soft cap did not accumulate. It is a good and promising project but in the end, no token came from my wallet. Sad to say thay this day when cryptocurrency finally developing and popular. A lots of scams are existing, they are like viruses. Thank you for your advise, I will remind it till I invest.
newbie
Activity: 163
Merit: 0
December 28, 2017, 10:44:49 AM
#55
Tell you a trick. Money doesn't grow on tree. As long as you understand this sentence seriously. I think you can avoid more than 90% deception. A lot of people are being cheated because of reckless with greed! So just remember that, you'll have good luck.
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 500
i love my family
December 28, 2017, 10:41:06 AM
#54
for me i notice the site is scam if the site has a lot of promises like example invest now and make it double in 24hrs.... sometimes they post a lot of money to get our attention... sometimes i get email saying i won on raffle which i don't remember i join anything... and i always read the reviews
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 106
December 28, 2017, 09:41:03 AM
#53
The name of the company is listed on this website somewhere as a scam.
The email matches one of the definitions or formats on this website.
The organization has no website and can not be located in Google.
The email or requestor asks for bank account information, credit card numbers, driver's license numbers, passport numbers, your mother's maiden name or other personal information.
The email or caller advises that you have won a prize - but you did not enter any competition run by the prize promoters.
The email claims you won a lottery (we know of NO legal lottery that notifies winners by email)
The mail may be personally addressed to you but it has been posted using bulk mail - thousands of others around the world may have received the exact same notification. Especially true if you find an exact or similar email posted on this website.
The return address is a yahoo, hotmail, excite.com or other free email accounts. Legitimate companies can afford the roughly $100 per year that it costs to acquire and maintain a domain and related company email account.
The literature contains a lot of hype and exaggerations, but few specific details about costs, your obligations, how it works, etc.
The prize promoters ask for a fee (for administration, "processing", taxes, etc.) to be paid in advance. A legitimate lottery simply deducts that from the winnings!
The scheme offers bait prizes that, if they are real, are often substandard, over-priced, or falsely represented.  Or, as part of the prize you can purchase "exclusive items" which may also be over-priced or substandard.
To get your prize might require travel overseas at your own cost (and personal risk) to receive it.
newbie
Activity: 38
Merit: 0
December 28, 2017, 04:37:16 AM
#52
 Well, the followings are the reasons for me to recognize a scam:

* The organization has no website and can not be located in Google.

* The email or requester asks for bank account information, credit card numbers, driver' license numbers, passport numbers, your mother's maiden name or other personal information.

* The email or caller advises that you have won a prize - but you did not enter any competition run by the prize promoters.
legendary
Activity: 1190
Merit: 1001
December 26, 2017, 12:56:19 PM
#51
If you are talking about ICo then you are talking about Altcoin not abou bitcoins you are in wrong section..

To judge a scam ICO
Follow all the social programs and scan it properly everytime
check the website , search it when it created and when modifies last time , ? is data copies or not
you can try to find official number of investor from the telegram group talk and try to find about the project.
No one offers you 10x or 20x they are scams they will dump and run away
newbie
Activity: 33
Merit: 0
December 26, 2017, 12:50:49 PM
#50
In bitcoin industry or line.... Scam can come from nowhere....
... It someone offer YOU a chance to have money or bitcoin in a very easy way and the fastest way... And they are looking for payments or information about your bank accounts, bitcoin account, credit cards or atm.... That's definitely a sigh of scam....
Report them immediately...
member
Activity: 186
Merit: 10
December 26, 2017, 12:49:00 PM
#49
You can observe how a site attracts its customers for example by giving a multiply fund injection after someone has started to enter the depth of a site then at some time there is no response at all when we ask when it can make a profit. That is crucial whether the site scam or not.
newbie
Activity: 53
Merit: 0
December 26, 2017, 12:44:05 PM
#48
Hello everyone!

Today I've read a couple of articles and I've noticed that the most people are used to label each ICO as a scam. That is not fair, I know. Especially when you work in a startup launching ICO and do your best to make a project successful. However, having worked in ICO industry I learned how to recognize a scam just from one conversation with a Founder. I don't know how to explain this feeling. Probably, my subconscious translates knowledge, but I could not say a have a large experience.

So I decided to make a list of scam signs: (and this is just my own opinion)

- A founder and a team are not open.

Talking with a founder is always nice. They are usually full of energy and ready to talk about their project for hours. No matter how tired he/she is: when one is asking about a project, a founder starts talking about it with eyes burn with a fire. No matter who you are. When a founder deflects, tries to escape and avoids it makes you think that he/she just can't tell you anything important. What is more, it is crucial talking to a team. When a team member doesn't know how to answer a simple question about a product, it is also a bad sign.

In case of the lack of opportunity to visit an event and to talk to a team, you always can contact a founder and a team online. They should be open and answer patiently all your difficult questions. Even if you ask it every minute.

- Spending a lot of money on marketing isn't always show professionalism.

Just think. A company needs ICO to raise money for a company development. Isn't it a little bit queerly when an unknown company is too fancy. How? And Why? Why do they need ICO if they already have money on expensive advertisement? I don't know too  Huh

- You know nothing about a founder. And you cant find any information about him/her.

Always google the founder. Always. And now I'm not talking about his/her FB page. I'm talking about his experience, education, photos, events he took part in. A founder should not be a mysterious person who came from nowhere. His background should be open to everyone.

- They don't have a readymade product.

Let's make a sober recognition. The competition is high. In the end of 2017 - the beginning of 2018 you just can't appear with an idea and ask for money. You need to develop your product before ICO. It should not be an amazing one. It could be just prototype. But investors need something real. They need to touch and try your product. However, just 16% of all ICO has a product.

And what do you think about it? What are your signs of a scam?





I am also wondering how to realize this, all investors are worried about their money on the project.
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