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Topic: SIGNS THAT A CRYPTO PROJECT IS A SCAM - page 3. (Read 593 times)

hero member
Activity: 2184
Merit: 585
You own the pen
July 26, 2023, 10:00:17 AM
#44
But sometimes when the crypto project is active in their telegram and any other social media activities they just do it for some reasons that they want to attract more investors to their project and when they get what they wanted, they start to stop their updates and they start to delay their response to their investors in the telegram. That's why I'm saying that's not totally reliable when a project is active on their social media because sometimes they only do it to lure their victims and do not sincerely make any progress to complete their project or to be listed in some exchanges.
hero member
Activity: 1218
Merit: 556
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
July 25, 2023, 03:20:42 AM
#43
There are two more warning signs, so let's look at those. Poor programming and exclusive approaches.

A crypto project whose code is not available for public review is like a gift whose contents you havent seen before. That is to say, you are investing in something of which you know nothing about the contents. And believe me, thats a surefire way to meet with failure in this world.

Second, its a red flag when a crypto project has a pre-mined supply and keeps back a large percentage of it for themselves or a select few. Its a red flag if a project uses this template.

The ancient adage "buyer beware" rings truer than ever in the rapidly changing world of cryptocurrencies. If you can avoid these warning signs, you can lessen the likelihood of suffering massive losses.
member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 49
Binance #Smart World Global Token
July 24, 2023, 11:37:20 PM
#42


There are many factors to be considered for a project to be appraised as a scam or a possible scam because of some red flags shown as mentioned above. However, we should also realize that scammers can be adopting...so they are already good on what they do by being effective deceivers. I am always sad whenever a project will turn out to be just another fraud...in fact in the past many years I am involved in bounty hunting I think more than 90% of the projects I supporters turned out to be scams or just failures - such a big waste of time and effort on my part and this is something I really regret.
hero member
Activity: 2590
Merit: 549
Rollbit
July 24, 2023, 11:03:42 PM
#41
As cryptocurrency continues to gain popularity, more and more people are investing in various crypto projects. Unfortunately, with this rise in interest comes an increase in scams.

 Here are signs that a crypto project may be a scam:

1. Lack of transparency: A legitimate crypto project should have clear information about its team, its technology, and its roadmap. If a project fails to provide this information, or only offers vague promises, it could be a sign that they are hiding something.

2. Unrealistic promises: If a project promises too-good-to-be-true returns on investment, it is likely a scam. While some crypto projects are innovative and have the potential for significant growth, investors should be wary of promises that seem too exaggerated.

3. Lack of community engagement: A legitimate crypto project will have an active and engaged community. If a project lacks social media activity or community interaction, it could be a red flag.

4. No clear use case: A legitimate crypto project should have a clear use case for its token. If a project cannot articulate a clear purpose for its token, or its use case seems vague or broad, it may be a scam.
Before investing in any crypto project, investors should do their research and look for these red flags. By being vigilant, investors can protect themselves from scams and make informed investment decisions.

 https://www.binance.com/en/feed/post/804194

All of the above are not only limited to scam projects. Because there are numerous projects that took off without transparency , lack of community engagement (which is kind of normal for new projects), and of course no real use case/utilities (meme coins are a living example).
All of what you have posted are all generic reasons and also a vague one. There's actually more indicator for a scam projects. Some were too obvious and some aren't. Some projects are even legitimate, but did not meet their target market and failed eventually.
You can research about the scan projects and maybe you will get an idea of how these frauds operate.
hero member
Activity: 2702
Merit: 704
July 24, 2023, 10:53:24 PM
#40
Basically approach everything like it's a scam, and only start to trust them if they prove to be otherwise, there is nothing wrong with that. I mean if you start thinking "this is a scam project" at the very start, that means they will work hard to prove to you they are not, and they will not do it personally to you like you are the only investor, so you just check what they do and what they provide, and that will be fine.

Look at pinksale, between audit, kyc, safu and many other stuff, they end up getting the projects to be a lot bigger and so forth. This means that if they keep working towards that, you get to see what they are working on, and then you can decide if they are actually good or not, and that will help you out a lot.
This may sound as inappropriate to some people out there, however we gain nothing by being nice and we gain a lot for not trusting at all on the developers behind all of those projects.

So anyone thinking about investing in any project needs to assume that the project is a scam, and as soon as they find something wrong with it no matter how small then such project needs to be discarded immediately, now this may seem like a standard that is too high for most projects to pass, but that is the whole point about doing this.
legendary
Activity: 3080
Merit: 1024
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
July 19, 2023, 07:59:58 PM
#39
Basically approach everything like it's a scam, and only start to trust them if they prove to be otherwise, there is nothing wrong with that. I mean if you start thinking "this is a scam project" at the very start, that means they will work hard to prove to you they are not, and they will not do it personally to you like you are the only investor, so you just check what they do and what they provide, and that will be fine.

Look at pinksale, between audit, kyc, safu and many other stuff, they end up getting the projects to be a lot bigger and so forth. This means that if they keep working towards that, you get to see what they are working on, and then you can decide if they are actually good or not, and that will help you out a lot.

When developers create a scam and know that they create a scam they make too attractive project. They must attract a big community of investors to collect a lot of money from them. People always want to earn more and that is why scams always attract people by big profit and promises them to earn more and more money.
this should be basic rule of thumbs of determining scam projects basically too much of an unrealistic promises and big profits in short term just outright means that its a red flag and everyone should avoid such projects in general.
after all the big project that I knew never ever giving such promises yet they become big project anyway. meaning commitment and efforts worth more than just some bullshit.
but nowadays there are many scammers that already knew that, despite not promising anything they still outright scams. like shitcoin project in general that are just outright trying to make pump and dump scheme which usually ended up with the devs dumping their coin to the market until the value become zero.
hero member
Activity: 2184
Merit: 513
Moonbet.io | Web3 Casino
July 19, 2023, 07:35:58 PM
#38
the projects requires you to pay for minting, seriously there are many project like this right now the devs outright just try to get some money out of the minters
and some people being too greedy just blindly pay for the minting fee and ended up getting scammed since the coin or NFT they minted are basically useless.
legendary
Activity: 3640
Merit: 1407
July 19, 2023, 05:58:00 PM
#37
As cryptocurrency continues to gain popularity, more and more people are investing in various crypto projects. Unfortunately, with this rise in interest comes an increase in scams.

 Here are signs that a crypto project may be a scam:

1. Lack of transparency: A legitimate crypto project should have clear information about its team, its technology, and its roadmap. If a project fails to provide this information, or only offers vague promises, it could be a sign that they are hiding something.

2. Unrealistic promises: If a project promises too-good-to-be-true returns on investment, it is likely a scam. While some crypto projects are innovative and have the potential for significant growth, investors should be wary of promises that seem too exaggerated.

3. Lack of community engagement: A legitimate crypto project will have an active and engaged community. If a project lacks social media activity or community interaction, it could be a red flag.

4. No clear use case: A legitimate crypto project should have a clear use case for its token. If a project cannot articulate a clear purpose for its token, or its use case seems vague or broad, it may be a scam.
Before investing in any crypto project, investors should do their research and look for these red flags. By being vigilant, investors can protect themselves from scams and make informed investment decisions.

 https://www.binance.com/en/feed/post/804194

The clear line that it's a scam us a zillion things but here are two indicators to me:

1)  if a coin is named after another coin its never legit. Those scammers are just trying to scrape some of the success from the coin they named theirs after from

2) planned coin or token burns as a feature.  When a mass amount of tokens are planned to be burned with no mechanism other than someone burning them its a scam.why even build those coins in to begin with only to burn them with the perception of lowering supply lol
legendary
Activity: 3066
Merit: 1028
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
July 19, 2023, 12:33:58 PM
#36
Those were just common indicators. The fact that if scammers become even smart from day to the another day. It's not only people who become even smarter but scammers are also trying so hard in fooling people.
You shall aware how scammers were using various modern trick like sending dusting tokens and many more.

I have seen some scam tokens owned by scammers who tried to be transparent, have big community, even this scammer offers realistic promises. I will prefer to avoid non doxxed project. A project that has not backed by a big company must be avoided. That being said that if this gonna be the main problem for ordinady people caused by it will become even harder to know which was scam or non scam tokens in the market. Im thinking about there shall be a new parameter that being used to identify the scammer.

The scammers can tricked us with various trick. You can see that so many meme tokens being launched. Even some tokens have sense idea but these turn to be scam tokens.
It's very hard to differentiate between legit and scam project.
legendary
Activity: 2898
Merit: 1253
Call your grandparents and tell them you love them
July 19, 2023, 11:36:00 AM
#35
Scams are never 100% predictable. Often the company is bankrupt and the owners just scam its investors and leave.

Point is that the above lines and many more are only pointers towards a possible legitimate project but any of these well running projects may not be able to face whats coming in the future and shut down - in the words of the investor it is a scam.

If the above lines match, then defenitely the project should be a no-go. But the doubt arises and the best practice is never to buy at ICOs but give the project a time period of at least 2years to observe and then invest.
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
FOCUS
July 19, 2023, 11:11:03 AM
#34
Your mentioned signs to avoid a scam project are indeed valid. However, there are instances that contradict these principles, such as Bitcoin, where we do not know who Satoshi is, yet it has been successful up to now. Therefore, we cannot immediately deem a project as a scam just because the team is anonymous. Perhaps, it really boils down to luck when choosing crypto projects, but thorough research remains essential since there are undoubtedly some projects that are obvious scams. Additionally, I would like to emphasize the importance of "investing only what you can afford to lose."

Yes. you are right, anonymous is not a measure and justifies outright scam. Today, there are 1000 new crypto coins that have appeared in the last 5 months. are we going to say average they are scam all. certainly not. There must be potential, of course, and it needs to be looked at carefully and thoroughly for sure.
They are essentially not but they are prone to being scam given that they can run anytime. There are many anonymous defi projects out there that still exist but among the total anonymous projects exist, only a very small percentage of those projects becomes legit. Remember those money making projects back then that has a completely anonymous developers? Where are they now? One factor before I personally trust a project is the project team background. It is one of the first thing that I am checking before investing on a project and having an anonymous project, I can't verify them and that's why I don't invest on that kind of projects unless they are established already and fully functioning.
jr. member
Activity: 31
Merit: 5
July 19, 2023, 10:59:57 AM
#33
Your mentioned signs to avoid a scam project are indeed valid. However, there are instances that contradict these principles, such as Bitcoin, where we do not know who Satoshi is, yet it has been successful up to now. Therefore, we cannot immediately deem a project as a scam just because the team is anonymous. Perhaps, it really boils down to luck when choosing crypto projects, but thorough research remains essential since there are undoubtedly some projects that are obvious scams. Additionally, I would like to emphasize the importance of "investing only what you can afford to lose."

Yes. you are right, anonymous is not a measure and justifies outright scam. Today, there are 1000 new crypto coins that have appeared in the last 5 months. are we going to say average they are scam all. certainly not. There must be potential, of course, and it needs to be looked at carefully and thoroughly for sure.
full member
Activity: 1365
Merit: 107
Sugars.zone | DatingFi - Earn for Posting
July 19, 2023, 10:00:23 AM
#32
As cryptocurrency continues to gain popularity, more and more people are investing in various crypto projects. Unfortunately, with this rise in interest comes an increase in scams.

 Here are signs that a crypto project may be a scam:

1. Lack of transparency: A legitimate crypto project should have clear information about its team, its technology, and its roadmap. If a project fails to provide this information, or only offers vague promises, it could be a sign that they are hiding something.

2. Unrealistic promises: If a project promises too-good-to-be-true returns on investment, it is likely a scam. While some crypto projects are innovative and have the potential for significant growth, investors should be wary of promises that seem too exaggerated.

3. Lack of community engagement: A legitimate crypto project will have an active and engaged community. If a project lacks social media activity or community interaction, it could be a red flag.

4. No clear use case: A legitimate crypto project should have a clear use case for its token. If a project cannot articulate a clear purpose for its token, or its use case seems vague or broad, it may be a scam.
Before investing in any crypto project, investors should do their research and look for these red flags. By being vigilant, investors can protect themselves from scams and make informed investment decisions.

 https://www.binance.com/en/feed/post/804194
Your mentioned signs to avoid a scam project are indeed valid. However, there are instances that contradict these principles, such as Bitcoin, where we do not know who Satoshi is, yet it has been successful up to now. Therefore, we cannot immediately deem a project as a scam just because the team is anonymous. Perhaps, it really boils down to luck when choosing crypto projects, but thorough research remains essential since there are undoubtedly some projects that are obvious scams. Additionally, I would like to emphasize the importance of "investing only what you can afford to lose."
legendary
Activity: 1736
Merit: 4270
July 19, 2023, 07:31:52 AM
#31
As cryptocurrency continues to gain popularity, more and more people are investing in various crypto projects. Unfortunately, with this rise in interest comes an increase in scams.

 Here are signs that a crypto project may be a scam:

1. Lack of transparency: A legitimate crypto project should have clear information about its team, its technology, and its roadmap. If a project fails to provide this information, or only offers vague promises, it could be a sign that they are hiding something.

2. Unrealistic promises: If a project promises too-good-to-be-true returns on investment, it is likely a scam. While some crypto projects are innovative and have the potential for significant growth, investors should be wary of promises that seem too exaggerated.

3. Lack of community engagement: A legitimate crypto project will have an active and engaged community. If a project lacks social media activity or community interaction, it could be a red flag.

4. No clear use case: A legitimate crypto project should have a clear use case for its token. If a project cannot articulate a clear purpose for its token, or its use case seems vague or broad, it may be a scam.
Before investing in any crypto project, investors should do their research and look for these red flags. By being vigilant, investors can protect themselves from scams and make informed investment decisions.

 https://www.binance.com/en/feed/post/804194
Stop teaching other people until you have your own experience.
Everything you wrote can be easily done by scammers.
But scammers cannot find serious well-known investors from well-known crypto funds, because there are very thorough checks.
Fraudsters are unlikely to force famous people in the crypto world to subscribe to their social networks.
legendary
Activity: 1582
Merit: 1284
July 19, 2023, 05:38:14 AM
#30
These SIGNS measure for you most cases of traditional fraudulent projects, but sometimes scam is smart to the extent that you do not know that the project is scamming until after you lose your money, and here it makes you be more cautious and less willing to invest long-term in altcoins.
Make your investment in these projects an opportunity to achieve greater liquidity in the short term and thus buy more bitcoins or at least be able to withdraw your capital and keep the profits in the form of that currency and therefore even if its value becomes zero, you have withdrawn your capital early.Greed, the belief that the future holds quick profit and long-term investment is what makes you more vulnerable to scam cryptocurrencies.

sr. member
Activity: 966
Merit: 340
July 19, 2023, 04:42:22 AM
#29
One of the signs I expected you to mention is plagiarized white paper. Most fake projects have lazy people that just plagiarized white paper.

/jk.
You are getting it wrong. Let me give you an example. Assuming the people behind the project said they will list the coin on an exchange, but should make your findings to know if that is true. If you later make research and the exchange said it is a lie, know that it is a fake project.

Also know that some projects may want to be a good one, but later in one way or the other, it becomes bump and dump or become failed.

If you want to invest, I will advice you to invest in bitcoin.
Very surprising you reply my post in serious, when I already wrote /jk as the sarcasm sign.

A project can hire a high skilled writer to write their white paper, now the scam project is already looks legit.

The team that sad they will list the coin on an exchange are only give promise, when the deadline come and they not yet list their coin, they will give a clarification and say they will try their best bla bla bla.

There's no sign to know the project is scam until the time come.

Exactly it is since anyone could just pay professionals so that it can give clean works from them and make those look good to the eyes of people who's easily to deceive so lets erase that one as a basis since it can easily fake by them. But I don't agree that there's no sign that a project is scam since there are some of them showing a shady behavior especially by disclosing their identities and legitimacy of their project if they can't even show that then its safe to say we are dealing on a scam project.
hero member
Activity: 966
Merit: 755
July 19, 2023, 04:06:27 AM
#28
One of the signs I expected you to mention is plagiarized white paper. Most fake projects have lazy people that just plagiarized white paper.

/jk.
You are getting it wrong. Let me give you an example. Assuming the people behind the project said they will list the coin on an exchange, but should make your findings to know if that is true. If you later make research and the exchange said it is a lie, know that it is a fake project.

Also know that some projects may want to be a good one, but later in one way or the other, it becomes bump and dump or become failed.

If you want to invest, I will advice you to invest in bitcoin.
Very surprising you reply my post in serious, when I already wrote /jk as the sarcasm sign.

A project can hire a high skilled writer to write their white paper, now the scam project is already looks legit.

The team that sad they will list the coin on an exchange are only give promise, when the deadline come and they not yet list their coin, they will give a clarification and say they will try their best bla bla bla.

There's no sign to know the project is scam until the time come.
hero member
Activity: 1078
Merit: 570
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform.
July 19, 2023, 04:02:05 AM
#27
.
 Here are signs that a crypto project may be a scam:

1. Lack of transparency: A legitimate crypto project should have clear information about its team, its technology, and its roadmap. If a project fails to provide this information, or only offers vague promises, it could be a sign that they are hiding something.

This is the first thing you should be looking at in a project before deciding to invest or not because if you invest into a project that has no transparency, you'll be left in the dark always and there's a high possiblity of the project turning into a scam as investors won't know the moves the developers of the project are taking to protect their investment by selling or keep holding.
Scam project always hide things or use fake credentials as they know if the community gets to know about what they hiding, they'll be exposed and their trick to scam more users will fail. If you noticed a project isn't been transparent you should sell your investment immediately and exit the project as this type of project always end in one way and that's exit scams.
When a project keep promising their investors unrealistic promises it means they have no product to show and only depending on their promises to retain their own investors. Also when a project only talks about the possibility of them having a particular price target in few years, you should sell all your investment because that project is full of bullshit and a scam token.
newbie
Activity: 32
Merit: 0
July 19, 2023, 03:12:52 AM
#26
Basically approach everything like it's a scam, and only start to trust them if they prove to be otherwise, there is nothing wrong with that. I mean if you start thinking "this is a scam project" at the very start, that means they will work hard to prove to you they are not, and they will not do it personally to you like you are the only investor, so you just check what they do and what they provide, and that will be fine.

Look at pinksale, between audit, kyc, safu and many other stuff, they end up getting the projects to be a lot bigger and so forth. This means that if they keep working towards that, you get to see what they are working on, and then you can decide if they are actually good or not, and that will help you out a lot.

When developers create a scam and know that they create a scam they make too attractive project. They must attract a big community of investors to collect a lot of money from them. People always want to earn more and that is why scams always attract people by big profit and promises them to earn more and more money.
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 1162
www.Crypto.Games: Multiple coins, multiple games
July 18, 2023, 10:58:04 PM
#25
Basically approach everything like it's a scam, and only start to trust them if they prove to be otherwise, there is nothing wrong with that. I mean if you start thinking "this is a scam project" at the very start, that means they will work hard to prove to you they are not, and they will not do it personally to you like you are the only investor, so you just check what they do and what they provide, and that will be fine.

Look at pinksale, between audit, kyc, safu and many other stuff, they end up getting the projects to be a lot bigger and so forth. This means that if they keep working towards that, you get to see what they are working on, and then you can decide if they are actually good or not, and that will help you out a lot.
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