The main promoter's linkedin profile tells that he has been involved with personal businesses mostly.
Too many red flags here.He has been doing this for a long time and has
suddenly made the jump from managing a jewelry sourcing business to a bitcoin trading website. The suspicious part is
INRT which seems to be a replication of the USDT.The bitcoinalliance.in link is non-working too.
In India and crypto, a linkedin profile is hardly something with which you can verify the authenticity of a person's background. His doesn't speak much for him in the first place.
I don't understand the sudden interest in starting an
INR based BTC exchange safely from the confines of Dubai, UAE. (By the way, that other scammer of Gainbitcoin, Bitcoingrowthfund, MCAP and now GB21 notoriety also operates out of Dubai.)
During the time when legitimate established businessmen haven't been averse to stealing bank loans and running off to other jurisdictions (Vijay Mallya, Nirav Modi, The Rotomac guy-fuck you man, you spoiled a childhood memory), I don't find it prudent for anybody to trust a person starting a BTC exchange without any legal commitments binding him or his conveniently placed exchange.
What I would like to see is what exactly do these ICO promoters have in line themselves?? How much is he investing himself?? Making a website and claiming it to be some sort of awesome trader place with catch-words like INRT looks like a typical scam to my, now, paranoid, non-ICO trusting brain...LOL..
TLDR; Don't invest in these guys unless you see some real commitment from them to engage with the community. Newbies spreading the word after joining a Telegram channel is a big red flag in itself. If you trust such a promoter to keep his word in times like these then the joke is on you. Don't forget the treason of "Freedom 256" mobile device!!