#数字资产市场动态 $AXS $DASH $ZEN —— As the year comes to an end, various scam projects in the crypto space are starting to stir again.
To be honest, judging whether a coin is a scam is quite simple. Look at three points: whether there is a genuine project team, whether it is listed on mainstream exchanges, and whether there has been continuous technical iteration and development over the past six months. All three are indispensable.
Especially those projects that haven't even been listed on an exchange and are still just PPT presentations after half a year—nine out of ten are just here to harvest retail investors. Don't be fooled by appealing stories, and don't listen to others' hype. Take the time to check the project's Github, official website, and community activities. You can tell at a glance which projects are actively working and which are just abandoned.
The crypto market is very complex, but as long as you ask yourself a few more "why" questions, it's less likely you'll get scammed. Calm analysis > blindly following the crowd—that's the eternal truth.
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GasGuzzler
· 1h ago
Another friendly big brother mode. I looked at my account, and the net value has shrunk again, haha.
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GasFeeWhisperer
· 7h ago
It's the end of the year again, and the peak period for cutting leeks. It's hard to guard against.
I'm not listening to this anymore; I’ll just pass on projects that aren't even updated on Github.
That's true, but very few people can actually do it. Most are still paying the IQ tax.
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OnchainGossiper
· 7h ago
It's the same old story, PPT projects come every year, especially many at the end of the year.
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AirdropF5Bro
· 7h ago
The year-end harvest festival is starting, I see through this wave
These three points are indeed the gold standard, I've been doing it this way for a long time
Projects that haven't been updated on Github, I advise you not to touch them, really
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WhaleSurfer
· 7h ago
The reasoning is rough but not wrong; these three points are indeed filters, but you're still being too gentle.
It's that time of year again for the leek-cutting season, I'm already numb.
Github doesn't even have a decent commit, yet they still have the nerve to raise funds. LOL
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GraphGuru
· 7h ago
Another wave of rug pulls season, same old tricks.
Projects that haven't been updated on Github, I just pass on them. Don't try to tell me stories.
Half a year of PPT projects are indeed 90% scams; I've seen too many.
This market trend really requires patience; otherwise, you'll suffer heavy losses.
Claiming to be on mainstream exchanges without actually being listed? Haha.
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PanicSeller
· 7h ago
Really, every year at the end of the year, a bunch of PPT coins pop up and dance around.
This guy is not wrong; just a quick look at Github reveals their true nature.
#数字资产市场动态 $AXS $DASH $ZEN —— As the year comes to an end, various scam projects in the crypto space are starting to stir again.
To be honest, judging whether a coin is a scam is quite simple. Look at three points: whether there is a genuine project team, whether it is listed on mainstream exchanges, and whether there has been continuous technical iteration and development over the past six months. All three are indispensable.
Especially those projects that haven't even been listed on an exchange and are still just PPT presentations after half a year—nine out of ten are just here to harvest retail investors. Don't be fooled by appealing stories, and don't listen to others' hype. Take the time to check the project's Github, official website, and community activities. You can tell at a glance which projects are actively working and which are just abandoned.
The crypto market is very complex, but as long as you ask yourself a few more "why" questions, it's less likely you'll get scammed. Calm analysis > blindly following the crowd—that's the eternal truth.