80% of ICOs Are Scams – New Study Reveals
81% of all ICOs currently are scams. This is according to a study carried out by Satis Group, an ICO research and advisory firm. The highest percentage of failed ICOs were those with a market cap of $50-$100 million which was the lowest tier tracked.
The team of researchers divided the ICOs into 6 groups. They included outright scams- those projects that had no intention of fulfilling their promises; failed ICOs- projects which failed to hit the soft cap and had to refund the investors’ money; gone dead ICOs – projects that failed to be listed on exchanges and have not updated GitHub code for last three months; dwindling- initially succeeded but the project has stalled; promising- moderately flourishing and lastly, successful – completely delivered on promises.
"The Rising Popularity"
ICOs have risen astronomically in popularity in the past one year and have now become the new investment vehicle that everyone wants to hop on. With the immense success achieved by cryptocurrencies in 2017, those who hadn’t invested in them felt left out and endeavored to be on the frontline in the next wave. This group of expectant and eager investors has proven to be fertile ground for fraudsters who have made millions from them and then vanished.
This year alone, more than 1,300 ICOs have been conducted according to ICOs indexing site, ICObench.com. These ICOs have raised an astounding $2.1 trillion! This is a clear indicator of the great popularity initial coin offerings are getting.
"The Scams"
With the increase in popularity of ICOs, the number of scammers has shot up. In 2017, many investors lost millions of dollars to startups that promised incredible returns only for the websites to be pulled down shortly after completion of the ICO and the founders vanishing.
One of the ICO scams was Bitcard, a startup that promised investors to develop a smart contract platform and biometric validator that would disrupt and overhaul the current way of conducting business. Shortly after the ICO closed, the project was disintegrated and the money invested was never recovered.
This pales in comparison to ToTheMoon, a startup that promised its investors full-service mining solutions among other wild promises. Eager investors quickly bought the tokens and in one month, the ICO had raised $27 million. The money was never recovered and none of the team members’ whereabouts are known.
- For more information: https://goo.gl/XmvbFa
Woff, woff!
Hello @daoneday, We have met 2 times already!
I'm a guide dog living in KR community. I can see that you want to contribute to KR community and communicate with other Korean Steemians. I really appreciate it and I'd be more than happy to help.
KR tag is used mainly by Koreans, but we give warm welcome to anyone who wish to use it. I'm here to give you some advice so that your post can be viewed by many more Koreans. I'm a guide dog after all and that's what I do!
Tips:
Unfortunately, Google Translate is terrible at translating English into Korean. You may think you wrote in perfect Korean, but what KR Steemians read is gibberish. Sorry, even Koreans can't understand your post written in Google-Translated Korean.
I sincerely hope that you enjoy Steemit without getting downvotes. Because Steemit is a wonderful place. See? Korean Steemians are kind enough to raise a guide dog(that's me) to help you!
Woff, woff! 🐶
Hello there!
Following to #kr-guide policy,
Make sure to use #kr tag only if you are writing some article related with Korea or written in Korean language.
The puppie will come here and tell you the details.
Have a nice day! :) #kr-guide!
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