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Deadcoins hosts âa curated list of cryptocurrencies forgotten by this worldâ. Most of the coins detailed are artifacts from altcoin bubbles past, with many comprising exit scams or litecoin clones sporting a silly name for marketing purposes.
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The Majority of the Coins Listed on Deadcoins Comprised of Exit Scams or Poorly Planned Ventures
Deadcoins lists projects alphabetically, with âAidenâ being one of the first coins encountered by visitors. Of Aiden, the author states âhaha this brings back memories. Aiden is another LTC clone shitcoin I made which the idiots and Poloniex listed. I just changed some scrypt parameters and scammed people by calling it GPU friendly. I made so much BTC from this shitcoin itâs not even funny.â The flippant tone of the authorâs comments should underline the imperative need for prospective investors to critically evaluate the claims made by the developers of new altcoins.
Deadcoins illustrates the prevalence of exit scams among obscure cryptocurrencies. Many of the exit scams described tell the familiar story of developers disappearing with investorsâ funds, such as âBlocksharesâ, which âraised $250k [and] then disappearedâ, âCrimsoncoinâ, whose developors âsold their coins and ran off in less than a weekâ, and âErosvisionâ, which is said to have âcomprised a âscam coin ICO with [a] plagiarized white paper [that] collected around ten million US dollars before⊠disappearingâ.
Some scams, however, elicit a far more elaborate story, such as Chancoin. Of Chancoin, Deadcoins alleges that the developer conducted a â30% premine, supposedly mistakenly [sent] 10% of the coins to a stranger on the first day, [made] big promises to the community which went unfulfilled⊠[told] an elaborate lie about [multiple] developers which were all alternate accounts of the same personâ, and âfork[ed] the coin which accidentally caused all funds held by people on exchanges to disappear.â Deadcoins states that â[Chancoin] now has a daily volume of less than $1000 [which is] faked by the developer trading with himself.â
Many Failed Altcoins Possess Gimmicky Names
Many of the cryptocurrencies detailed on Deadcoins comprise projects with little worth that sought to ride the gimmick of a silly name. One such project is âBeercoinâ, which sought to use a premine in order to âhold the price relative to the price of beerâ. Other notably named coins include âFraudcoinâ, âGroincoinâ, âKoindashianâ, âObama_bin_lotterycoinâ, and âAsspenniesâ.
Although though most of the cryptocurrencies described on Deadcoins comprise lazy attempts at establishing a gimmick, or maliciously motivated scams, some projects appear to have been serious in their efforts, and failed due to comically poor execution. âSiliconvalleycoinâ sought to build its user base by âsending out a mailer that said âfree moneyâ to people in Silicon Valleyâ. âOilcoinâ is described as âan attempt to create a cryptocurrency for the vertical market of crude-oil shipping and dealing [that] made absolutely zero penetration into that market.â âCryptomethâ is another notable example, which âafter a smooth launch⊠couldnât get listed on Bittrex because bittrex objected to the⊠name. They were listed on allcrypt, but the price collapsed and miners abandoned the coin.â
Do you think that many of the cryptocurrencies launched during the recent altcoin bubble will be able to sustain a robust userbase long term? Or do you think the majority of altcoins are destined to fade into obscurity? Share your thoughts in the comments section below!
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The post Deadcoins Launches Compendium of Deceased Cryptocurrencies appeared first on Bitcoin News.
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