The development team, in order to avoid layoffs, suddenly started talking about lofty words: "Community-issued tokens, you can earn transaction fees."
Think about whether those developers on GitHub would see this as a good opportunity. Dream on. Stacks of GitHub coins are just surfacing like this, from zero to full risk.
Those projects claiming to be community tokens? Most are just rebranded pump-and-dump schemes. Developers who see through this routine have long since wisely stayed away. Beware of projects claiming to "issue community tokens"—this is often the last straw for unemployed developers and the easiest trap for retail investors to fall into.
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Fren_Not_Food
· 5h ago
Oh no, here comes another wave of "community token" scams. They never end.
I'm tired of this trick. Developers start making up stories when they lose their jobs.
GitHub coins are everywhere. Anyone who dares to touch them is a fool.
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GateUser-5854de8b
· 5h ago
I've seen through this routine a long time ago, another round of "community tokens" scam.
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Huh? Transaction fees, laughable, clearly just trying to cut the leeks.
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GitHub developers aren't fools, this kind of scheme has been played out long ago.
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They just change the name and start over every time, retail investors really need to wake up.
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It's the last struggle of unemployed developers, so pitiful.
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Pump-and-dump games disguised as community projects, and some people actually believe it.
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Be cautious, do not touch any of these projects.
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WhaleWatcher
· 6h ago
Playing this trick has long been exposed; seeing GitHub coins flying everywhere just shows how ridiculous it is.
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DefiPlaybook
· 6h ago
Once again, it's the same old "community coin issuance" trick. Honestly, seeing through this scam is as easy as recognizing a smart contract rug pull.
GitHub coins are everywhere, going from zero to liquidation so quickly, developers have caught on.
Basically, it's just a rebranding pump-and-dump, the last lifeline for unemployed developers, and the favorite trap for retail investors.
These days, there's not a single good one among those claiming to be community-driven to scam the sheep.
I just want to know how many people will be fooled again this time into chasing this illusionary wool.
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PseudoIntellectual
· 6h ago
Another wave of rookie harvesters, just a new project with a different name.
The development team, in order to avoid layoffs, suddenly started talking about lofty words: "Community-issued tokens, you can earn transaction fees."
Think about whether those developers on GitHub would see this as a good opportunity. Dream on. Stacks of GitHub coins are just surfacing like this, from zero to full risk.
Those projects claiming to be community tokens? Most are just rebranded pump-and-dump schemes. Developers who see through this routine have long since wisely stayed away. Beware of projects claiming to "issue community tokens"—this is often the last straw for unemployed developers and the easiest trap for retail investors to fall into.