A community called "My Damn Come" has recently caused quite a stir. On the 8th, someone privately messaged me inviting me to join the group. I thought it was just a small circle and didn't pay much attention. It wasn't until today that I accidentally clicked on the community link and realized it had already gathered over 5,000 people.
But behind the lively scene, there are hidden risks. I heard that on December 31st, several members pooled money to pay someone to update token information on DEX Screener. As a result, that guy took the $300 USD pooled by group members and disappeared — the group was even disbanded.
This incident serves as a reminder to everyone: no matter how convenient community fundraising is, risk prevention and control must keep up.
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FOMOSapien
· 8h ago
Haha, laugh to death. Just 300U can disband a community group. This move is really impressive.
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Another old trick from a local project. Promised to go to DEX for an update but still took the money and ran.
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A group of 5000 people was actually exploited like this. Are they mocking us?
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The biggest risk in fundraising is situations like this. Not even a multi-signature wallet, yet they still have the nerve to talk about risk control.
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I just want to know where that guy is now. Is 300U really that easy to run away with?
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RugpullAlertOfficer
· 8h ago
Haha, it's the same old trick again. I already said not to rush into pooling money easily.
300U is gone just like that. The group members are really quite something to keep messing around.
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SignatureDenied
· 8h ago
Running away with just 300U, how ruthless must this guy be? I just want to know if there's anyone who can catch up with him.
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RetailTherapist
· 8h ago
300U directly evaporates, this move is brilliant, it's truly a textbook example of outright exit scam.
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SnapshotStriker
· 8h ago
You can run away with just 300U, this guy is really bold. I thought scammers these days would at least have some technical skills, but it seems I was overthinking.
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HackerWhoCares
· 8h ago
300u is gone just like that? Haha, that's really impressive. The group members have paid their tuition this time.
A community called "My Damn Come" has recently caused quite a stir. On the 8th, someone privately messaged me inviting me to join the group. I thought it was just a small circle and didn't pay much attention. It wasn't until today that I accidentally clicked on the community link and realized it had already gathered over 5,000 people.
But behind the lively scene, there are hidden risks. I heard that on December 31st, several members pooled money to pay someone to update token information on DEX Screener. As a result, that guy took the $300 USD pooled by group members and disappeared — the group was even disbanded.
This incident serves as a reminder to everyone: no matter how convenient community fundraising is, risk prevention and control must keep up.