Post
Topic
Board Altcoin Discussion
Re: AURORA "airdrop" - before and after March 25
by
nelsonmw
on 24/03/2014, 19:08:52 UTC
Suppose I am entitled to get some, how do I do it? Do I email the guy? How can he trust I am who I say I am? He claims he has a National ID system in place, but has anyone seen it? Has he tested it at all? What if every single person wants their AUR at launch, what then? If this is supposed to be for the people, where is the transparency, why is everything a secret? The lack of information and structure seems overwhelmingly likely that this is a scam.

Suppose it's a tiered approach, who get's theirs first? Why does my neighbor get his when the price is $12, but I get mine when the price is $8? Forget the price, why does he get free money before I get free money?

Also, who and where is this guy? He's supposed to GIVE AWAY ~$65million USD? (50% of current coinmarketcap.com total $ value) Don't tell me they don't count towards the market cap, he holds them in a wallet and can clear all of the buy orders on all exchanges. He wouldn't clear $65 million, but he'll clear millions for sure.
Ask yourself, if you had even $10,000,000.00 and were completely anonymous, would you give all of it away just because you promised some people from ICELAND you would? Even if my initial intentions we're honest, simply GIVING AWAY 10 million would cause me to think twice.


If this isn't a scam, this may be the biggest positive news for Bitcoin in a long time. I hope for cryptocurrency's sake that its legit, but I am still very skeptical.