I wonder how did this thing slip through, it's not even that much of a changed image, a simple google reverse search will return tens of results.
The first thing I noticed is the name. Every time I see one of these "crypto marketing experts" with generic names like Adam Anderson or Joe Johnston, I immediately smell bullshit even before I see the the profile pic, and that was exactly the case here.
And the whole thing is really fishy:
https://www.egold.farm/So you buy plans of virtual hashes like in Farmville and this is supposed to earn you some virtual money that you can exchange only on their platform. This is going to end badly.
Yep, it really looks bad. Add on that anonymous team and you get the recipe for a disaster.
Another thing off topic that bothers me is how bounty hunters say "I worked hard". This is the funniest thing to read because I in fact know that it literally takes 1 minute to like a tweet, retweet it, and share the link. There is nothing hard about it. The same thing goes for facebook. Things like articles aren't even very hard because most just copy the info from the company website and post it to various other social media sites. IMO the hardest thing for bounty hunters is those that do original videos. At least some of them do their own work, but you notice a lot of duplicates while grading those as well.
And yet this farce goes on. Can you imagine someone investing because they somehow stumbled upon an illiterate article on some obscure platform or after watching a poor quality YT video made by some guy who you can barely understand because he used built-in laptop mic. I would really like to witness the negotiations between bounty managers and potential client, to hear all the bs they have to say in order to persuade someone to go for that marketing technique.

@Tranthidung are you in contact with the person who hired you to post the bounty, did you get any feedback yet?