Seems promising project as it has clear milestone setup for the period.
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The rationale behind ICO funding is that once a product launches and acquires users, demand for its token will increase dramatically, causing token values to rise to the benefit of their holders. Pre-sale participants are often further rewarded with additional bonuses on their token purchase to compensate for their additional exposure. Anyway invest during the pre-sales involves higher risk than other, because pre-sales starts at the very beginning of the project and there are not much information about the project. You have to take high risk as it is difficult to differentiate whether the project will success or it is just another scam.
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The most important point of difference that often confuses participants new to the cryptocurrency space is that tokens are not equity, but are more like paid API keys. In this model contributors don’t measure the attractiveness based on cost of equity, P/E ratios and the like, but on the basis of the future usefulness of the product, number of tokens in circulation (and future inflation/deflation of this number), necessity of the token to the products functionality and the opportunity for capital gains.
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Many people are unaware what the term initial coin offering means. However, if you know what a digital currency is, the premise is quite simple. Every project has to start somewhere, and also needs money to get it set up, and an initial coin offering is a great way to raise funds for these developments. A new digital currency is more often than not created by a team of developers who are looking to start a new project. They tell the wider community about this project using a whitepaper that contains all the key details and information in the hope that people will back the project and invest their funds in it.
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As far as I understand, both of them offer the chance to community to purchase some coins before it is released. Normally pre-sales offer higher benefits like some percentage of bonus to the amount you buy and the unit price also might be lower. And when it comes to Initial Coin Offering, the bonus amount might be less or not available anymore and price might be little bit high. Anyway the consideration is the risk. It is very high risk to invest during pre-sales as the project is not well known and might end up with scam.
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As the supply has a limitation, there will not be a deflation. Good project.
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Does ICOs all bad? Of course not. Knowledger prefers to apply some patience, best-practices and investment experience to avoid throwing the baby out with the bathwater..
I think you have a working solution to help make an informed assessment of a given product in this domain. Although the fact that most of the important parameters are not measurable, It is up to you to look for all the details and information you can find and analyze them deeply before taking the risk.
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The Initial Coin Offering phenomenon has started to play a significant role in the crypto-startup world. Lately, more and more experts are looking to decentralized crowd-funding methods with interest.
But, the absence of legal guidelines in the operation of these ICOs has resulted in more than a few scams. This is hardly abnormal for an entirely new, unregulated field; but, would-be investors, nonetheless, find it difficult to discern potential opportunities from grab-the-money-and-run schemes.So whatever you do, you have to make sure the money you invest can be afford to lose in worst case.
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As with any investment, nothing in the Initial Coin Offering space can be predicted or proved with absolute certainty. Analysis of the team, style and quality of management, and even some basic managerial accounting data is not available in most case. Still, most ICO trackers try to combine lists of presumably relevant parameters such as: who holds the collected money (in many cases investors do not even know!), what kind of social network activity a given project can boast, and other seemingly disparate data.
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If you look at lists of recent Initial Coin Offering campaigns it is really hard to come up with any sort of reasonable filter. There’s so much to be obviously skeptical of in this space that wealthier and experienced investors won’t even consider it As with any investment, nothing in the Initial Coin Offering space can be predicted or proved with absolute certainty. Analysis of the team, style and quality of management, and even some basic managerial accounting data is not available in most case
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