You need to carefully study the technical documents, the team - check whether the team members participated in other projects and find feedback on them. Then, if the project has passed the test, take part in the bounty program and see how the project works, only then decide whether to invest in the project or not.
Of course, breaking the wallet is possible anyway. If hackers broke into a well-protected Binance exchange, it is so easy for hackers to crack any user's wallet.
Proof of joined post Bitcointalk username: baeva2 Campaign in which you participate:Facebook, Linkedin ETH address: 0xb239f1433eB9b6fA59ceC1ed37DCbF9F978727aB
I do not think that bounty hunters are the main culprits of project failures. Most projects cheat bounty hunters and do not pay them earned rewards or pay very little.
Currently there are really very few projects and their number is decreasing. On projects that exist it is impossible to earn good money. It is likely that in the future, ICO projects in general will cease to appear.
Good article. I took part in bounty and airdrop, and now I'll try Crowdholding and a blogging platform. I was interested in these ways of making crypto.
I think that passing KYC for head managers will not solve the problem. Even if they go through this procedure, the project may turn out to be Scam and for bounty hunters they will not cancel KYC.