Managers IMO do have a duty to pull the plug on the bounty if the project gets exposed as a scam by the community detectives who do a great job of scrutinizing these ICO ANN threads.
This I think everyone will agree on... and is, for me, the defining line where a manager will move from "unknowing victim" to "actively promoting a scam".
This has been discussed over and over and every time it ends with the same conclusion: Bounty whores are equally responsible for promoting a scam project when they don't do their 'due diligence' before joining a bounty.
That's actually a fairly valid point... I wonder if the "Bounty whores" screaming "scam" when they don't get their shit tokens, realise that there are possibly ICO investors who consider
them to be part of the scam as they were spamming/promoting said shit token everywhere?
Some people just aren't good at detective work, aren't thorough, or may have some other impediment that keeps them from being able to tell if a project is fishy.
I mean I am no Sherlock, I have been approached by a couple of "ICOs" who didn't have their story straight or were just a copy of something which was already done. I will also give credit to Loyce here by making me see things which I wouldn't have otherwise. I think the managers do/should have a moral duty towards the community. I mean why work with a project which has already been done and isn't doing something "unique". The chances it will end up as failure/scam are quite high TBH. I mean these managers should be able to make the call if you ask me. In my book, if I see the chances of the project failing are high, I usually decline to work with them. I mean I get it that they want to get paid but they are getting paid at the expense of other people getting scammed/losing money in a shit project? But hey that's just me.
A commendable attitude... #kudos
You seem to be "shooting the messenger"...
Yet anyone who tries to promote a Ponzi gets tagged. Isn't he just a "Messenger"??
I get your point... I guess it's a very grey area (as a lot of things tend to be).
Perhaps the the defining line is whether one is knowingly promoting a (known) scam/ponzi... as opposed to being paid to help promote a project... that later turns into a scam?