Obviously Patrick Dai is a scammer. But what about the rest of the team? They issued a statement saying the could see nothing wrong in Dai's past. That clearly incriminates them, but is it enough to conclude they are all scammers?
Here's his Twitter page:
https://twitter.com/oyyq99999 (no mention of Qtum just like his Linkedin page).
Here's his GitHub page:
https://github.com/oyyq99999 (Qtumproject is mentioned in his profile, his coding important if Qtum needs use of a Chinese lunar calendar).
http://alumnius.net/college_of_charlesto-9365-11Machine Learning, Data Mining, Data Analysis, Teaching, Research, Fraud Prevention, Microsoft Office, Higher Education, University Teaching, Music, Training, Statistics, Public Speaking, Science, Editing, Nonprofits, Qualitative Research, Payments, Financial Services, Piano, Python, SQL, Matlab, LaTeX, C++, Finale, iWork, Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Flash Animation, Flash Design, Flash, HPLC, PCR, Graphic Design, Social Media, Microsoft Excel, Event Planning, Management, Social Networking, Strategic Planning, Entrepreneurship, Customer Service, Marketing Strategy, Project Management, Business Strategy, Leadership, Start-ups, Marketing, Social Media Marketing
Seriously, a Bitcoiner well-versed in the myriad frauds in this space, but when the dude who is educated in fraud prevention is presented with facts pertaining to the outfit in which he's an associate, it's time to don dark glasses and say ...