Cryptocurrency rug pulls are unfortunately a common occurrence in the global crypto markets, resulting in billions of dollars of losses for digital asset investors.
What Is a Crypto Rug Pull?
A rug pull is a type of exit scam that involves a team raising money using investors and the public by selling a token only to quietly shut down the project or suddenly disappear, stealing the raised funds and leaving them with worthless tokens.
Rug pulls can be extensively orchestrated, with actors leveraging social media influencers and hype-generating campaigns to lure as many victims as possible. Some scams even use trusted key opinion leaders in the social space to gain trust. Others promise extremely high yields or offer exclusive digital goods, as seen in NFT rug pulls.
Crypto rug pulls can also occur when the project’s owners manipulate the value of a particular token or coin to deceive investors and subsequently draw off their investments. Fraudsters often attract victims with a sudden, sharp increase in the token’s value in a short period. Once the price peaks, the people behind the token sell it to generate a profit while leaving “investors” with steep losses.
Types of Rug Pulls
Rug pulls can generally be classified into “hard” and “soft” pulls.
Hard rug pulls are more severe and sudden, in which investors lose all their money within a short period of time. The soft rug pulls takes place over a longer period, as the cryptocurrency team gives investors a false sense of security while quietly carrying out their fraudulent actions.
Common types of rug pulls include:
Liquidity Pulls: When liquidity is removed from a token pool, causing the token’s value to dive due to a lack of buyers and sellers.Fake Projects: Scammers create seemingly legitimate projects, gather investments, and then disappear with the funds, leaving investors with worthless tokens.Pump and Dump: Fraudsters artificially inflate the price of a token through coordinated buying, only to sell their holdings at the peak and crash the value.Team Exit: The project’s team members suddenly disappear or exit, leaving investors with no support and a collapsing token.
Biggest Crypto Rug Pulls in History
Some scams left a mark in the industry.
OneCoin
OneCoin was a cryptocurrency-based Ponzi scheme promoted as a new digital currency that would revolutionize the financial world. The scheme was run by Ruja Ignatova, who claimed that OneCoin was backed by a team of experts and had a vast network of distributors.
However, OneCoin was never actually backed by anything, and the distributors were simply paid to recruit new investors. When the scheme eventually collapsed, investors lost over $4 billion.
Thodex
Thodex was a Turkish cryptocurrency exchange that was hacked in 2021. The hacker stole over $2 billion worth of cryptocurrency from Thodex users, and the exchange’s founder, Faruk Özer, then disappeared. Özer was later arrested in Albania in 2022.
AnubisDAO
AnubisDAO was a DeFi project launched in 2021. The project promised high returns to investors, but it was a rug pull. The developers drained the project’s liquidity pool and disappeared, leaving investors with nothing.
Uranium Finance
Uranium Finance was a DeFi project that promised to provide investors with exposure to uranium mining, but it was yet another rug pull. The developers of Uranium Finance drained the project’s liquidity pool and vanished, leaving token holders with heavy losses.
Squid Game Token
Squid Game Token was a scam cryptocurrency created in 2021, inspired by the popular Netflix series “Squid Game.” However, the token was a rug pull. The developers disabled the token’s ability to be sold and then disappeared with investors’ money.
Can AMAL teams Rug Pull the token?
When we claim that AMAL is a cryptocurrency built on transparency, credibility, and security, it's important to not just accept the slogans at face value. Instead, thorough research and scrutiny should always be conducted, whether for AMAL or any other crypto-asset. The factors that demonstrate the AMAL team's inability to engage in fraudulent activities are as follows:
100% Liquidity Lock
Withdrawing funds from the liquidity pool is a common practice for pulling the rug on cryptocurrencies available on decentralized platforms. However, AMAL's liquidity is 100% locked by a third party for 200 years, making it impossible to pull the rug by withdrawing other people's money.
Auditing the smart contract
Fraudsters who exploit decentralized platforms typically avoid having their currency's smart contract audited, as reputable audit companies would expose their schemes. However, the AMAL smart contract was thoroughly audited by Cyberscope, one of the world's leading audit firms, and received an excellent security score.
It's crucial not to rely on audit reports found solely on a cryptocurrency's website, as they could be manipulated. Instead, it's important to verify the audit results on the website of the auditing company.
KYC certificate
Fraudsters will not verify their identity because their goal is to take other people's money and escape without getting caught. The AMAL team takes pride in documenting data and obtaining a KYC certificate, which states that the team’s identity will be revealed in the event of rug pulling or any other fraudulent act.
Website, project roadmap, and white papers
The scammers who pull the rug do not work very hard. They create a simple and repetitive website and white papers copied from other projects. On the other hand, with AMAL, you will notice the effort put into every page of the site. There is care taken to explain all matters and develop an executable roadmap and white papers that are unique to AMAL. Additionally, the AMAL team publishes articles about the importance of fighting fraud, deception, and scams in the world of cryptocurrencies.
In conclusion, we hope that everyone reading this article will be careful when buying cryptocurrencies and assume the possibility of rug-pulling until proven otherwise. However, it's important not to lose hope in trustworthy cryptocurrencies, such as AMAL.
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