I believe it's another scam. I could name 10 other websites claiming the same kind of thing that's popped up over the last month. This particular one reminds me of coince.com which has since proven to be a scam too. They use slick web/video production to fool people, but already I can point out a ton of red flags on maximuscoin.com.
For one they have a video where the actor is obviously from the US. If they were truly real the developers should be upfront with their identities to prove they are legit.
Check this out. On the front page under the profit percentages boxes it says "Instant Withdrawals: OFF (MORE SECURE)", but if you go to any other page it says "Instant Withdrawals: ON".
Reading through the vague text there tons of grammatical mistakes. If this was a serious company dealing in money you would think they would afford to hire someone who knows how to write proper English. All of the scam sites I've seen are like this.
This is how a ponzi scheme works:
They'll be around for the first month, and people who give them bitcoin will see these ROI's . Then when it works those investors will tell others and get more people to sign up and invest. Eventually the payouts will stop.
Maximuscoin.com claims they're not a HYIP, and their daily 1% ROI's may seem more reasonable than the others, but it still doesn't mean they're really not HYIP, just another way to fool people into thinking they're not the same kind of scams as before. They emphasize on the scams more than on the actual technologies they are using.
A few more discrepancies... they provide an address to their location, but if you look on google earth it shows an apartment complex, not an office.
On the front page at the top it says "Total Invested: BTC 3862.5338000 / Total Members: 8566", on any other page it says "Total Invested: BTC 43.90338334 / Total Members: 435".
If you're still getting payouts in a months, let me know. :)
I believe it's another scam. I could name 10 other websites claiming the same kind of thing that's popped up over the last month. This particular one reminds me of coince.com which has since proven to be a scam too. They use slick web/video production to fool people, but already I can point out a ton of red flags on maximuscoin.com.
For one they have a video where the actor is obviously from the US. If they were truly real the developers should be upfront with their identities to prove they are legit.
Check this out. On the front page under the profit percentages boxes it says "Instant Withdrawals: OFF (MORE SECURE)", but if you go to any other page it says "Instant Withdrawals: ON".
Reading through the vague text there tons of grammatical mistakes. If this was a serious company dealing in money you would think they would afford to hire someone who knows how to write proper English. All of the scam sites I've seen are like this.
This is how a ponzi scheme works:
They'll be around for the first month, and people who give them bitcoin will see these ROI's . Then when it works those investors will tell others and get more people to sign up and invest. Eventually the payouts will stop.
Maximuscoin.com claims they're not a HYIP, and their daily 1% ROI's may seem more reasonable than the others, but it still doesn't mean they're really not HYIP, just another way to fool people into thinking they're not the same kind of scams as before. They emphasize on the scams more than on the actual technologies they are using.
A few more discrepancies... they provide an address to their location, but if you look on google earth it shows an apartment complex, not an office.
On the front page at the top it says "Total Invested: BTC 3862.5338000 / Total Members: 8566", on any other page it says "Total Invested: BTC 43.90338334 / Total Members: 435".
If you're still getting payouts in a months, let me know. :)