In recent years, the internet has become flooded with platforms claiming that, through the use of “AI trading bots,” automated trading systems, and advanced algorithms, users can generate stable and high daily returns with little or no risk.

One of the more recent examples attracting attention within the online community is Altrady, a platform presenting itself as an automated cryptocurrency trading system while promising daily returns that, according to its promotional materials, may allegedly reach several percent per day.

At first glance, projects of this kind often appear highly professional. They use terms such as “AI,” “trading bot,” “automated strategy,” and “passive income,” while displaying growth charts, membership levels, bonuses, and detailed compensation structures.

However, this is precisely why several important questions should always be asked.

First, if a certain “trading bot” is genuinely capable of generating stable returns of 1%, 2%, or more per day over an extended period of time, a logical question arises: why would the operators of such a system need to solicit funds from large numbers of individuals through MLM structures and aggressive online promotion?

Another important factor is the way the system itself operates. In cases such as this, user earnings are often linked not only to alleged trading activity, but also to recruiting new participants, building downline structures, and generating new deposits through referral networks.

This is a pattern that frequently appears in high-risk MLM crypto projects.

Particular caution should also be exercised regarding promises of “guaranteed” or unusually high daily profits. In legitimate and regulated financial markets, such returns generally do not exist without extremely high levels of risk.

Another important issue is regulatory oversight. Whenever a platform collects funds from the public while promising passive returns, it is essential to verify whether it holds the necessary licenses or authorizations from relevant financial regulators in the jurisdictions where it operates. In the case of Altrady, publicly available information does not appear to show registration of such investment offerings with relevant regulatory authorities.

It is also important to understand that a professional-looking website, strong social media presence, large promoter networks, or the use of modern terms such as “AI” and “automated trading” do not, by themselves, prove that a project is legitimate.

In practice, sophisticated marketing is often used precisely to create the appearance of credibility, innovation, and financial security.

For this reason, special caution is necessary whenever a project operates through:

  • promises of high passive returns,
  • supposedly guaranteed daily profits,
  • rewards for recruiting new participants,
  • internal token or credit systems,
  • and constant dependence on new inflows of funds.

In systems of this nature, one of the most important questions is often not how long the platform can continue operating, but where the money used to pay the alleged returns is actually coming from.

Your DefendMe Team