Kinda like, "I'm Bernie Madoff, Jr". Or "I'm an assistant branch manager with Fly-By-Night Savings and Loan". Not something to be proud of.
"Maybe"? If there was any kind of free exchange there, the various posters over the years who tried to inform visitors that
all of the "programs" they push are obvious, clumsy ponzis wouldn't have been banned.
Then you're one of two things: an idiot or a scammer. There are no other options.
SMICAP's own site tells you almost nothing - but that's enough to raise all sorts of red flags. You say the thing's been in existence for three years; for how long has the "Know More" page been "Coming Soon"? Still,
this page shows the type of thing they do - play "egames" with "virtual shares".
Someone who appears to be one of their main shills
gives more information. First, s/he assures the reader that "This is NOT a Ponzi, MLM, pyramid, get-rich-quick scheme, nor scam, nor gambling"; such assurances are a fairly reliable sign that the subject is in fact all of those. The writer goes on to explain what you do: play "the online website games (virtual shares / eShares / sToken / tokens)". S/He claims returns of over 200% annually. Those of us who've been around a while will recognize this.
Here in the US, a decade or so ago some scammers tried to do the same thing - they called it "Stock Generation". The SEC shut it down as a fake securities-based ponzi scheme, approved by the First Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Court's description:SMICAP can't even invent its own fictionalized return.
After concluding that this BS was an investment contract rather than just a "game", the First Circuit goes on to find that "the arrangement described in the SEC's complaint fairly can be characterized as either a Ponzi or pyramid scheme":Conclusion: ponzi. U.S. operations shut down, U.S. assets seized.
And you would be either wrong or lying. Since I don't know you, I can't say which.