Since its early June launch, the GO marketplace has facilitated over $370,000 in payouts, with hundreds of tasks currently pending in escrow. While some listings involve benign activities like feeding stray animals, others range from public humiliation—such as recording job resignations or sticking faces into toilets—to high-risk stunts like climbing Mount Everest. The platform, which initially marketed the feature with the slogan “Pay ANYONE to do ANYTHING,” maintains final authority over approving or rejecting submissions.
In section Cryptocurrency
Pump.fun’s bounty platform sparks backlash over extreme user tasks
A man tattooing a website on his forehead for $15,000 is among the extreme tasks fueling a wave of criticism against Pump.fun’s new GO feature. The Solana-based platform, which encourages users to pay others for stunts, now faces intense scrutiny over whether its crypto rewards exploit vulnerable participants.

Public condemnation has reached the highest levels of government. New York Governor Kathy Hochul labeled the platform a “dystopian nightmare” and pledged support for legislation aimed at banning the service. Critics argue that the incentive structure pressures individuals with limited resources to ignore personal safety and dignity for crypto payouts. Despite the growing controversy, Pump.fun continues to operate the feature, placing it at the center of a volatile debate regarding the ethics of online attention markets and the potential for digital platforms to weaponize financial incentives against their users.
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