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Re: AI Spam Report Reference Thread
by
nutildah
on 21/08/2025, 20:42:02 UTC
⭐ Merited by Ultegra134 (1)
It's been a while since I last reported someone, but today, I noticed someone who looked a little "off". The posts are almost perfect in grammar and vocabulary, the user is a member and I'm receiving mixed results from detectors. Anyone else have any feedback? I'm suspecting that they might be humanized.

User: BlockchainWizard

Yeah definitely something off about this account. They seem to be copy/pasting largely AI-generated material. Additionally, they seem to be an alt account of Phu Juck, who posts in a similarly mechanical fashion. These accounts have shared most of their merit between themselves. They have a few posts that are straight-up AI:

I get your point about decentralization – and I fully agree that too much regulation could destroy what makes crypto unique in the first place. My intention wasn’t to say that regulation should control every aspect of crypto or turn it into a centralized system like traditional finance.

What I meant is that the complete lack of any oversight makes it easier for outright scams to flourish, especially for new investors who don’t yet have the knowledge to separate solid projects from “obvious garbage coins.” Even minimal consumer protections, without touching the core decentralization, could reduce the amount of fraud.

I also agree with you that the main reason many altcoins fail is bad tech, lack of innovation, or no real use case. That’s exactly why I emphasize doing proper research and regularly reviewing your holdings – because whether regulated or not, bad projects will eventually collapse.

I’m not advocating for killing decentralization, but I do think the absence of any framework means scams can run wild, and that’s where many people lose money unnecessarily.

Sapling: 100% Fake
GPTZero: 100% AI Generated

That’s exactly why I always say: if someone is offering Bitcoin at a discount, it’s a red flag by default. Nobody sells below market price when they can just use an exchange – unless there’s something shady behind it.

Trusting friends or “friends of friends” doesn’t change the fact that stolen coins can get you into serious trouble, even if you didn’t know. And once you move them onto a centralized exchange with KYC, you’re basically pointing the finger at yourself.

It’s safer to just stick to reputable exchanges or P2P platforms where there’s at least some level of protection. Buying face-to-face with no guarantees is simply too risky nowadays.

Sapling: 99.9% Fake
GPTZero: 100% AI Generated