Here's a 2018 account that came back to life after a nearly 4-year absence to start threads with the help of AI.
sohidulsk99He only has 7 posts since 2021 but they are all AI-generated. Here's 5 of them:
I believe I've found a similar case as well. Older posts are shit and totally random, but new ones look polished compared to the old ones. It seems that they're using a paraphraser because some posts initially aren't detected as AI.
User:
daxkiePost 1.
I’m with the younger crowd on this one. Keeping money in the bank feels pointless, interest rates are a joke, and inflation eats the rest. Bitcoin gives us an option that actually feels alive, not stuck. It’s not just about quick profits either, it’s about having control and knowing our money isn’t just sitting there doing nothing. That’s why so many of us are drawn to it.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Sapling.ai: 100% Fake
Copyleaks: 0% AI
Post 2.
Bitcoin has definitely shown it can be more than just a passing trend, but completely replacing fiat is another story. Fiat currencies aren’t just about payments, they’re tied to how governments manage economies, debts, and policies. That’s not something they’ll easily give up. What Bitcoin can do is offer an alternative system one that’s borderless, transparent, and free from central authority. For people in unstable economies, that already makes BTC more attractive than their local fiat. But for daily transactions and stability, fiat still has the upper hand. So in my view, it’s less about BTC replacing fiat and more about both co-existing: fiat for mainstream use, BTC as digital gold and a financial safety net. The real question is how much space governments are willing to give Bitcoin as it keeps growing.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Sapling.ai: 100% Fake
Copyleaks: 0% AI
Post 3.
You’re right that most people today don’t dive into the whitepaper or care who Satoshi is they just buy, sell, and hope for profit. But I don’t think that automatically means the origin won’t matter later. Think of it like the internet. Most users don’t know who Vint Cerf or Tim Berners-Lee are, but their stories still shape how universities, books, and even documentaries explain the internet’s importance. Bitcoin might follow the same path day-to-day users won’t care, but the history will keep inspiring builders, developers, and educators. So maybe the majority won’t care, but the right minority (innovators, teachers, policymakers) will. And that might be enough to keep Bitcoin’s origin alive across generations.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Sapling.ai: 100% Fake
Copyleaks: 0% AI