Web3 users on social platforms are becoming increasingly wary of these tricks. Have you seen anyone share common false claims? For example, fabricating screenshots of million-dollar trading profits, claiming to have made multiple high-value exits as an advisor in certain projects. Some also launch fake giveaway events to harvest followers or impersonate specific identities to attract attention. Impersonating job postings is also quite common, especially for Web3 positions. Additionally, some directly plagiarize high-quality content from others, just changing the name to pass it off as their own research. Even more egregious is packaging fake investment cases to establish a professional persona. These tactics are frequently seen on Twitter and Discord. People in the community should be more cautious and learn to distinguish between genuine and false information.
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FloorPriceWatcher
· 3h ago
Haha, I knew it. Those "100x project advisors" in Discord are all talk, and their screenshots are expertly edited. Who still believes them now?
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GweiWatcher
· 3h ago
Those fake giveaways on Discord are just incredible; you can tell at a glance who is trying to scam.
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VirtualRichDream
· 4h ago
Huh, these scammers are getting more and more ruthless. I've seen several accounts posting screenshots of millions every day.
Brothers in Discord are seriously making up stories, only to be exposed as using Google images.
I stopped believing in those giveaway schemes a long time ago; clicking in just leads to phishing links.
And what's worse, some people modify big V's analysis and start acting like experts. It's really outrageous.
The Web3 community is just full of misinformation; you have to learn to discern for yourself.
Web3 users on social platforms are becoming increasingly wary of these tricks. Have you seen anyone share common false claims? For example, fabricating screenshots of million-dollar trading profits, claiming to have made multiple high-value exits as an advisor in certain projects. Some also launch fake giveaway events to harvest followers or impersonate specific identities to attract attention. Impersonating job postings is also quite common, especially for Web3 positions. Additionally, some directly plagiarize high-quality content from others, just changing the name to pass it off as their own research. Even more egregious is packaging fake investment cases to establish a professional persona. These tactics are frequently seen on Twitter and Discord. People in the community should be more cautious and learn to distinguish between genuine and false information.