- Joined
- Jul 18, 2017
- Messages
- 229
- Reaction score
- 48
- Points
- 76
Hi there!
A few months after Elon Musk acquired Twitter, I experienced significant losses in tokens, and all the efforts I invested in Twitter - such as mass likes, comments, quotes, retweets, and gaining followers—only lasted for a short period. Regardless of whether I used cracked or new tokens, the results were the same. It appears Elon knows his game. Prior to his acquisition, with around 10,000 tokens, I could achieve substantial engagement, and the mentions I received lasted a considerable amount of time. However, the last time I engaged in mass mentions under a post, they vanished in about 5 minutes.
I'm curious about the strategies that still prove effective for spamming on Twitter nowadays. I've remained connected with people involved in Twitter, and I've heard rumors about "hacking the viral algorithm." Some individuals managed to garner thousands of likes, comments, and retweets, hoping their post would go viral. I've witnessed instances where this worked for some. For instance, creating 20 identical posts on one account, each receiving an equal number of likes, comments, and retweets. Perhaps one of these posts would catch fire and attract attention. However, it seems even this tactic is less effective these days.
Not long ago, I used to be mentioned in quotes at least twice a day, but now I haven't received any mentions for months. I'm contemplating returning to Twitter botting, but it appears to be a dying business. I'd appreciate hearing your thoughts on this.
A few months after Elon Musk acquired Twitter, I experienced significant losses in tokens, and all the efforts I invested in Twitter - such as mass likes, comments, quotes, retweets, and gaining followers—only lasted for a short period. Regardless of whether I used cracked or new tokens, the results were the same. It appears Elon knows his game. Prior to his acquisition, with around 10,000 tokens, I could achieve substantial engagement, and the mentions I received lasted a considerable amount of time. However, the last time I engaged in mass mentions under a post, they vanished in about 5 minutes.
I'm curious about the strategies that still prove effective for spamming on Twitter nowadays. I've remained connected with people involved in Twitter, and I've heard rumors about "hacking the viral algorithm." Some individuals managed to garner thousands of likes, comments, and retweets, hoping their post would go viral. I've witnessed instances where this worked for some. For instance, creating 20 identical posts on one account, each receiving an equal number of likes, comments, and retweets. Perhaps one of these posts would catch fire and attract attention. However, it seems even this tactic is less effective these days.
Not long ago, I used to be mentioned in quotes at least twice a day, but now I haven't received any mentions for months. I'm contemplating returning to Twitter botting, but it appears to be a dying business. I'd appreciate hearing your thoughts on this.