X Won’t Delete Its Fakes – Chaos as a Business Model?
X is pure chaos. Everyone knows it. Fake accounts like @SpaceX20068 rake in ad revenue – 2 to 5 cents per click. That’s apparently enough to keep them breathing.
This scammer lured me from X to Telegram. Weeks later, while I was critically ill in the hospital – still hooked to blood tubes – he pounced. Demanded Apple gift cards and “Walmart” cards. By the way: Walmart hasn’t existed in Germany since 2006.
He tried to sell my girlfriend laughable “get-rich-quick” lists. She fled X because of this creep.
I reported him. X’s reply: “No violation of our rules.”
Yesterday I posted a detailed list of fake accounts.
Zero response. The “brilliant Harvard grads” at X must think it’s beneath them to clean up. Or can’t they handle a translation tool? Should I rewrite the damn list in English for them?
Nothing happens. The fake disaster keeps growing. But hey – that’s their mess, not mine.
Meanwhile, a friend and I are looking after a victim of a sleazy love scam. A woman left homeless because of one of these fakes. How much more has to happen on X?
I’m still building my public anti-fake tools. And Grok? Just spits out ad-friendly fluff.
Life somehow goes on.
Watch your backs.
