memes4airdrop
@wake
some of your are worried you'll be misclassified as bots. which tells me you don't really know what moxie farmer bots look like. moxie farmer bots saturate cast replies with mechanical content, such as below. the markers: >casts too regularly (every five minutes, every hour, for 24+ hours) >casts are too regular (length, verbosity, emoji usage all drift together) >casts too often (wake casts 1000 times/ week; this user casts 1000/day) >is very poorly integrated (not followed by credible users)
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Dix π©
@dix0x1.eth
question though, wake. the bot iβm working on requires me or anyone else to mention it in order trigger it to reply to their queries, will that in anyway flag as spam? If used excessively
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memes4airdrop
@wake
"if used excessively" where "excessive" is defined as "went too hard and got in trouble".... yeah lol look, if your bot goes apeshit and gets flagged... is that even a problem? it means users won't get the bot's replies unless they follow it. which is... normal behavior, no? users who invoke the bot want to hear from it and are likely to follow it and so will receive the message correctly.
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Dix π©
@dix0x1.eth
thanks for clarifying. Also mentioning the same account (my bot) to invoke it wonβt get me marked as spam? π sorry for taking up much of your time. Just wanna make sure iβm following through
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memes4airdrop
@wake
i've never seen evidence of high-frequency tags being used as a bot detection trait. it would take a lot; like, a LOT of tags and other abuses for this kinda thing to trip spam algos. i could be wrong but i think you're in the clear. unless you're making a spam bot lol
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Dix π©
@dix0x1.eth
Perfect. Thanks again, wake π€
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