The cause-and-effect relationship has accompanied us since childhood. At least since the moment a small child throws their toy on the ground and their mother picks it up. And so many times until the mother stops doing it. This is a lesson for both the mother and the child. What am I getting at? I was searching for a reason, as I don't like the consequences. I'm talking about Twitter bans :) (I wrote about this in the previous article).
I decided to investigate how the "system" of Twitter works to continue my journey in the crypto space, focusing primarily on airdrops. What did I discover?
If many users interact with a post (likes, retweets, comments), it is considered more valuable.
Newer posts receive priority in visibility.
Having a profile picture, bio, and account activity is important. However, excessive activity raises suspicions.
Using identical texts or links is also suspicious for the "system," and those who massively share airdrops and bounty programs are often considered bots.
I'm sitting here, drinking tea and laughing. They consider me a "bot" :)
What did I do wrong? I stormed into Twitter like a whirlwind. Rapidly. Strongly. I should have gradually developed my account and interacted with the community. Then there wouldn’t have been any suspicions or bans.
Moreover, I needed to create diverse content and avoid copying the same texts. I shouldn’t have subscribed, liked, or retweeted a large number of posts all at once. This is a signal for the "system" about possible automation or bot activity. It’s important to know this for those who actively work in bounty programs or airdrops.
Damn, it feels like I'm going in circles. But I will break through it anyway.
