I think it's a big grift. Many accounts posted about the Queen's death, exact same wording, just different dates, and posted at different times.
This account was pushing predictions on crypto as well, so I think they trying to ultimately profit from a pump and dump on crypto. Wouldn't surprise me if they promote some largely unknown coin tomorrow, which they have already purchased a shit load of, say that it will be future currency or something, let it go up and then sell.
Mail out 16 letters predicting the winner of a toss-up game. (An evenly matched game where no te am is favored by Vegas oddsmakers) Make 8 of them predict for team A and 8 of them choose team B.
After that game concludes, mail out 8 letters to the people who received the correct pick. Do it again with 4 and 4.
Repeat mail the 4 with a 2 and 2.
Once more with the 2 with a 1 and 1, and voila, you have someone that just witnessed you correctly predict 4 games in a row. Now you try to see what he will pay you to predict a 5th game.
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Someone started making accounts predicting the queen’s death, probably every possible day for months. Once one of those dates ‘hit,’ the grift went into action.
Yep this is exactly it. Private account, make a ton of "prediction posts" for every date of the year. When it happens, delete the "wrong" posts and keep the accurate one, unprivate, promote, gain all your followers on the day of.
Derren Brown did this in a TV show, he took 16 people to the races, with 16 film crews, shuttled between them giving the tips for betting. Eventually he had one winner with an unbroken win streak. He then revealed the method.
They set up multiple accounts, make 'predictions' on events likely to happen, likely keep accounts private while they do this, that's why not indexed in search engines prior, then when one hits, delete everything else, make public, have some supporter accounts re-post, like oh wow look at this. Get a bunch of people to follow, then make some more predictions, far off, plus say you have secret knowledge to share, then weave in your grift, in this case crypto to the story, get gullible people to buy lots, then cash out profit while they are left holding the bag.
I think it's a big grift. Many accounts posted about the Queen's death, exact same wording, just different dates, and posted at different times.
This account was pushing predictions on crypto as well, so I think they trying to ultimately profit from a pump and dump on crypto. Wouldn't surprise me if they promote some largely unknown coin tomorrow, which they have already purchased a shit load of, say that it will be future currency or something, let it go up and then sell.
Very old grift.
Mail out 16 letters predicting the winner of a toss-up game. (An evenly matched game where no te am is favored by Vegas oddsmakers) Make 8 of them predict for team A and 8 of them choose team B.
After that game concludes, mail out 8 letters to the people who received the correct pick. Do it again with 4 and 4.
Repeat mail the 4 with a 2 and 2.
Once more with the 2 with a 1 and 1, and voila, you have someone that just witnessed you correctly predict 4 games in a row. Now you try to see what he will pay you to predict a 5th game.
——-
Someone started making accounts predicting the queen’s death, probably every possible day for months. Once one of those dates ‘hit,’ the grift went into action.
Yep this is exactly it. Private account, make a ton of "prediction posts" for every date of the year. When it happens, delete the "wrong" posts and keep the accurate one, unprivate, promote, gain all your followers on the day of.
Derren Brown did this in a TV show, he took 16 people to the races, with 16 film crews, shuttled between them giving the tips for betting. Eventually he had one winner with an unbroken win streak. He then revealed the method.
They didn't guess anything, it's a grift. Multiple accounts. Let me show you...
Crypto predictions... https://twitter.com/aidemleoxide/status/1485161040086192128
Multiple Accounts 'predicting' Queen's death... https://mobile.twitter.com/Liv_Boeree/status/1568023917134233600/photo/2
They set up multiple accounts, make 'predictions' on events likely to happen, likely keep accounts private while they do this, that's why not indexed in search engines prior, then when one hits, delete everything else, make public, have some supporter accounts re-post, like oh wow look at this. Get a bunch of people to follow, then make some more predictions, far off, plus say you have secret knowledge to share, then weave in your grift, in this case crypto to the story, get gullible people to buy lots, then cash out profit while they are left holding the bag.
Playbook known.