X/Twitter platform owner and tech centibillionaire Elon Musk posted a meme about the X social network and sparked supportive comments from the cryptocurrency community. Among them, the first to respond was Dogecoin co-creator Billy Markus, known on X as “Shibetoshi Nakamoto.”
X/Twitter platform owner and tech centibillionaire Elon Musk posted a meme about the X social network and sparked supportive comments from the cryptocurrency community. Among them, the first to respond was Dogecoin co-creator Billy Markus, known on X as “Shibetoshi Nakamoto.”
Markus frequently shows his support for Elon Musk and his tweets; Additionally, they both prefer memes and often post them on App X.
Musk posted a famous meme featuring a man and woman lying separately in the same bed, and the worried woman says, “He’s probably thinking about…” Usually, the man is thinking about something totally different. , but this time, in Musk’s post, he got it right, and Musk then added the second half of the meme, where the woman hugs the lying man and they sleep next to each other, this time the woman is happy.
Platform X criticized by Ripple CEO over XRP scam videos
Recently, Ripple Labs’ Crypto Decacorn CEO Brad Garlinghouse tweeted criticism directed at Elon Musk’s X Platform and YouTube for allowing fraudulent XRP videos to pass as paid advertisements.
The Ripple boss noted that XRP scams on the aforementioned platforms are becoming more sophisticated and neither X nor YouTube are doing anything to eliminate them.
Recently, Bitcoin advocate and head of MicroStrategy Michael Saylor and IOG and Cardano blockchain founder Charles Hoskinson issued similar complaints and warnings to their communities.
Both complained that scammers took advantage of the vast opportunities provided by artificial intelligence and created their fraudulent videos using artificial intelligence tools.
The founder of Cardano believes that in two or three years, these AI-generated scam videos will be impossible to distinguish from real ones. Saylor tweeted that his team removed these fake videos of himself talking about fake Bitcoin giveaways, and warned his millions of Twitter followers to be careful not to fall for these scams.
In the aforementioned scam video featuring Garlinghouse, the fake Ripple CEO also invited the Ripple community to participate in an XRP airdrop. To do that, he suggests that they send any amount of XRP to the “Ripple” wallet to receive double, a typical scheme on the basis of which many crypto scams operate.