In a 158-page document, the team behind Little Shapes alleged that NFT scammers utilized bot networks to rug-pull “$200 million+ out of the ecosystem.”
Atto, the pseudonym founder of small NFT, revealed that the project is actually a "social experiment" aimed at unraveling the scam of intelligent robots on Twitter that cannot replace dynamic password (NFT).
Since the middle and late December of 2022, "small styling" has been highly valued by the social media password community. This is thanks to several semi-viral articles detailing some of the things in the founder's life that seem too great to be true at all.
For example, when she woke up after five months of fainting, she found that she had confirmed her property on FTX and told his wife, but found that she was cheating on her with others in the NFT industry.
But in a Twitter post on February 2nd, the Little Shape NFT account said to 30800 followers: "Thank you for participating-Little Shape is a social experiment for @ BALLZNFT" and shared a link to a 158-page document.
"but this kind of exposure is real. Here's how a group of popular people and founders sucked more than $200 million out of the ecosystem on 274 projects, "Little Shape NFT wrote, adding:
Over the past year, NFT Twitter has been controlled and controlled by a separate Twitter denial-of-service attack. It appeared mainly in February 2022 and then was used for sales projects along with the Internet of popular people and the Elfa team.
The title of this document article is "NFT denial of Service attacks that have been manipulating the inside of the market."
It claims that since February 2022, many other low-end NFT projects have launched the BOT Internet, creating local hotspots and reasonable laws, all to win over investors.
In an interview with BuzzFeed News on Feb. 2, Atto, also the founder of BALLZNFT, described small shape design as "conceptual art" and pointed out that "it's not easy for people to care if you give him a reason."
"I need a best-selling story to make sure that no one can ignore a hurtful story," he said.
The document mentions BOT Internet, such as Dmister, which makes social network participation a key way of NFTS programs, deducting only about $100 for every 1000 likes, shares and responses.
The elite BALLZNFT team even uses Dmister to promote Little Shape NFT, providing an example of how it works.
Atto told BuzzFeed that once such a project has set up enough hot spots to attract specific investors, they will "be dragged down or screwed up in a few months, and the people behind the project will make $3 million or $4 million," he added:
"what I find disturbing is that the industry is based entirely on private capital and unreal Twitter participation rankings, and there are no real items."
Previously, Xiaoxiao was described as an upcoming project with 4444 NFT, which uses a specific mobile software "module" to allow users to instantly communicate and change their tokens about works of art.
BALLZNFT looks real, and since the NFT project first made coins on February 3rd, its typical work of art depicts the introduction of the collapse of Little Shape.