‘Explain This Bob’ bot account had over 4,00,000 followers
Prabhu Biswal is yet to comment on the situation
Bob coin has tumbled in prices by over 30 percent in recent hours
Musk has promised Twitter users that he would rid the platform of scam bot accounts
Photo Credit: Twitter/@kangpromos
Elon Musk, who has vowed to rid Twitter of bots and scam accounts, has suspended Indian developer Prabhu Biswal's popular bot account. Biswal ran a Twitter account ‘Explain This Bob', which was linked to a popular memecoin, BOB. The account was integrated with OpenAI's GPT-4 model, that understood and responded to tweets with a brief explanation when tagged in the replies to the original tweet. Musk, reportedly, is of the belief that this account was manipulating the prices of BOB.
Musk, on June 18, tweeted that the ‘Explain This Bob' account “sure looks like a scam crypto account,” and the handle was suspended from the micro-blogging site soon after.
This sure looks like a scam crypto account. If so, it will be suspended.
Followed by over 4,00,000 people before its suspension, the ‘Explain This Bob' Twitter bot had jumped into the limelight in April after Musk himself had reacted to a tweet from @ExplainThisBob saying, “I love Bob”.
At the time of writing, BOB is trading at $0.00001942 (roughly Rs. 0.0016) as per CoinMarketCap.
Created in April this year on the Ethereum blockchain, the BOB coin has a maximum circulating supply of 690 billion and it currently has a fully diluted market cap of $13.3 million (roughly Rs. 109 crore).
#FREEBOB$BOB A coin that's listed on 22 different markets with near 40 million volume is NOT a scam. In April Elon even said “I love Bob” before continuing to interact for months on end pic.twitter.com/yDZar6oQAi
— ฿ITCOIN:hamsa:TRAPPΞR (@BITCOINTRAPPER) June 18, 2023
As of now, Biswal has not responded to Twitter's suspension.
Musk bought Twitter for $44 billion (roughly Rs. 3,61,900 crore) last year. As part of his main agendas on revamping Twitter, Musk promised users that he would rid the platform of crypto-related scam bot accounts.
Crypto scammers have been flocking Twitter to get a hold of unsuspecting victims and their activities have only risen in recent times.
Last year in May, a report by crypto intelligence firm LunarCrash said that scam activities on Twitter had spiked by 3,894 percent at the time.
The report had also highlighted that the social engagement with spam posts had escalated by over 920 percent on public platforms as of last year.
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