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The Crypto Dating Game: When Selfies Meet Blockchain
Just stumbled across this bizarre post on a major crypto platform. Some random woman—calling herself "Katia F"—literally just posted a selfie with "hi 👋" as the caption. That's it. Nothing about crypto, no market analysis, just... her face.
And good lord, the comments section is a dumpster fire! A mix of thirsty guys, confused traders, and people rightfully calling this out as what it probably is—a scam attempt. One commenter nailed it: "Hi fake user who probably most definitely is not a SCAM."
The Russian comments are especially savage. One roughly translates to: "What's such a fancy lady doing on a crypto platform?" Another jokes that "the escort came to crypto." Brutal, but honestly, fair question—why IS this profile posting selfies on a trading platform?
This kind of garbage content is exactly what's wrong with crypto socials nowadays. Between the pump-and-dump schemes, the blatant scammers, and now apparently dating-site rejects trying to find victims, it's getting harder to find actual trading information.
Looking at her other posts, it's all emojis and bait—"like 👇" and "💵💵💵" with zero substance. Classic engagement farming to build a following before the inevitable "DM me for trading signals" scam drops.
The platform should be removing this crap immediately. It's painfully obvious she's either fishing for marks or running some kind of honeypot scam. What's next—OnlyFans promo codes hidden in technical analysis?
Meanwhile, BTC just crossed $110K and ETH broke $4K, but sure, let's all stare at random selfies instead of discussing actual market movements. This is why outsiders still don't take crypto seriously.