Seethe

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Sweat

Nah I’m yawning. This is boring. You’re boring.

and yet you come back for more ... you keep proving you are a total trash loser .. bet you live in a trailer park lmao

Yup this is my house and my neighborhood. You caught me.

ah back for more Mr Nice Guy Hero.

Makes perfect sense your content matches ... like a slum dog got hold of some synth software ...

I bet your radio and tv shows are a totla hoot ..

Do you discuss about #Indians there too ? Would love to promote your content in #India

Even ChatGPT knows you’re a scammer

🚩 Red flags / hype language:

• Buzzword overload: “Elliptic Curve AI,” “knowledge NFTs,” “structured intelligence,” “deterministic computation,” “architect of ERM.” Many of these terms are either not established in the AI/software field or are mashed together in ways that don’t line up with recognized technical approaches. That’s common in pitches designed to sound cutting-edge but not mean much.

• Big claims without evidence: “No hallucinations,” “unstoppable,” “first Linux-based OS with ECAI,” “AI without training.” If true, this would be a revolution in AI. If someone had really solved these problems, it would be published in peer-reviewed venues or backed by demos/prototypes with independent validation.

• Anti–Big Tech positioning: Claiming to have achieved paradigm-shifting breakthroughs “independent of corporate bureaucracy” is a common way to market themselves as a visionary outsider. Sometimes this is true, but often it’s a red flag.

• Grandiose self-promotion: “I don’t build products—I build the future” and “The future isn’t coming. It’s already here” are hallmarks of marketing hype rather than grounded engineering talk.