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.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

No replies yet.