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Payton H
52e2cc58290a86f562acf178e7238d49ec593cd98665043450350c55963edc00
SAT Stacker - Sports Card Dealer - coming soon 🎙️- END THE FED -

The chances of your cat murdering you are never zero…

Only thing depressing about this dip is not having extra fiat to sell ☹️

Back to the fiat mine today 😎

GM Nostr 🧡🇺🇸

That shit is barely even “bread” 🤣💀

Got a new sticker for the water bottle I bring to the Fiat mine 😮‍💨🤣

Bought these on Amazon and I cannot WAIT to gift my friends this Christmas with one bitcoin 🤣

Happy Halloween! 👻

Watching a grown man’s EBT get declined while buying ice cream and energy drinks 🥳😤

Always a beautiful day to stack SATs 😎

Replying to Avatar FLASH

⚡️👀 NEW - Terminally ill developer rug pulls community: 'I have 120 hours to live..'

The story begins in early October 2025 on social media, where someone shares their heartbreaking story, which moves the entire community.

A developer claiming to be disabled and terminally ill says he has only 120 hours left to live, or just five days.

He wants to launch a token in tribute to his life, a memecoin called "120 Hours," with the profits going to support his family after his death.

Within hours, the project goes viral on forums, Pumpfun, and X.

Users share his story and buy the token out of empathy, with some even calling it a "final community tribute."

In less than three days, the token reached a market cap of over $534,000.

But five days later... everything collapsed, and the project's liquidity was completely drained...

Several hundred thousand dollars were transferred to several anonymous addresses.

And the creator, the one who claimed to be living his "last hours," disappeared forever.

No more messages, no more traces. The account that posted his videos, where he was seen hooked up to a respirator, was deleted.

The supposed "dying man" was in fact a con artist who exploited empathy to create a sense of urgency and push people to buy his token.

By appearing on screen wearing a respirator, he triggered what psychologists call an emotional rescue bias: "When we believe we are helping someone in distress, we lower all our rational defenses."

In 2025, so-called "emotional rug pulls" are exploding: projects invent stories of illness, loss, war, or family drama to attract followers.

This case also reveals the darkest side of the crypto market: memecoins, scams, and cynicism taken to its extreme.

Long day at the fiat mine 🤮 so ready for a bowl and relaxation 😎

This goes unreasonably hard 🤣🔥

Anyone have any recommendations for a decentralized email service? Looking into merging my personal accounts all to one and starting a new business email as well!

My Fold debit came in today!! I was finally going on to order The Big Print! And The Bitcoin Standard was on sale! Had to run back to Fold to get another gift card 😂

Using Fold to get a few Amazon gift cards I managed to stack 743 SATs!!! This app is so awesome

It’s on sale 🗣️

After sitting and watching the last 8-10 I’ve decided no more Dem v. Rep, I am now a single issue voter. If you don’t kiss that stupid wall, youll get my vote - If you do you are traitor to the American people and should be treated as such

Been a fun first few weeks! Wanna continue to grow myself and Nostr! 🔥🔥

Replying to Avatar Bitcoinveneto

🚨 WARNING: New P2P Bitcoin Scam Involving Revolut and Online Marketplaces 🚨

There’s a growing scam that combines RoboSats, Revolut, and platforms like Facebook Marketplace or eBay.

It’s a classic man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack — and both Bitcoin users and online sellers can become victims.

🧠 Here’s how it works:

A scammer opens a BTC sell offer on RoboSats, requesting payment via Revolut.

At the same time, they contact someone selling an item (e.g., a MacBook) on Facebook Marketplace.

The scammer gives the seller’s Revolut account details to the Bitcoin buyer on RoboSats.

The buyer sends money (thinking it’s for Bitcoin), but it actually goes to the unsuspecting seller of the MacBook.

The seller, seeing the payment, ships the item — to the scammer.

The scammer gets a free MacBook, the buyer gets BTC, and the seller loses their item.

📌 Everyone loses — except the scammer.

🔐 How to protect yourself:

For Bitcoin buyers/sellers:

⚠️ NEVER send money to an account that doesn’t match your trade partner’s name.

Ask for a screenshot of the Revolut profile before sending payment.

Be skeptical of anyone who says “use my friend’s account” or “this is my assistant’s Revolut.”

If anything feels off — cancel the trade.

For marketplace sellers (Facebook/eBay, etc.):

Be cautious if someone pays via Revolut but the account name doesn't match your buyer’s.

Don’t ship products unless you’re sure the payment is legit and not part of a crypto scam.

If someone says “my friend will pay you” — it’s likely a scam.

Stay sharp. Scammers are evolving — so must our awareness.

Don't trust. Verify. ⚡

#Bitcoin #P2P #RoboSats #ScamAlert #CryptoSecurity #Revolut

I’ve recently been talking about starting to advertise accepting SATs for sports cards and such! This is nice to be aware of before I start…