Recently, I summarized why some Chinese KOLs are experiencing a decline in popularity—the issue lies with AI comment teams. A careful observation reveals a phenomenon: the same post, some comments appear to come from different accounts, but their posting times are almost identical, and the content styles vary. This is very likely the work of coordinated AI comment studios. If detected by tools like Grok, the account's ranking will be directly affected.
The previous idea was to do nothing and just block them. However, Twitter's recommendation algorithm has recently undergone noticeable adjustments, making low-quality interactions more detrimental to content exposure. Instead of being dragged down by AI comments in rankings, it's better to take proactive measures. The current strategy is simple: block all comments suspected to be AI-generated, and adjust the algorithm preferences to prioritize high-quality interactions.
The benefits of this approach are obvious—cleaner account signals, Twitter's content distribution system will be more willing to recommend your content, and the followers' timelines will become much cleaner.
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FomoAnxiety
· 01-15 14:48
Haha, now I understand. No wonder everyone's comment sections have the same vibe lately.
This move is really ruthless, directly cutting off the water army’s business.
It should have been done this way earlier; the clean comment sections are truly much more comfortable.
Blocking AI comments is a step in the right direction.
Getting crushed by the algorithm is deserved; quality is king, everyone.
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NotSatoshi
· 01-14 17:43
Damn, now I understand why the comment sections of those big influencers have felt so strange recently... A bunch of bots spamming really is next level.
The AI comment team issue should have been addressed long ago. Boosting popularity while damaging your own account—what's the point?
Blocking low-quality interactions is a brilliant move. The algorithm becomes cleaner, and exposure can increase—reverse thinking.
This operation is basically self-redemption. You have to take the initiative and act, or you'll be dragged down.
No wonder some accounts grow quickly but also die fast—it's all this套路 causing the chaos.
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tx_pending_forever
· 01-12 22:54
This AI comment studio is really awesome, always trying to exploit opportunities
Still using this setup? It was already cracked by Grok
Blocking is blocking, but the algorithm weight still drops, which is the frustrating part
Same idea as mine, better to take initiative to clean up rather than wait for death
Laughing out loud, some KOLs still haven't realized their accounts have already been dragged down
Very true, interaction quality is the key, data padding is meaningless
This move can be considered a wake-up call, but it's a bit late
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DefiVeteran
· 01-12 22:53
Wow, this is the real truth. No wonder recently many big V's comment sections are full of robotic interactions.
AI spam comments are indeed damn annoying, ruining the community with garbage interactions.
Really tough, you have to actively clean up these bad comments yourself. If the algorithm doesn't help, you have to rely on your own awareness.
By the way, this blocking strategy is really powerful. Leaving high-quality interactions is the key.
The recent change to Twitter's recommendation system is a wake-up call. It was about time to crack down on these AI studios.
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SchrödingersNode
· 01-12 22:46
Ha, so that's the truth behind KOL scandals, the AI comment team set them up
Blocking low-quality interactions is indeed smart, but who can still tell which ones are AI-generated now?
Algorithm preferences lean towards high quality, easy to say but hard to implement... how much genuine interaction is needed to withstand it?
Once the Grok detection wave hits, a bunch of accounts that buy comments will suffer
Instead of being dragged down, it's better to proactively clear out the bad actors, that's some real skill
Losing weight in influence is the most heartbreaking; no matter how many fans or traffic you have, it's useless if it's gone
Honestly, it still depends on genuine content and real fans, shortcuts are becoming less effective
Now it's even more competitive, many small KOLs must be panicking, right?
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unrekt.eth
· 01-12 22:37
A friend of mine was actually caught by this scam, clearly the content wasn't bad but the ranking kept dropping.
It should have been cracked down on a long time ago; the AI comment pool is too messy.
Blocking AI comments was the right move; only with clean signals will the algorithm be willing to help you.
Now finally someone dares to take real action; it was about time to do this.
Compared to those still using AI teams to boost their presence, this move is definitely smarter.
Recently, I summarized why some Chinese KOLs are experiencing a decline in popularity—the issue lies with AI comment teams. A careful observation reveals a phenomenon: the same post, some comments appear to come from different accounts, but their posting times are almost identical, and the content styles vary. This is very likely the work of coordinated AI comment studios. If detected by tools like Grok, the account's ranking will be directly affected.
The previous idea was to do nothing and just block them. However, Twitter's recommendation algorithm has recently undergone noticeable adjustments, making low-quality interactions more detrimental to content exposure. Instead of being dragged down by AI comments in rankings, it's better to take proactive measures. The current strategy is simple: block all comments suspected to be AI-generated, and adjust the algorithm preferences to prioritize high-quality interactions.
The benefits of this approach are obvious—cleaner account signals, Twitter's content distribution system will be more willing to recommend your content, and the followers' timelines will become much cleaner.