Lesson 75 — Fake “AI Bots”


Meet Fake “AI Bots”

Picture someone selling you a “robot chef” that apparently cooks Michelin-star meals, cleans your kitchen, babysits your kids, and walks your dog — all while you sleep. Sounds amazing… until you realize it’s just a toaster with LEDs glued on.

That’s the vibe behind fake AI trading bots.

These are products marketed as magical machines that generate automated profit, but behind the curtain they’re nothing more than hype, vague promises, or even Ponzi structures dressed up in tech buzzwords.

👉 Comic Illustration Idea:
An astronaut holding a shiny “AI trading robot” that is secretly powered by tiny aliens turning gears behind it.


How Fake “AI Bots” Work

Fake AI bots don’t trade — they perform theatre.

Let’s break down how the illusion is created:

1. “100% automated profit” claims

If markets were this predictable, everyone would retire at 21 with a yacht.
These bots promise the impossible to lure beginners.

2. MLM-style AI bot companies

Recruit others → earn commissions → repeat.
The “AI” becomes the bait.

3. Ponzi bot models

New deposits fund older “returns.”
There’s no real trading — just money circulating.

4. Vague technology descriptions

“Quantum neural adaptive algorithmic super-intelligence.”
Translation: Trust us, we won’t show you how it works.

5. Fake dashboards

You see “profits,” but nothing is connected to real market activity.

👉 Infographic Idea:
A funnel showing hype → onboarding → “returns” → collapse.
(Just shapes: arrows, gears, coins flowing, funnel.)


Why This Matters in Real Trading

Fake AI bots seduce beginners with zero-effort fantasies:

  • Hands-free wealth
  • Guaranteed returns
  • No learning required

But in reality:

  • If you don’t know how money is made, you’re the product.
  • Lack of transparency is a giant neon warning sign.
  • Bots that can’t show live execution logs aren’t trading — they’re storytelling.

💡 Tip: If a bot promises automation but won’t show its execution history, walk away.

📌 Note: Real automation is boring, technical, and provable — scams are flashy, vague, and dramatic.

🤓 Did You Know?: Some scams literally just display random green numbers to mimic “profit”?

👉 Comic Illustration Idea:
An astronaut staring at a floating dashboard full of glowing green numbers — but backstage, aliens spin a wheel deciding random results.


Key Takeaways

  • Fake AI bots use marketing buzzwords to hide their emptiness.
  • If a bot promises effortless guaranteed profit — it’s bait.
  • Always demand transparency in execution, not flashy dashboards.
  • The most powerful trading “AI” is critical thinking — yours.

Thumbnail Idea:

An astronaut lifting the mask off a shiny “robot trader,” revealing a messy hamster running on a wheel beneath — floating in space, one unified scene, no text.


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *