Screenshots of various report cards are everywhere in the square, showing screenshots of earning hundreds of thousands or losing millions. But have you ever thought about how many of these are real trades and how many are just using demo accounts to scam likes?
Instead of being tricked by IQ taxes, it's better to learn a few quick identification tricks. I have compared many real trading screenshots and simulated trading screenshots, and the differences are actually quite obvious.
First, look at the details. Real trading accounts will display the words "Trading Bot," which is a built-in mark from the exchange. Simulated accounts do not have this. Additionally, real accounts often show clear transaction information and signs of fund flow, while simulated accounts are just a virtual number game.
Another easily overlooked point—arrows. Many people, when editing screenshots later, will use arrows to highlight certain positions to emphasize their "trading accuracy." But true traders usually don't need to do this because the data itself speaks for itself.
In simple terms, next time you see such screenshots, quickly check for the trading bot label, whether there are complete transaction records, and if there are signs of editing. This way, you can quickly filter out most of the blowhards.
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HalfIsEmpty
· 22h ago
Well said. I'm already tired of seeing those screenshots flood the screens every day.
Looking at those deals in the朋友圈 that often reach millions, nine out of ten are probably simulated trading.
Robot tags, transaction records, and traces of handling—these three indicators can be identified at a glance.
This move is textbook-level.
Speaking of which, the people who are truly making money have probably already gone silent.
Screenshots this detailed are a bit suspicious.
I agree, the套路 for cutting leeks is just like this.
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FunGibleTom
· 01-06 13:58
Simulation account screenshot flying everywhere, really not worth looking at
A quick glance at the arrow annotation makes it clear it's fake
The trading robot label is the key, this can't be fooled
Another one, no transaction record and still dares to post
Honestly, there are so many braggers, flooding the screen every day
The robot label is obvious at a glance, simple and straightforward
The traces of fund flow are the most truthful, luckily someone pointed it out
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zkProofInThePudding
· 01-06 13:57
The simulated trading braggers definitely need to be regulated, but honestly, seeing this stuff every day is still annoying.
The details of real accounts are well-captured; I’ve also been fooled by this trick many times.
The traces of screenshot editing are the biggest flaw; it's obvious at a glance.
This guy's summary is pretty good, at least more reliable than those scammers in the square.
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TokenomicsPolice
· 01-06 13:41
Real trading vs. demo trading at a glance, stop getting scammed, bro
And what about the trading robot label? This thing even scammers can't think of
Demo accounts are everywhere, real accounts bring tears to your eyes
Look at the screenshots and arrows, a bunch of later Photoshop edits will give it away
Earning screenshots is much easier than actually making money, hilarious
Having complete transaction records is the real deal, remember that
These bragging tricks should really be exposed, to prevent newbies from being wronged
By looking at the editing traces of the arrows, you can tell who's flaunting
Data speaks for itself, get lost with the nonsense
In one sentence, recognize the label and the flow, don't get swept away
Screenshots of various report cards are everywhere in the square, showing screenshots of earning hundreds of thousands or losing millions. But have you ever thought about how many of these are real trades and how many are just using demo accounts to scam likes?
Instead of being tricked by IQ taxes, it's better to learn a few quick identification tricks. I have compared many real trading screenshots and simulated trading screenshots, and the differences are actually quite obvious.
First, look at the details. Real trading accounts will display the words "Trading Bot," which is a built-in mark from the exchange. Simulated accounts do not have this. Additionally, real accounts often show clear transaction information and signs of fund flow, while simulated accounts are just a virtual number game.
Another easily overlooked point—arrows. Many people, when editing screenshots later, will use arrows to highlight certain positions to emphasize their "trading accuracy." But true traders usually don't need to do this because the data itself speaks for itself.
In simple terms, next time you see such screenshots, quickly check for the trading bot label, whether there are complete transaction records, and if there are signs of editing. This way, you can quickly filter out most of the blowhards.