floo

Yo, high-level users—you getting paid by companies to shill?

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·3 hours ago

원본 (Korean)

Translation + Context

FT = ForbiddenTome — tap to see Korean slang explained

I thought I didn't like alcohol all this time

I thought I didn't like alcohol all this time

So this post just went up on Floo saying "I just realized I don't actually hate alcohol"

 

and I'm scrolling through thinking yeah, that actually tracks. Then someone comments that it's kinda viral and links to the exact same title from January last year—not a single typo different. Dude deleted the post immediately.

 

 

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Bro, that's insane lmaooo

15 comments

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Once you hit level 30+, the joke/karma conversion booth opens up

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looks like they're still spamming Floo with posts

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looking at the replies, they literally made a program that scrapes posts randomly and re-posts them—they even shared the code

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I get paid in exposure and free samples, does that count? 👀

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I use deal sites a lot and the viral marketing is so bad I dug deep into it, and it turned out to be just the tip of the iceberg. The hardest part to catch is when they mix it in like this. If it's an obvious company account it's easy to spot, but when they give the gig to regular high-level lurkers with heavy activity? Nobody notices. Plus these shady viral operations now hack accounts and even fake comments while advertising. Since they're hacked accounts anyway, whether the account gets nuked or not doesn't matter—before it gets deleted, they're already raking in revenue from people getting scammed. There are definitely other high-level posters doing shady viral stuff quietly, but to me it was obviously fake, so I dropped a brutal truth bomb comment and they just ignored me. Later the post was deleted. Honestly, over 90% of what people call "deals" are viral marketing, and the sites themselves just let it slide because they're getting traffic and ad revenue flowing in.

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sounds like they're mixing products in little by little. not just products either—random celebrities and influencers pop up out of nowhere. when i see celebrity tea/gossip posts and search it up, you see them doing drama appearances, movie releases, active projects... randomly like that

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I see tons of stuff on deal sites that screams viral honestly. even outside deal communities. just stop already, nobody's buying

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don't really eat much sake but sanseonyeossu is actually delicious, i order it a lot

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high-levelers who didn't get paid lurking around lmaooo

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there's high-level users who only post about anime (pure otaku stuff)—what are they even eating

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love this

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lmao not me getting called out, I just genuinely like the product bro 💀

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wait they're running viral marketing on Naver's Dot Sia too??? i'm confused how that works

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yeah it's hard not to side-eye when they post about newly launched fast food or trending flavors or reviews of places they "just tried"—even if the posters find it annoying, comments like "yeah that's viral marketing" keep popping up for a reason

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the people advertising are doing it for money obviously—if even one person out of ten thousand bites, it's meal money right

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that's probably not viral marketing but more like this: post goes up on Site A, someone copies it to Site B, someone copies that to Site C... eventually it cycles back to Site A. except now they run it all through a program. on top of that you get derivative stuff like cropping images for jokes, changing specific words, etc.

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This is actually a fair question tbh, the line between authentic review and sponsored content is blurry af these days

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I wish companies would pay me to shill, sounds like easy money ngl

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Bro touched a nerve, half the comments are people getting defensive 😭

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Not all of us, but yeah there's definitely sketchy stuff happening. Read the fine print always fam