
How Meme Tokens Use Fake Partnerships and Influencers to Scam the People
The meme token industry is built on deception. These projects don’t just rely on hype—they manufacture it using fake partnerships, paid influencers, and deceptive marketing to lure people in before pulling the rug. 247 Satoshi ($247) exists to call out these tactics, expose frauds, and protect the people from getting scammed.
The Fake Partnership Scam
One of the biggest tricks in the scammer playbook is fake partnerships. Meme token projects will claim they are “partnered” with major exchanges, blockchains, or even celebrities—but it’s all a lie.
🚨 “We’re working with Binance & Coinbase” – In reality, the project might have just applied for a listing or paid for a minor ad. No real partnership exists.
🚨 “Big name influencers support us!” – Many influencers don’t even know they’re being used in scam promotions. Scammers fake tweets, edit images, and spread lies to make it seem like celebrities are backing them.
🚨 “We have secured VC funding” – They post fake investor names or use meaningless venture capital buzzwords to sound legit. Most of these funds don’t exist.
Solana-based meme tokens are the worst offenders. Scammers know the people trust major brands, so they pretend to have partnerships to boost credibility before cashing out.
Influencer Manipulation: Paid Shills & Fake Hype
Crypto influencers are another weapon in the scammer’s arsenal. Most meme tokens pay influencers to promote their projects, creating the illusion of organic hype. But behind the scenes, these influencers:
🔥 Get paid upfront in tokens and dump them on the people as soon as the price pumps.
🔥 Repeat the same script across multiple projects, recycling the same buzzwords without doing any real research.
🔥 Disappear after the scam collapses, leaving the people wrecked.
Many influencers will deny involvement after a rug pull, claiming they were just “sharing an opportunity”—but in reality, they were part of the scam from the start.
How to Spot These Scams
🔍 Research Every Partnership – If a meme token claims to be working with a big company, check official sources. If it’s not on the company’s website, it’s fake.
🔍 Avoid Influencer-Backed Meme Tokens – If the only reason people are buying a token is because an influencer is pushing it, it’s probably a scam.
🔍 Follow the Money – Are insiders holding most of the supply? Are wallets tied to the team selling before the public? It’s a setup.
247 Satoshi: Fighting Back Against the Lies
247 Satoshi is here to expose these fraudulent tactics and raid the scams before they spread. The Telegram community is always on the lookout for fake partnerships, paid influencers, and deceptive marketing.
🔥 Join the fight. Help us expose these frauds. Protect the people.
💬 Telegram: https://t.me/Chat247Satoshi
📢 X: https://x.com/247Satoshi