Little Shapes was a ‘social experiment’ to expose NFT botnets: founder

Published at: Feb. 4, 2023

Atto, the pseudonymous founder behind Little Shapes NFT has revealed that the project was actually a “social experiment” designed to shed light on large-scale NFT bot network scams on Twitter.

Since late December, Little Shapes had been attracting a fair amount of attention from the media and crypto community. This is due to several semi-viral tweets detailing incidents in the founder's life that seemed too good to be true.

Examples of such included him waking up from a five-month coma, finding out he had assets locked on FTX, telling his wife and then finding out she was cheating on him with other people in the NFT industry.

Hey Little Shapes fam, this might sound crazy but I got into a car accident 5 months ago and just got out of a huge coma. I don’t know what’s been going on since then but we’re coming back harder than ever. You’re only on the start, of the Little Shapes journey <3 pic.twitter.com/rOEEHq0kVN

— Little Shapes NFT (BALLZ) (@LittleShapesNFT) December 28, 2022

In a Feb. 2 Twitter thread however, the Little Shapes NFT account stated to its 30,800 followers: “thanks for participating everyone – Little Shapes was a social experiment by @BALLZNFT” and shared a link to a 158-page document.

“The exposé was real though. Here’s how a ring of influencers and founders drained $200 million+ out of the ecosystem over 274 projects,” Little Shapes NFT wrote, adding that:

“Over the past year, NFT Twitter has been manipulated and controlled mostly by a singular Twitter botnet. It showed up mostly in February 2022, and then was used in conjunction with a network of influencers and alpha groups to sell out projects.”

The document itself is titled “The insider NFT bot network that’s been controlling the market behind the scenes.”

It alleges that since February 2022, a large number of low-level NFT projects have deployed bot networks to artificially build hype and legitimacy, all in a bid to rug-pull investors.

What would happen is a project would come up seemingly out of nowhere, like @MindblowonNFT or @BBRCOfficial, all these influencers would host collab giveaways on Twitter - they would bot it to shit, you’d see the botted numbers and think the project has hype, you mint.

— Little Shapes NFT (BALLZ) (@LittleShapesNFT) February 1, 2023

Speaking with BuzzFeed News on Feb. 2, Atto who is also the founder of BALLZNFT, described Little Shapes as “performance art” and stressed that “people don’t pay attention unless you give them a reason to.”

“I needed a story that sells to make sure no one would ignore a story that hurts,” he said.

The document points to bot networks such as “Dmister” that sell social media engagement as a key avenue for such NFTs projects, as it only charges around $100 per 1,000 likes, retweets and replies.

Ask why this has 120K replies and 20K likes. It’s deeper than just bots. It’s the same private botnet over 274+ projects over the past year, a botnet you can’t access anywhere publicly, with a what seems like a whole cabal organized behind it. pic.twitter.com/pyH0zliVy0

— Little Shapes NFT (BALLZ) (@LittleShapesNFT) February 1, 2023

The BALLZNFT team even used Dmister to promote Little Shapes NFT to provide an example of how it works.

Once these projects have successfully built up enough hype to rope in actual investors, they “get rug-pulled or fucked over, usually in the course of a few months, and the people behind the project make $3 or $4 million,” Atto told Buzz Feed, adding that:

“What I found frustrating is we’re in a space ranked completely by social capital and fake Twitter engagement where nothing’s real.”

Little Shapes was previously depicted as an upcoming avatar-style project with 4,444 NFTs that utilized a specific software “engine” to enable owners to interact and change the form of their token’s associated artwort in real-time.

Related: Nifty News: Bitcoin NFTs cause spicy fees, Mastercard exec tokenizes resignation letter and more

BALLZNFT however, appears to be genuine given that the NFT project had its first mint on Feb. 3 with its token artwork depicting references to the whole Little Shapes debacle.

BALLZ - the project behind Little Shapes and the botnet exposéIf you want to ensure a spot in our collection, you can support us here: - refunding all if not minted out within 5 days- 3 owned = BALLZ airdrop on mint day https://t.co/uI9nfzDRCl Below /

— BALLZ (@BALLZNFT_) February 3, 2023
Tags
Nft
Bot
Related Posts
$1 million rock NFT sells for a penny in all ore nothing error
It's a hard rock life for one crypto user. A clumsy keystroke and the actions of a sniper bot caused a million-dollar mistake on March 10. A rock valued at 444 ether (ETH), or $1.2 million, sold for 444 Wei ($0.0012) to a bot as the seller, DinoDealer confused WEI and ETH. In a tweet, the seller said “in one click my entire net worth of ~$1 million dollars, gone.” How's your week? Mine? I just erroneously listed @etherrock #44 for 444 wei instead of 444 eth‍♂️ Bot sniped it in the same block and trying to flip for 234 …
Blockchain / March 18, 2022
There’s a browser plugin that autoblocks Twitter NFT profile pictures
That was quick. Within 24 hours of the launch of the Twitter nonfungible token, or NFT, profile pictures for iOS update, a github contributor called mcclure has coded up and shared a browser extension that automatically blocks Twitter accounts using an NFT profile picture. The program called NFTBlocker blocks paying subscribers of the Twitter Blue for iOS service who choose to display an NFT as their profile picture. The extension works with Chrome and Firefox on desktop and while an early prototype, “future versions of this plugin will scan your notifications and do the blocking automatically.” But why would someone …
Adoption / Jan. 24, 2022
Counterfeit NFTs result in marketplace shutdown: Experts weigh in
“Rampant” issues relating to minting counterfeit nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, have forced popular platform Cent to halt some operations. Founded in 2017, Cent kicked off as a “social network and informal platform for creative experimentation.” In 2020, the team also launched an NFT platform called Valuables to mint and auction iconic tweets. Jack Dorsey’s first tweet, “just setting up my twttr,” sold for $2.9 million on the platform in March last year. On February 6th, the platform ceased NFT trading due to “a spectrum of activity” that "shouldn’t be happening." Cameron Hejazi, co-founder of Cent told Cointelegraph: “People in this …
Nft / Feb. 15, 2022
Targeted phishing scam nets $438K in crypto and NFTs from hacked Beeple account
Digital artist and popular nonfungible token (NFT) creator Mike Winkelmann, more commonly known as Beeple, had his Twitter account hacked on Sunday as part of a phishing scam. Harry Denley, security analyst of MetaMask, alerted users that Beeple’s tweets at the time containing a link to a raffle of a Louis Vuitton NFT collaboration were, in fact, a phishing scam that would drain the crypto out of users’ wallets if clicked. ⚠️ Beeple's Twitter account has been compromised (ATO) to post a phishing website to steal funds. 0x7b69c4f2ACF77300025E49DbDbB65B068b2Fda7D 0xF305F6073CFa24f05FF15CA5b387DD91f871b983 pic.twitter.com/0MPNwOPlEu — harry.eth (whg.eth) (@sniko_) May 22, 2022 The scammers were …
Artists / May 23, 2022
Nifty News: Christie’s NFT expert to lead CryptoPunks, fake heiress launches NFT collection
Noah Davis, the nonfungible token (NFT) specialist at auction house Christie’s, has said he’s leaving the position in July to take up a post as brand lead for the CryptoPunks NFT collection with Yuga Labs. Announcing the move on Sunday in a Twitter thread, Davis looked to quash any anxieties holders had regarding the future of one of the oldest NFT projects, saying he “will not f*ck with the punks.” What does that mean? It means no Punks on lunchboxes or cringe TV shows/shitty movies. It means no arbitrary rushed utility or thoughtless airdrops. It means if you love your …
Nft / June 20, 2022