A trader's strategy seems simple and straightforward—focusing repeatedly on one question: "Will a certain well-known person post X to Y tweets this week?"
It sounds like gambling, but it's not.
His tweeting habits are consistently stable: high posting frequency, habitual patterns, and small data fluctuations within a short-term window.
Because these characteristics are predictable, they can be quantified. That's why some people can turn signals into trading logic—not guesswork, but discovering measurable patterns.
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On-ChainDiver
· 42m ago
This strategy is essentially data arbitrage, turning people's behavioral habits into tradable signals. To put it simply, it still depends on whose data is cleaner.
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ShibaOnTheRun
· 01-11 21:12
This guy treats tweet frequency as a trading signal, truly finding a new alpha angle.
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FlashLoanKing
· 01-11 21:11
Haha, this is data-driven trading. It sounds low, but it's actually very hardcore.
Damn, this idea is brilliant—treating human behavior as a predictable financial product.
Genius or crazy? Anyway, making money is right.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 01-11 21:03
Ha, isn't this just selling people's habits as data to make money? Pretty clever.
A trader's strategy seems simple and straightforward—focusing repeatedly on one question: "Will a certain well-known person post X to Y tweets this week?"
It sounds like gambling, but it's not.
His tweeting habits are consistently stable: high posting frequency, habitual patterns, and small data fluctuations within a short-term window.
Because these characteristics are predictable, they can be quantified. That's why some people can turn signals into trading logic—not guesswork, but discovering measurable patterns.