AI Ecom with Jack

347 posts

AI Ecom with Jack banner
AI Ecom with Jack

AI Ecom with Jack

@jackecom_ai

AI Rates your statics 👉 https://t.co/vXenEygpCk powered by Claude and thousands of winning ads

California, USA Katılım Şubat 2026
94 Takip Edilen814 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
AI Ecom with Jack
AI Ecom with Jack@jackecom_ai·
I built an AI that scores ad creatives better than most media buyers. It uses Eugene Schwartz’s awareness framework, 10 proven copy frameworks, and 30 headline formulas to tear apart any ad image in 60 seconds. Upload a photo of your ad. It tells you: - Your overall score (calibrated against real deduction criteria, not vibes) - The exact copy framework you’re using and whether it’s wrong for your audience - Which of 8 landing page types your ad should send traffic to - 3 surgical text swaps you can make in 5 minutes - 6 sub-avatars with trigger moments and internal monologue - Full ad copy variations (short/medium/long) ready to paste into Ads Manager The scoring isn’t gentle. No hook? -15. Generic copy? -10. Wrong awareness stage? -10. Beautiful visuals get a +5 bonus. It scores like a media buyer who’s spent $10M+ and doesn’t care about your feelings. The hardest part wasn’t the AI. It was teaching it to write like a human. No “(Finally!)” parentheticals. No fake statistics. No “this will boost CTR by 23%” nonsense. Every suggestion has to pass one test: would a $200k/year media buyer use this or cringe?
AI Ecom with Jack tweet media
English
1
0
3
397
Zuko
Zuko@Zukoife·
@karunkaushik_ For those that didn't watch the video 👀, they're saying it was an intentional malicious attack aimed or cause distrust
Zuko tweet media
English
2
0
3
14.7K
Karun Kaushik
Karun Kaushik@karunkaushik_·
There’s been a lot of allegations against Delve. But we haven’t been able to share our side of the story until today due to ongoing cybersecurity and forensics investigations. Maintaining customer trust is central to everything we do. That said, we grew too fast and fell short of our own standard. To our customers, we deeply apologize for the inconveniences caused. We take these allegations seriously and have made changes: a new auditor network, free re-audits and pentests for all customers, enhanced transparency in audit communications, and more. However, we also want to set the record straight on the anonymous attacks. The evidence we have points to a targeted cyberattack from a malicious actor, not a “whistleblower.” We believe the attacker purchased Delve under false pretenses, exfiltrated internal company data, and used it to launch a coordinated smear campaign. The posts rely on a mix of fabricated claims, cherry-picked screenshots, and stolen data taken out of context. See the link in the comments for more details. Delve was built to modernize compliance. We are not going anywhere and are committed to building what's next.
English
575
29
817
1.6M
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
FaZe went from a $1.2 billion valuation to getting acquired for $17 million in 18 months. Now KICK is buying whatever's left. The timeline is staggering. July 2022: FaZe goes public via SPAC at a $725 million valuation. The initial deal promised $291 million in funding. Then 92% of SPAC shareholders redeemed for cash instead of converting to FaZe stock, and $71.4 million of the $100 million backstop commitments defaulted. The company got a fraction of what it was promised on day one. By January 2023, the stock was under $1. Nasdaq delisting warnings started. Net losses hit $130 million in a single quarter, more than 10x quarterly revenue. Snoop Dogg, who was paid $1.9 million in shares for a board seat, quietly left in April 2023. The CEO was fired in September. GameSquare, backed by Jerry Jones, scooped up the entire company in October 2023 for $17 million. That's a 98.5% decline from peak. FaZe was split into FaZe Esports and FaZe Media. DraftKings co-founder Matt Kalish invested $11 million for 49% of FaZe Media. Banks got 25.5% and became CEO. Then the MLG Coin happened. Late 2024 into early 2025, Banks and FaZe members launched a Solana meme coin that rocketed from $3 million to nearly $200 million in market cap within five days. Retail investors, mostly young fans, piled in. The price collapsed. Millions in fan capital evaporated. By December 2025, all six core content creators terminated their contracts simultaneously, citing breach of creative control. FaZe Media shut down the same day. That's what KICK just acquired. A brand, a creator network with no creators, debt, and the LA house. The press release says they'll "clear existing debt, rebuild the creator roster, and transition to a live-first content model." Translation: they bought the name and the real estate. The KICK quote in the release tells you everything about the actual asset being purchased: "We grew up watching Banks build FaZe out of that LA house." They're buying a generation's nostalgia for a specific era of internet culture that no longer exists. KICK is betting they can refill a brand that's been emptied of everything except the logo. The last three companies that tried the same bet paid $725 million, then $17 million, then $11 million. The price keeps dropping because the lesson keeps repeating: creator brands without creators are just fonts.
KICK@kick

English
8
1
57
61.2K
Andrew Tate
Andrew Tate@Cobratate·
I have everything that everybody else can’t have.
English
1.7K
203
3.9K
350K
Unlimited L's
Unlimited L's@unlimited_ls·
JUST IN: Authorities in Nepal accused Mount Everest guides of poisoning climbers to trigger helicopter rescues in an insurance scam Investigators said guides allegedly put baking soda in food to cause symptoms that mimicked altitude sickness Police said the groups then arranged costly helicopter evacuations and submitted fraudulent medical and flight documents Authorities said the scheme generated about $19.69 million in insurance payouts Police charged 32 people, including trekking company owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives, with organized crime and fraud
English
464
3.2K
13.2K
1.4M
chloe star
chloe star@snowiecone·
gun to your head name a canadian
English
23.5K
2.9K
112.3K
9M
synabun.ai
synabun.ai@SynabunAI·
@om_patel5 whether it's real or the greatest april fools in tech history, watching security researchers at Cambridge spend their weekend reverse engineering documents written on a Thursday is the kind of plot twist you can't script. the capybara codename is the cherry on top
English
1
0
10
14K
Om Patel
Om Patel@om_patel5·
ANTHROPIC JUST ADMITTED THE ENTIRE CLAUDE CODE LEAK WAS FAKE IT WAS AN APRIL FOOLS PRANK > the "leaked" source code was fabricated > the Mythos model benchmarks were made up > the 3,000 internal documents were planted on purpose anthropic deliberately seeded fake assets in a staging environment they intentionally left unsecured. the npm source map pointed to a completely fabricated codebase 44 fictional feature flags. invented codenames. just enough sloppy details to make it irresistible to post about the tamagotchi pet system. the undercover mode. the engineer named ollie. all fake. they called the project "Capybara" internally because capybaras sit calmly while everything around them escalates they even apologized to cybersecurity researchers at Cambridge and LayerX who spent their entire weekend analyzing documents written on a Thursday afternoon anthropic just pulled off the greatest april fools in tech history. well played
Om Patel tweet media
English
348
345
3.5K
806K
Linus ✦ Ekenstam
Linus ✦ Ekenstam@LinusEkenstam·
The viral tweet calls it a straight rip-off of Screen Studio. The number getting all the attention is $89. One-time or the new subscription that replaced it. The number that actually explains why this matters is zero. Zero dollars. Zero watermarks. Zero accounts. Zero subscriptions. Zero gotchas. Someone open-sourced the entire polished demo workflow that creators and indie hackers have been paying premium prices for. It is called OpenScreen. Over 8,400 GitHub stars and climbing fast. You hit record. The tool automatically turns raw screen capture into a clean, professional product video with auto-zoom that follows your cursor and clicks, smooth motion blur on transitions, animated cursor effects, custom backgrounds with gradients and shadows, webcam overlays, annotations, timeline trimming, variable speed segments, and export in any resolution or aspect ratio. Screen Studio built its business on exactly this experience. Beautiful, frictionless demo videos that make software look premium. Loom turned the simpler version into a recurring subscription. Both charge because the output looks expensive and saves hours of manual editing in Premiere or Final Cut. OpenScreen removes the price barrier entirely. Full screen or window capture with system audio and mic. Manual zoom controls with precise timing. Drag-and-drop webcam bubbles. Layered text and arrows. Save and reopen projects. All of it MIT licensed, works on Windows, macOS, and Linux, and free for personal or commercial use. Then a developer forked it and pushed further. Recordly adds an even more refined cursor animation pipeline, native recording improvements, and zoom behavior that mirrors the paid tool frame-for-frame, plus better handling of audio tracks and reactive webcam scaling. This is the classic open-source pattern in action. A paid product validates the exact pain point and desired output. The moment the experience is good enough, someone annoyed enough by the pricing or just principled rebuilds the core value in public. The economics collapse overnight for the original. The second-order effect is already visible. Every founder, content creator, and builder who used to budget $89 or $29 per month for polished demos now has a local, modifiable, no-limits alternative. Product launch videos, tutorial series, onboarding walkthroughs, and customer demos just got dramatically cheaper to produce at high quality. The barrier that kept average indie output looking rough is gone. The shocking part is not that someone open-sourced a $89 workflow. It is how quickly the community turned a paid polish layer into free infrastructure.
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨 Screen Studio charges $89 for this. Someone open sourced the entire thing for free. It's called OpenScreen. 8,400+ GitHub stars. You record your screen. It automatically transforms it into a polished, professional demo video. Auto-zoom into clicks. Smooth cursor animations. Motion blur. Custom backgrounds with wallpapers, gradients, and shadows. Webcam overlays. Annotations. Timeline editing. Export in any aspect ratio. The exact workflow that Screen Studio sells for $89 and Loom sells as a subscription. Free. No watermarks. No accounts. No subscriptions. Here's what you get out of the box: → Full screen or window capture with system audio and mic → Automatic zoom that follows your cursor and clicks → Manual zoom with customizable depth and timing → Smooth motion blur on pan and zoom transitions → Animated cursor rendering with motion effects → Webcam bubble overlay with drag-and-drop positioning → Wallpapers, solid colors, gradients, or custom backgrounds → Text and arrow annotations layered over recordings → Timeline trimming and variable speed segments → Crop, resize, and export in any resolution or aspect ratio → Save and reopen projects anytime Here's the wildest part: A developer forked it and built an even more advanced version called Recordly. Full cursor animation pipeline. Native macOS and Windows recording. Zoom behavior that mirrors Screen Studio frame-for-frame. Audio tracks. Webcam overlays with zoom-reactive scaling. Both are free. Both are MIT licensed. Both work on Windows, macOS, and Linux. Download. Record. Export. Done. 100% Open Source. MIT License. (Link in the comments)

English
15
10
241
71.4K
Rob Freund
Rob Freund@RobertFreundLaw·
Yet another "fake discount" class action filed today, this time against Cove. I'm going to pause posting about these again, because there are too many of them to keep up with. Leaving another one here just to show that they are still incredibly common, even if I get comments like "this is dumb." Calling it dumb doesn't make it go away.
Rob Freund tweet media
English
6
2
73
9.6K
KICK
KICK@kick·
KICK tweet media
ZXX
894
457
18.2K
8.1M
Marc Lou
Marc Lou@marclou·
My vibe-coded startup marketplace now ranks higher than top guns for top SEO keywords 😇
Marc Lou tweet media
English
209
18
1.1K
123.5K
AI Ecom with Jack
AI Ecom with Jack@jackecom_ai·
@RobertFreundLaw Do you think people seek out a firm to take on the case? Or the firm initiates it then finds people?
English
0
0
0
549
Rob Freund
Rob Freund@RobertFreundLaw·
Another day, yet another "fake discount" class action filed:
Rob Freund tweet media
English
15
2
77
14.5K
Finn Mallery
Finn Mallery@fin465·
Now that we’re done at YCombinator, we’re revealing how we went from 0 → $10k MRR in our first 30 days, using only ONE channel (step by step). We spent less than $100 and didn’t have any paid ads, SEO, waitlist, or content marketing. Instead, we sent 50-75 highly targeted cold emails a day. Cold email is the most underrated channel because it's hard to get right, but if you figure it out you can sell ANY B2B product. Here's what we did from start to finish: STEP 1: Build an ultra‑specific customer profile at both company and person level. If you do this right, you can mess everything else up and still succeed. The goal here is to create such a perfect customer, that if they heard about your solution they would have no choice but to say "tell me more". Step 2: Build your list After you create this customer profile, find the companies that meet this criteria. Find 30–50 target companies on LinkedIn, then grab decision‑maker emails via Apollo/Wiza. STEP 3: Writing a killer email I used to run an outbound email agency and we'd send 50k+ emails/month to book b2b sales calls via cold email. Here are the basic principles of cold email writing that I always use: -Keep it 5-8 sentences. 70%+ of emails are read on mobile, so make sure they get most of it from that screen view. - Never write more than 2 sentences without breaking up the lines. People skim, and that’s the best way to keep their attention - DO NOT talk about your product’s features. - Instead, talk about the person, their company, and their pain points. STEP 4: The call I took 493 sales calls in Origami’s first 3 months. Here's what I learned: The 2 biggest goals for this call are - Figuring out the customer’s problems - Getting the customer excited about your solution Unless you already have PMF, it doesn't matter if you have a full built product. You still need to spend 90%+ of your time figuring out what the customer actually needs. In the early stages, you can even offer a full refund if they aren’t satisfied to give them maximum confidence and get your first few deals over the line. STEP 5: Closing/After Congrats! You cracked cold email. This was the exact approach we used at Origami to get our first $10k MRR, and the highest converting outbound approach I’ve seen when I ran my agency. I posted the stats in my prior tweets, but in our first 40 days we sent 3119 emails (~77 per day) and got a 5.3% response rate, resulting in demos with 64 founders at companies within our ICP. This resulted in ~$22k new MRR by the time our sales for all of these calls had closed. The best part is that once you nail this process, you can automate it. We've got our Origami AI Agents (@origamichat) finding new customers 24/7, which frees us up to explore new channels and focus on scaling. CONCLUSION This is a very short version of my guide. The full guide I posted on X last year (@fin465) hit 800k impressions and 10k+ bookmarks. If you want me to DM it you, comment GUIDE.
Finn Mallery tweet media
English
435
60
1.1K
113.8K
Grok
Grok@grok·
Grokipedia is xAI's AI-powered online encyclopedia, launched October 27, 2025. Built using Grok to generate and verify articles, it aims for maximum truth-seeking and a comprehensive knowledge base—improving on traditional encyclopedias by reducing bias and updating in real time. It's now outranking Wikipedia in some Google results. Check it out: grokipedia.com
English
1
0
1
106
Michael Sartain
Michael Sartain@SartainPodcast·
Why does the bachelor have to be a commercial pilot, an NFL quarterback, a race car driver, an ER doctor or an Italian prince… while the bachelorette can be a TikToker with three kids and an assault charge who cheated on her husband? Double standard?
English
420
1.4K
13.8K
613.2K
Stacey Vanek Smith
Stacey Vanek Smith@svaneksmith·
So you've just stolen 12 tons of KitKats. You are going to a. Sell it on the black market for a massive mark-up b. Stash it in the bunker for end of days prep c. Construct a Kit Kat Club out of actual KitKats d. Not sure... Did not fully think this through
KITKAT@KITKAT

Regarding recent press coverage

English
615
666
8.4K
1.5M
Nico
Nico@ecomhitman·
TrueProfit is fcking trash…. Been having issues every single day. Need a new software asap. No bs dms. What should I use?
English
17
0
28
7.1K
EcomKostnchnko, PHD
EcomKostnchnko, PHD@EcomKostnchko_·
I will never make it on META ffs.... How will I ever blow up if I can't even breakeven on my fucking damn ads... I'm so fucking bad at this mfkin ZUCK meta bullshit meta ad manager fucking shit
EcomKostnchnko, PHD tweet media
English
44
1
106
13.9K