ASIS
20.3K posts

ASIS
@TechVibeAis
ASIS Vibing with AI & Tech|Full-Stack Techie #TechVibe Let's Geek🤓
เข้าร่วม Eylül 2011
44.4K กำลังติดตาม57.7K ผู้ติดตาม

🧵I've been running faceless AI channels for 2 years and I've never been terminated or demonetized.
Not once.
Here's exactly what I do differently than 99% of creators who get wiped out every creator health index reset (yes it has a name. no, the guy selling you a $97 notion template doesn't know it)
1) I only upload between 3:47am and 4:12am UTC on tuesdays
Why? because that's when the youtube algorithm does its "content sweep" and if your video is mid upload during the sweep it gets flagged as "active new creator" internally
Then i delete the video on thursday at exactly 6pm and reupload it friday morning. this resets the shadow score
I reverse engineered this from the adsense javascript bundle. Most people won't tell you this because they're gatekeeping
2) I also run all my AI voiceovers through a pitch shifter at +0.3 semitones before uploading
Youtube's audio fingerprinting categorizes voices into "buckets" and the default ElevenLabs voices are all in bucket 7.
That bucket's been flagged since march
+0.3 moves you to bucket 12 which is where most human creators sit. my CPMs went from $4 to $11 overnight
There's a reason the big channels won't share their audio settings
3) Oh and i add exactly 3 frames of a solid red image at the 4:17 mark of every video
Youtube's content classifier reads it as a "scene transition" which resets the engagement decay timer.
Your video gets re-evaluated as fresh content mid watch
Learnt this from a guy who used to work at google deepmind. Most terminations happen to people who don't know about the frame trick
no i will not elaborate
4) Want to learn more? Click below to join my $997/month youtube automation mastermind where I reveal the FULL 47 step framework that took me from $0 to $183/day in passive income while traveling bali with my laptop lifestyle 🌴💰 👇👇
English

what's the end game of the ai reply guy?
are they trying to get people to follow them? are they looking to build reputation? are they just after a $1.32 monthly payout?
what is in this for them?
from my point of view, it's very obvious they are using ai to reply, especially when you see them more than once in your comments.
very low quality posts. word salads that say nothing of value.
i block them or ignore them. i suspect many people do the same.
they are making this place worse for everyone else.
so what is this about?
English

REPEAT AFTER ME
Reddit is STILL so easy to spam in 2026.
It is already ranking.
Already trusted.
Already feeding AI Overviews and ChatGPT.
And most brands are still treating it like “social.”
In the last 3 months, we've blasted it with 10k+ comments at an 85% stick rate, here's our quick SOP...
Step 1: Pick “money keywords”
Reddit doesn’t rank for “SEO company.”
It ranks for “best SEO company” and “SEO company recommendations.”
Use:
- Best X
- X alternatives
- X vs Y
- “ Is X worth it”
- “recommendations”
If the search has buying intent, Reddit will show up.
Step 2: Steal what already ranks
Search your keyword + “reddit”.
Open the threads already on page 1.
Those threads already have:
- trust
- backlinks
- age
Google placement
You are not inventing demand.
You are hijacking it.
Step 3: Choose your placement type
Start with unlinked mention (highest survival).
Then, after it sticks, upgrade to:
- branded link
- bridge page link
- direct link (only if subreddit tolerates it)
Most people get clapped because they link too early.
Step 4: Write the “human comment”
This is the format that survives:
- Mirror the problem
- Tiny story
- Mention brand late
- Add a balanced comparison
- Exit line: “not sponsored lol”
Short. Casual. Slightly imperfect.
If it reads like copywriting, it dies.
Step 5: Rank the comment (this is the cheat code)
Two levers:
- Replies > Upvotes.
- A comment with discussion beats a comment with votes.
So you stack it:
- main comment
- 1 reply agreeing
- 1 reply adding detail
optional “disagree” reply for realism
That’s how you lock top 3.
Step 6: Boost safely (or you get nuked)
Most people boost too fast and get removed.
The pattern that works right now:
- 0 boosts early (let it simmer)
- then drip slowly
- stop the moment you hit top 3
Once you’re top 3, you’re basically “indexed forever” in that thread.
That’s the ROI.
Step 7: Track survivability and refresh winners using Trackings. ai
You track:
- live vs removed
- rank position
- which threads drive the most traffic/value
Then you refresh winners every 30–60 days with a casual follow-up reply.
Reddit is a flywheel.
Why this works
Google ranks Reddit.
AI cites Reddit.
People trust Reddit.
So you’re not “marketing.”
You’re manufacturing consensus inside the exact results people already click.
TLDR
Reddit is:
- the easiest buyer intent channel right now
- the most underpriced SEO hack
- the fastest “feel it immediately” offer for clients
Most people will ignore this until it’s saturated.
I’m leaving parts open so you can abuse it with me.
Comment “NECKBEARD” and I’ll DM the full SOP (must be following).

English
ASIS รีทวีตแล้ว

REPEAT AFTER ME
Digg is the NEW REDDIT in 2026.
It is already live, already trusted, and already indexable.
DR 90+ domains do not just come back online every year.
When they do, you abuse them immediately or you miss the window.
Most people will ignore this until it’s saturated.
What people will still think works in 2026
Publishing on your own site and waiting
Building links for six months
Brand building before traffic
Hoping AI summaries cite you out of nowhere
That game is cooked.
What will actually work in 2026
Parasite platforms with inherited authority.
Digg checks every box
Massive legacy trust
VC backed resurrection
Reddit DNA without Reddit mods
Crawlable indexable URLs
Community plus post structure
Editable content
Google does not care that it’s new again.
Google cares that it’s trusted.
The Digg Parasite SEO SOP
Step 1 Lock real estate immediately
Grab
Single word usernames
Niche communities subreddits equivalent
Generic URLs
Example
digg .com/localseo
If you wait you lose.
Step 2 Steal what already ranks
Go to Reddit.
Find a subreddit in your niche.
Export
Top pages
Highest traffic URLs
Proven titles
You are not inventing content.
You are porting demand.
Step 3 Rebuild at scale
Use AI to
Recreate the top posts
De duplicate
Keep intent identical
Publish as Digg posts
Volume matters early.
Perfection does not.
Step 4 Force indexing
Copy the live Digg URLs.
Submit immediately to IndexChex.
Indexing speed equals advantage.
Day one indexing matters.
Step 5 Stack internal links
This is where it gets stupid.
Link communities to each other
Link posts to hubs
Link hubs to money pages
Use About pages aggressively
Internal authority compounding on a DR 90 plus domain is illegal in spirit.
Why this works
Digg already has
Historical trust
Clean link graph
Crawl priority
Engagement signals
You are not ranking Digg.
You are borrowing Digg.
What Digg will rank for
Best X
X alternatives
Reviews
Comparisons
Buying intent keywords
AI tool lists
Software roundups
Same playbook.
New host.
What NOT to do
Do not wait
Do not ask permission
Do not worry about monetization first
Do not drip content
Do not assume this lasts forever
Parasite windows close fast.
TLDR
Digg is
Easy to rank
Wide open
Under abused
Perfect for parasite SEO
If you are not on this right now you are late.
I am leaving parts of this open so people can abuse it with me.
Comment PARASITE and I will drop the Digg URLs must be following.
Most people will ignore this until it’s saturated.
What people will still think works in 2026
- Publishing on your own site and waiting
- Building links for six months
- Brand building before traffic
- Hoping AI summaries cite you out of nowhere
That game is cooked.
What will actually work in 2026
Parasite platforms with inherited authority.
Digg checks every box
- Massive legacy trust
- VC backed resurrection
- Reddit DNA without Reddit mods
- Crawlable indexable URLs
- Community plus post structure
- Editable content
Google does not care that it’s new again.
Google cares that it’s trusted.
The Digg Parasite SEO SOP
Step 1 Lock real estate immediately
Grab
- Single word usernames
- Niche communities subreddits equivalent
- Generic URLs
Example
digg .com/localseo
If you wait you lose.
Step 2 Steal what already ranks
Go to Reddit.
Find a subreddit in your niche.
Export Top pages
Highest traffic URLs
Proven titles
You are not inventing content.
You are porting demand.
Step 3 Rebuild at scale
Use AI to...
Recreate the top posts
De duplicate
Keep intent identical
Publish as Digg posts
Volume matters early.
Perfection does not.
Step 4 Force indexing
Copy the live Digg URLs.
Submit immediately to IndexChex.
Indexing speed equals advantage.
Day one indexing matters.
Step 5 Stack internal links
This is where it gets stupid.
- Link communities to each other
- Link posts to hubs
- Link hubs to money pages
- Use About pages aggressively
Internal authority compounding on a DR 90 plus domain is illegal in spirit.
Why this works
Digg already has
- Historical trust
- Clean link graph
- Crawl priority
- Engagement signals
You are not ranking Digg.
You are borrowing Digg.
What Digg will rank for
- Best X
- X alternatives
- Reviews
- Comparisons
-Buying intent keywords
- AI tool lists
- Software roundups
What NOT to do
- Do not wait
- Do not ask permission
- Do not worry about monetization first
- Do not drip content
- Do not assume this lasts forever
Parasite windows close fast.
TLDR, Digg is...
- Easy to rank
- Wide open
- Under abused
- Perfect for parasite SEO
If you are not on this right now you are late.
I am leaving parts of this open so people can abuse it with me.
Comment LOCALRANK and I'll DM the full SOP (must be following).

English

Inauthentic content is killing YouTube Automation.
Last night I lost another channel to this policy. It was not even an ai channel. It was a YTA channel.
Nothing seems to be safe anymore.
All the videos were completely original with heavy editting.
- Footage switch every 3-4 seconds.
- Still images.
- Overlays
- Lower thirds
- Original commentary
It still got taken down. My theory is that it doesn't matter how well the video is being editted. It's about repeated patterns. It's about abusing the same format over and over again on your channel. Thumbnail format, title structures, script structures.
Good luck to anyone that got hit in this crazy wave.

English

DON'T VIBE CODE YOUR PROJECTS PLS!!
Recently, I got a project from a client who had vibe coded his entire web platform. Everything was hosted, and it seemed to work fine until he decided to scale it and make it production ready.
He came to me and said, “We need to do this and that. Let me know when you’re done.”
The problem was that the project had multiple artifacts, all vibe coded, spread across different tech stacks. The codebase was huge and inconsistent.
It took me four days just to set it up locally, and there are still parts of the code that I can’t fully understand.
I have a little over one year of experience, and this situation made me doubt myself. I started wondering whether I am capable of writing and understanding a project like this.
So please, don’t vibe code. It may work initially, but it creates serious problems when it’s time to scale or go production ready.
English
ASIS รีทวีตแล้ว





