

Some kind of in game pokeman transfer (a magby) -300k coins for FIFA on playstation -League of Legends skin (for character) -A logo for a character in Club Penguin -a tshirt from the standardbred owners association of new york -2 tickets to a documentary about gay marriage at the DOXA film festival in Vancouver -tickets to Broad Ripple Art Festival in Indiana -maze + gemstone panning pass to penns cave and wildlife park -A copy of Galzac's guide (reference for journalists to find experts in various subjects) -Koya Rift, an indie platform shooting game -Chucky Mendoza, an indie platform adventure game -a can of "fragrant disinfectant" (they wouldn't send it to me because I live in the US and they're in the UK.) -a bunch of swag from Nielsen Careers -tickets to a concert in Orlando -a custom logo from a gamer (similar to club penguin thing) -7x VIP guestlist for a club in London (The Roof Gardens) -25k coins for FIFA -koozie from Southern Swim Co. (the shirt was made/sold by a backstreet boys fan, of course).
Evoland 2 sugar movie#
Here's a full list of Scott's haul: -self help book -tickets to film screening in London -free entry into some club in Denver -2 tickets to a concert in LA -2 tickets to the BBC food show in North Yorkshire + meet and greet with chef James Martin -4 tickets to nuclear cowboyz in atlanta -2 tickets to a movie in Edinburgh -2 tickets to a film festival in London -some app -2 tickets and parking pass to Chelsea Handler show in Kansas City -ticket to an EDM concert in Detroit -DENIED winning a shirt that said the name of a bodyguard of the backstreet boys who had died because I wasn't a true backstreet boys fan. Sometimes they’re fake, but what do I care? I added search terms for tweets like this and had enough bandwidth to retweet every tweet of this kind without going over the rate limit.” “Lots of people raise money for charities by asking people to retweet. “After a while of winning contests, I realized I could use my bot for good too,” Scott writes. But he did snag off-the-wall goodies like a cowboy hat signed by the cast of a Mexican soap opera.Īnd Scott's story even has a heartwarming twist. Scott wasn’t able to claim all the prizes he won - specifically the most valuable prize, a $4,000 trip to New York fashion week. The bot ended up entering an astounding 165,000 contests. This last part could have been particularly damaging for Scott, but he says his Python script was able to take it into account. Twitter has its own policies to prevent spamming, which stops you from following people ad infinitum, and from retweeting at too fast a clip. It does not store any personal data.Scott says the hardest part of the project was keeping the bot from getting banned on Twitter. The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance". This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.

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