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Simply Bitcoin

@simplybitcoin · 118.0K subscribers · 7.1K videos · 1 analyzed

Keeping you up-to-date with the peaceful Bitcoin revolution.

Share Influence Report

Communication Profile (across 1 videos)

Stated Purpose

Keeping you up-to-date with the peaceful Bitcoin revolution.

Operative Pattern

Across 1 videos, this channel demonstrates low persuasion intensity, primarily through Us Vs. Them. Recurring themes suggest consistent operative goals beyond stated content.

Avg Intensity

Low 30%

Avg Transparency

Transparent 80%

Top Technique

Us vs. Them

Dividing the world into two camps — people like us (good, trustworthy) and people not like us (dangerous, wrong). It exploits a deep human tendency to favor our own group. Once you accept the division, information from "them" gets automatically discounted.

Tajfel's Social Identity Theory (1979); Minimal Group Paradigm

Persuasion Dimensions

Story Shaping
40%
Emotional Appeal
30%
Group Characterization
30%
Implicit Claims
20%
Call to Action
20%
Engagement Mechanics
10%
Uses AI to group individual video agendas into recurring patterns
Viewer Guidance (3 tips)

Consider alternative frames

Information is consistently shaped from one angle. Seek out how other sources present the same facts.

Watch for emotional framing

This content frequently uses emotional appeal. Notice when feelings are being prioritized over evidence.

Watch for group characterization

People or groups are reduced to types. Consider whether the characterization serves the argument more than the truth.

Technique Fingerprint (from knowledge graph)

In-group/Out-group framing

AI detected as: Siege Mentality / In-group Bias

Leveraging your tendency to automatically trust information from "our people" and distrust outsiders. Once groups are established, people apply different standards of evidence depending on who is speaking.

Social Identity Theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979); Cialdini's Unity principle (2016)

In-group/Out-group framing

Leveraging your tendency to automatically trust information from "our people" and distrust outsiders. Once groups are established, people apply different standards of evidence depending on who is speaking.

Social Identity Theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979); Cialdini's Unity principle (2016)

Us vs. Them

Dividing the world into two camps — people like us (good, trustworthy) and people not like us (dangerous, wrong). It exploits a deep human tendency to favor our own group. Once you accept the division, information from "them" gets automatically discounted.

Tajfel's Social Identity Theory (1979); Minimal Group Paradigm

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© 2026 GrayBeam Technology Privacy v0.1.0 · ac93850 · 2026-04-03 22:43 UTC