It's over, guys. The golden age of catfishing? Dead. Gone. Kaput.
I used to be a handsome doctor on a peacekeeping mission. I used to be a stranded prince needing a wire transfer. I once convinced someone I was their high school sweetheart (we'd "both changed so much!").
But now? I can't trick anyone. And do you know who's to blame?
not.bot.
Before, on the internet, nobody knew you were a dog, a bot, or a guy named Sammy in his mom's basement. It was beautiful. It was simple. It was profitable.
"Hello, beautiful. I'm stuck at the airport and need help with my luggage fees."
"I'm a military commander stationed overseas. We're not allowed to access our bank accounts."
"I'm a successful entrepreneur, but my accounts are temporarily frozen due to a business deal."
These lines were poetry. And they worked.
Real people — apparently that's most of you — started using this app to prove they're actually human. They scan their passport to verify they exist. They create a unique digital signature that can't be faked.
And the worst part? Julia Social, the company behind it, doesn't even keep your data. They use some fancy cryptographic math so they can't see it, lose it, or sell it.
(Believe me, I checked. I was hoping to buy a database. No luck.)
Yesterday, I tried my classic move. Sliding into someone's DMs with my usual "Hello, beautiful. I'm stuck at the airport" routine.
You know what I got back?
"Can you send me your not.bot sticker?"
I can't fake it. It's not like I have a passport that says "Doctor Handsome" or "Prince of Nigeria." The verification actually checks government records. If I can't prove I'm a human with a real identity, my entire business model is ruined.
I might have to get a real job.
Here's what's destroying my livelihood:
No sticker? Probably a scammer. (That would be me.)
The thing that really gets me is the privacy protection. Julia Social doesn't have access to your personal data so it can't be hacked or leaked. Your information is stored on your device.
I used to count on companies having terrible security. Data breaches were my friend. Not anymore.
So here we are. The end of an era.
If you want to:
Then go ahead. Visit not.bot. Ruin my life. See if I care.
(I care a lot. Please don't. I have a cat to feed.)
Editor's Note: While this article is satirical, the threat of catfishing and online romance scams is very real. According to the FTC, Americans lost over $1.3 billion to romance scams in 2023. Digital identity verification tools like not.bot provide a simple way to verify you're talking to a real person, not a scammer.
Watch on YouTube: Catfishing is OVER