Ritorno del Dogecoin Millionaire
La recente impennata di Dogecoin ha segnato un nuovo capitolo per Glauber Contessoto, noto come “Dogecoin Millionaire”. Dopo aver visto i suoi investimenti scendere drasticamente negli ultimi anni, Contessoto ha avviato un percorso di risalita significativa grazie al recupero del meme coin. Con Dogecoin che ha superato il valore di [gpt_article engine=”openai-gpt-4o-mini” topic=”‘Dogecoin Millionaire’ Regains Title After DOGE Pump—And This Time, He’s Selling” sections=”5″ structure=”Prima di generare i nomi delle sezioni, analizza l’articolo seguente e utilizzalo come riferimento per la struttura della sezione del nuovo articolo per garantire che tutte le informazioni essenziali siano incluse.
L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” directives=”Identificati in un giornalista professionista e riscrivi completamente con tono di voce autorevole e pragmatico e con estrema competenza professionale e utilizzando uno stile autorevole ed essenziale un nuovo e dettaglato articolo in formato post
di blog attenendoti strettamente al testo fornito e senza inventare nulla, verificando che non ci siano paragrafi o frasi copiate uguali al testo fornito, tutto il testo deve essere originale e diverso dal testo fornito come ispirazione, se è presente mantieni il testo in grassetto, corsivo, sottolineato, mantieni i link esterni se presenti, se non è presente decidi tu dove inserirlo per dare più evidenza al testo scritto, formatta il testo per incorporarlo in un post WordPress utilizzando solo
LUGANO FINANCE FORUM: il tuo biglietto speciale scontato a CHF 49. Richiedilo subito CLICCA QUI
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Escludi eventuali altri tag HTML. Le sezioni devono avere almeno 150 parole e non devono superare le 300 parole. Il titolo di ogni sezione deve sempre includere per primo il soggetto principale del post e non deve essere duplicato nemmeno in parte, se esistono due titoli uguali cancella quello più corto. Utilizza l’articolo di riferimento qui sotto per trovare ispirazione.
L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” language=”Italiano” heading=”h2″],20 e continuato a crescere, le sue partecipazioni hanno raggiunto un valore di oltre ,1 milioni nel giro di pochi giorni. Contessoto ha sintetizzato il suo stato d’animo, dichiarando: “Tutto quello che ho detto che sarebbe successo sta accadendo. Si sente sicuramente bene”.Nella sua ascesa, Contessoto ha dovuto affrontare una montagna russa di emozioni. Nel corso della sua carriera, il suo patrimonio netto aveva toccato i milioni, solo per poi scendere a meno di 0.000 in seguito a un lungo mercato al ribasso. “Non riesco a ripetere la sensazione della prima volta diventando milionario partendo da zero, ma questa è come una buona continuazione”, ha aggiunto, sottolineando la sua determinazione a rimanere fedele ai suoi principi anche di fronte alle critiche.
Parallelamente, l’interesse per Dogecoin ha riacceso l’attenzione su Contessoto e le sue scelte di investimento. Divenuto un punto di riferimento per altri investitori di criptovalute, il suo approccio si distingue per una visione ottimistica sull’andamento futuro di Dogecoin e sull’intero mercato delle criptovalute. Questo nuovo slancio ha contribuito a ripristinare la sua reputazione e il valore simbolico associato al titolo di “Dogecoin Millionaire”, rendendolo un protagonista della comunità crittografica.
La storia di Glauber Contessoto
Glauber Contessoto, noto nel mondo delle criptovalute come “Dogecoin Millionaire”, ha intrapreso un viaggio affascinante e altalenante che ha attira l’attenzione su di sé. Nel 2020, con una spesa di circa 0.000 in Dogecoin, ha deciso di investire tutti i suoi risparmi e persino di utilizzare carte di credito in un momento in cui la meme coin non aveva ancora raggiunto la sua fama attuale. Solo un anno dopo, il valore delle sue partecipazioni ha raggiunto un sorprendente picco di milioni. Tuttavia, Contessoto scelse di non vendere, un dilemma che si sarebbe rivelato cruciale nella sua storia personale e finanziaria.
Con il crollo del mercato e una lenta discesa del valore di Dogecoin, il suo patrimonio si ridusse a una cifra ben al di sotto dei 0.000. Contessoto racconta di aver vissuto un periodo difficile, tormentato dalle critiche e dal risentimento di coloro che avevano investito seguendo i suoi suggerimenti iniziali. “Sentivo il dovere di non vendere, poiché molte persone avevano investito a causa mia”, ha affermato. Anche nei momenti più bui, quando il prezzo di Dogecoin scese a soli [gpt_article engine=”openai-gpt-4o-mini” topic=”‘Dogecoin Millionaire’ Regains Title After DOGE Pump—And This Time, He’s Selling” sections=”5″ structure=”Prima di generare i nomi delle sezioni, analizza l’articolo seguente e utilizzalo come riferimento per la struttura della sezione del nuovo articolo per garantire che tutte le informazioni essenziali siano incluse.
L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” directives=”Identificati in un giornalista professionista e riscrivi completamente con tono di voce autorevole e pragmatico e con estrema competenza professionale e utilizzando uno stile autorevole ed essenziale un nuovo e dettaglato articolo in formato post
di blog attenendoti strettamente al testo fornito e senza inventare nulla, verificando che non ci siano paragrafi o frasi copiate uguali al testo fornito, tutto il testo deve essere originale e diverso dal testo fornito come ispirazione, se è presente mantieni il testo in grassetto, corsivo, sottolineato, mantieni i link esterni se presenti, se non è presente decidi tu dove inserirlo per dare più evidenza al testo scritto, formatta il testo per incorporarlo in un post WordPress utilizzando solo,
,
,
- ,
- ,
,
, , , , and tags.
Escludi eventuali altri tag HTML. Le sezioni devono avere almeno 150 parole e non devono superare le 300 parole. Il titolo di ogni sezione deve sempre includere per primo il soggetto principale del post e non deve essere duplicato nemmeno in parte, se esistono due titoli uguali cancella quello più corto. Utilizza l’articolo di riferimento qui sotto per trovare ispirazione.
L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” language=”Italiano” heading=”h2″].055, Contessoto ha mantenuto salda la sua convinzione, decidendo addirittura di acquistare 1.3 milioni di DOGE, investendo ulteriormente quasi .500.Il suo impegno è finalmente stato ripagato con la recente impennata del valore di Dogecoin. Credendo fermamente nella ripresa della meme coin, la determinazione di Contessoto ha portato a una reazione giusta. Con Dogecoin ora stabilmente sopra i [gpt_article engine=”openai-gpt-4o-mini” topic=”‘Dogecoin Millionaire’ Regains Title After DOGE Pump—And This Time, He’s Selling” sections=”5″ structure=”Prima di generare i nomi delle sezioni, analizza l’articolo seguente e utilizzalo come riferimento per la struttura della sezione del nuovo articolo per garantire che tutte le informazioni essenziali siano incluse.
L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” directives=”Identificati in un giornalista professionista e riscrivi completamente con tono di voce autorevole e pragmatico e con estrema competenza professionale e utilizzando uno stile autorevole ed essenziale un nuovo e dettaglato articolo in formato post
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L’ARTICOLO PER LA TUA ISPIRAZIONE:
It’s been a wild ride for the “Dogecoin Millionaire” over the last few years as his net worth touched $3 million and then fell to the hundreds of thousands. But with the leading meme coin surging to a price point unseen since 2021, he’s reclaimed the title.Glauber Contessoto spent his life savings and loaded up credit cards to buy $180,000 worth of Dogecoin in late 2020 and early 2021. The following year, his stash shot up in value to $3 million—but he didn’t sell.In the months following, his fortunes fell to $200,000 and Dogecoin lost momentum. For years, he said he has been tormented for this fumble, sticking to his convictions amid the downward market moves. But now the title is legit again, and Contessoto is weighing a different move this time around.Contessoto, better known as ProTheDoge, reclaimed his status as the ”Dogecoin Millionaire” last week as the coin surpassed a price of $0.20. Over the next few days, as the meme coin continued to soar above $0.40, his holdings peaked at a value of just over $2.1 million.“Everything I said would happen is happening. It definitely feels good,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “I can never duplicate the feeling of the first time becoming a millionaire from having nothing, but this is like a really good sequel.”
People laughed when I said $DOGE was coming back…
But I never sold, I just bought more
I have $1.2 Million in #DOGE currently
…and the bull run has just begun.
2021: $180K 👉🏼 $3 Million
2025: $1.2 Million 👉🏼 ??? pic.twitter.com/1E8QWCGkeq
— SlumDOGE Millionaire (@ProTheDoge) November 10, 2024When he first became a Dogecoin millionaire, Contessoto was working a full-time job, living in a humble flat and driving a notoriously beat-up Toyota. During this period, he documented his journey on YouTube, showing his holdings at the end of every video.“I had a lot of people that bought in because of me. And I felt a duty to them not to sell,” Contessoto told Decrypt. “When things took a downturn, Dogecoin went right back down—and I had lost so much money, I had a lot of people turn on me.”He said that every day he logged onto social media, following the fall of DOGE, he would see streams of hate from people who claimed to have lost money because of him. During the lowest period, as DOGE sold for just $0.055, he claims that his holdings sat at around $200,000. At this moment, he questioned what he was doing this all for with his finger hovering over the sell button. He clicked a button—but it was to buy another 1.3 million DOGE, which he claims cost him approximately $71,500 at the time.Now that those dark days are behind him, he says that he will be selling—but not the whole stash.“I’m definitely going to sell this time around. One lesson I obviously learned was to take profits,” he told Decrypt. “Am I going to sell my entire bag of Dogecoin? Probably not.”Contessoto said that he is devising an exit strategy by consulting more experienced traders than himself. Broadly speaking, he said that he’ll start slowly taking money out of the meme coin when he believes that Bitcoin is starting to reach its peak.While the last three years were filled with people taking “stabs” at him for the $3 million fumble, he believes in the long run that it was ultimately the “smart” thing to do. This is because the “Dogecoin Millionaire” nickname served as a platform to become a crypto influencer.He now has 115,000 YouTube subscribers and over 350,000 Twitter followers, an audience that he didn’t have before this saga. In a documentary that followed his journey called “This is Not Financial Advice,” he claimed to have made $690,000 in sponsorship deals by its June 2023 release date. He had also moved into a better home in Las Vegas. “That was my goal initially anyway, because I felt like I could create a name brand from the entire thing,” Contessoto explained. “I was doing YouTube videos every single day. I was doing advertisements for products, I was doing commercials, I was selling merchandise […] I was just basically monetizing the entire journey.”But this too hasn’t come without its downsides. Many Crypto Twitter influencers take payments from projects in exchange for social media promotion—a move that has landed Contessoto in the crosshairs of crypto detectives. Noted on-chain sleuth ZachXBT has highlighted some of the Dogecoin Millionaire’s previous promotions of alleged “rug pulls.” This includes Safereum, a token that plummeted nearly 95% as the team behind the project dumped 600 ETH on the holders. Security firm CertiK defined this as an “exit scam.” Contessoto deflected blame for his role in promoting projects that go awry.“ZachXBT always talks about, ‘You need to do your due diligence before you work with these projects,’” Contessoto explained. “I’ll do as much research as I can possibly do. But I’m not some detective, sleuth, tech guy. What am I going to do? Sit there for hours and hours, try to make sure it’s legit, and then something ends up happening anyway?”Such influencer-driven token scams remain common. In October, a Solana meme coin called Sharpei soared to a market cap of $54 million in under an hour thanks to promotion from prominent crypto influencers; Contessoto was not among them.Soon after, the token dramatically collapsed in price in a matter of seconds as insiders collectively cashed out amid controversy. Part of this scheme included a pitch deck that named big projects and influencers as official partners, which helped onboard others who promoted the “rug pull.”When considering projects to promote, Contessoto claims to check if a token’s liquidity is locked, examine the tokenomics of a project and the token supply, research the people behind the coin, and ask other people in the space to vouch for them. But ultimately, he said, influencers can be fooled just like regular traders. “As long as you’re not pumping and dumping, I’ve never once called a project and then two seconds later dumped my whole bag,” he said. “I have a good conscience on me. I work with projects I think are legitimate, and I try to maneuver through this space as best as I can.”Edited by Andrew HaywardDaily Debrief NewsletterStart every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.” language=”Italiano” heading=”h2″].20, il suo nuovo picco patrimoniale di oltre .1 milioni ha ridato vigore alla sua condizione di “Dogecoin Millionaire”. “Creare un nome e un marchio attorno alla mia esperienza era il mio obiettivo fin dall’inizio”, ha dichiarato, dimostrando come la resilienza e la pianificazione a lungo termine possano condurre a risultati sorprendenti nel volatile mondo delle criptovalute.Strategia di vendita e apprendimento
Strategia di vendita e apprendimento Dogecoin Millionaire
Con la recente crescita del valore di Dogecoin, Glauber Contessoto ha attivamente messo a punto una strategia di vendita che riflette le sue esperienze passate nel mercato delle criptovalute. L’emozione di aver raggiunto nuovamente un valore patrimoniale considerevole di oltre ,1 milioni non ha portato a una decisione affrettata di vendere tutto, anzi, Contessoto ha chiaramente dichiarato l’intenzione di approcciare la situazione in modo più strategico rispetto al passato.
Contessoto ha appreso che una lezione chiave dall’esperienza vissuta è l’importanza di capitalizzare i profitti. “Imparerò a prendere profitti,” ha detto, segnalando la sua intenzione di non commettere lo stesso errore di non vendere nella fase di picco precedente. Nonostante i suoi successi recenti, Contessoto ha pianificato di adottare un approccio equilibrato, evitando di svendere il suo intero pacchetto di Dogecoin, ma piuttosto vendendo porzioni per realizzare guadagni mentre continua a monitorare il mercato.
In base alla sua analisi delle tendenze del mercato, Contessoto ha espresso l’intenzione di iniziare a prelevare fondi non appena il prezzo di Bitcoin si avvicina a un picco, un segnale che generalmente suggerirebbe una possibile correzione nel mercato delle criptovalute più ampio. Sottolineando l’importanza di consultare trader più esperti nella comunità, Contessoto ha iniziato a costruire relazioni con professionisti del settore per migliorare le sue decisioni di investimento.
Questo approccio riflette non solo una maturazione personale, ma anche l’adattamento a un mercato che continua ad evolversi. Attraverso una combinazione di esperienze pratiche e apprendimento teorico, Contessoto si sta preparando a navigare nel complesso panorama delle criptovalute con maggiore saggezza, raccontando come questo processo di adattamento sia una componente cruciale per chiunque desideri avere successo nel mondo delle criptovalute.
Influenza nel mondo delle criptovalute
Glauber Contessoto, celebrato come il “Dogecoin Millionaire”, ha sfruttato la sua notorietà per affermarsi come una figura influente nel panorama delle criptovalute. Dalla sua ascesa meteoria nel 2021, ha attirato un vasto seguito, accumulando oltre 115.000 iscritti su YouTube e più di 350.000 follower su Twitter. Questa transizione da semplice investitore a influencer è avvenuta in modo strategico, trasformando la sua esperienza personale in una piattaforma per condividere informazioni e insegnamenti sulle criptovalute. Inoltre, ha commentato la sua capacità di generare guadagni significativi attraverso sponsorizzazioni, citando circa 0.000 ottenuti in affari legati a marchi e prodotti nel settore.
La sua attività di influencer va oltre la mera condivisione di successi. Contessoto si è impegnato a educare il suo pubblico sui rischi e le opportunità del mercato delle criptovalute. La sua trasparenza sui processi decisionali e sui flop ha attirato l’attenzione, posizionandolo come un educatore piuttosto che semplicemente un promotore. Con la pubblicazione del documentario “This is Not Financial Advice”, Contessoto ha amplificato ulteriormente il suo messaggio, presentando le sue sfide e vittorie in un formato visivo e accessibile.
Nonostante i successi, la sua posizione nella comunità delle criptovalute è stata oggetto di scrutinio. I critici lo accusano di avere, in alcune occasioni, promosso progetti ritenuti poco solidi o addirittura truffaldini. Riconoscendo i rischi associati alla sua attività, Contessoto ha sottolineato che, sebbene cerchi di svolgere ricerche approfondite prima di promuovere un progetto, non è infallibile e può essere ingannato proprio come chiunque altro. La sua consapevolezza delle vulnerabilità dell’influenza nel mercato ha aggiunto una dimensione di realismo alla sua narrativa, dimostrando l’importanza di un approccio prudente e informato nel settore in rapida evoluzione delle criptovalute.
Sfide e critiche nel percorso di un influencer
Nel suo cammino da influencer nel settore delle criptovalute, Glauber Contessoto ha affrontato una serie di sfide significative che hanno messo alla prova la sua resilienza. Con la sua crescita come figura di riferimento nei social media, è emersa inevitabilmente anche una schiera di critiche e controversie. Le sue scelte di investimento, spesso sottoposte a scrutinio, hanno attirato l’attenzione di analisti e detrattori. In particolare, la promozione di alcuni progetti che si sono rivelati fallimentari ha suscitato domande sulla responsabilità degli influencer nel diffondere informazioni e nell’incoraggiare investimenti in criptovalute.
Contessoto ha difeso la sua posizione, affermando: “Farò quanto più ricerca possibile. Ma non sono un detective.” Questa affermazione sottolinea la complessità dell’ambiente crittografico, dove anche i professionisti possono cadere vittima di truffe sofisticate. Infatti, il coinvolgimento di Contessoto in progetti controversi, come quello di Safereum, ha mostrato come il coinvolgimento attivo nel panorama delle criptovalute possa comportare rischi elevati e incertezze.
La sua pelle dura si è forgiata nel fuoco delle critiche ricevute dai follower arrabbiati per le perdite patite a causa di investimenti ritenuti a rischio. Durante periodi di forte volatilità del mercato, le piattaforme social sono stati teatro di insulti e accuse. In questo contesto, Contessoto ha mantenuto un atteggiamento pragmatico, riconoscendo che, nonostante le buone intenzioni, il mercato può riservare sorprese sgradevoli e la responsabilità finale su un investimento ricade sempre sull’investitore stesso.
Allo stesso tempo, ha imparato che la comunicazione e l’educazione del pubblico sono essenziali. I suoi sforzi per chiarire le sfide associate agli investimenti in criptovalute e per condividere le sue esperienze personali hanno contribuito a costruire una relazione di fiducia con i suoi seguaci. La trasparenza riguardo ai suoi errori e alle sue scelte, così come la sua decisione di migliorare continuamente la sua conoscenza approfondendo la variabile della ricerca, sono diventati parte integrante della sua narrativa pubblica.
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