While you're busy — spammers write "Hey! How are you?" in your channel comments or group chat and quietly advertise casinos in their profile. Readers see the garbage and leave. Our AI removes them before their message is even read.
Here's what's really happening in Telegram groups and channel comments in 2025 — and what ordinary filters miss.
Someone writes "Hey! How are you?" — harmless text. But their bio and Stories link to a scam channel or casino. Simple filters only see the message text.
A bot writes a nice "helpful" recap of your post with loads of emoji. The goal is to build reputation and lure reactors into DMs. Looks exactly like a real user.
A group of 3 bots stages a conversation: one asks for advice, another "accidentally" recommends a service. Looks like a real discussion. Our AI spots suspicious links between accounts.
The spammer doesn't link directly to a channel — they recommend a "useful assistant bot". This shields the main channel from bans. Our AI analyzes where all mentioned resources lead.
Every one of these messages looked innocent — in a group or channel comments. None of them passed.
Telegram only removes spammers from its global blacklist — accounts already caught and recorded. But a fresh account with casino ads in its bio is perfectly clean to Telegram.
Entry captchas filter out dumb 2018-era bots. But a real person — or a smart bot — will pass any captcha, then quietly spam for months in your group chat or channel comments.
Keyword filters require constant manual updates. Spammers adapt in days. You won't keep up.
Our AI looks where nobody looked before: the full profile — bio, Stories, linked channels, account age. Works for both groups and channel comments. A different class of protection.
Three layers of checks running in parallel for every new member.
The AI doesn't look for stop-words — it understands context and intent. "Earn from home" and "I want to earn" are different with different intentions.
For every message from a new member, the bot checks their bio, Stories, linked channels, and account creation date — automatically.
At ≥90% confidence — auto-delete. Below 90% — the bot notifies you and waits for your call. Real users won't get caught in false bans.
Forward any message to the bot labeled "Spam" or "Not spam". Each group gets its own base — what's normal in one chat may be spam in another.
Pay only for real work done. Approved members are never charged again.
Deep dive into spam evolution from simple links to complex multi-layer Pig Butchering funnels. Article on vc.ru.
Now at low AI confidence (<90%) the bot doesn't delete by itself — you get a notification with "Delete" and "Not spam" buttons. Fewer false positives.
The bot now detects account creation date. Fresh profiles are one of the main signs of spam bots.
Breaking down new tactics: how spam bots disguise as regular users and use "blind zones" for simple bots.
Step-by-step guide for channel comment moderation and group protection.