Tuesdays can be boring, but an ongoing Twitter drama is captivating the attention of many blockchain enthusiasts. Ask The Doctor, a Canadian medical questions and answers website, announced that it would be suing Shytoshi Kusama, volunteer project lead of meme token Shiba Inu (SHIB), for alleged libel and will attempt to uncover his personal identity in court. Kusama immediately fired back, alleging that “it is illegal [for Ask The Doctor] to take people’s money for a service it never provides.”
Tell your legal team that it is illegal to buy a verified account to use it to scam other people. Tell them it is illegal to take people’s money for a service you never provide.
And if you REALLY want to come and get me…
COME GET ME.
It’s almost time anyway… I’m ready https://t.co/jTnQydUWBt
— Shytoshi Kusama™ (@ShytoshiKusama) December 21, 2021
The heated exchange began when Kusama quoted a promotional SHIB Tweet from Ask The Doctor the day prior, alleging, “You’re a scam account. Where are all your “doctor” tweets from tour account created in what 2009?” If the plot wasn’t already thick enough, Ask The Doctor was formerly a SHIB influencer.
In a Dec. 1 tweet, the firm claimed to have added 31 billion SHIB ($1.5 million at the time) to its balance sheet. On Dec. 20, Ask The Doctor then tweeted it had eliminated its SHIB tokens from its books. Twitter users allege that the firm has been heavily promoting SHIB tokens to retail investors over the past month.
You’re a scam account. Where are all your “doctor” tweets from tour account created in what 2009? Gtfoh. Go scam another token like you planned on doing with your first tweets. .@askthedr pic.twitter.com/ceFqL8KFYv
— Shytoshi Kusama™ (@ShytoshiKusama) December 21, 2021
Related: Shiba Inu gains over 30% in just 2 days as Kraken announces SHIB listing
At the time of publication, Ask The Doctor continues to escalate the conflict on the social media platform. In more recent tweets, the firm alleges that SHIB is “a scam,” “heading to zero,” “facing delisting,” and stating that, without evidence, “there is a rug pull coming.” Since the conflict’ began less than 24 hours ago, Ask the Doctor appears to have lost nearly 10,000 Twitter followers with approximately 48,000 remaining. Although Ask The Doctor said it dumped its SHIB stake for business purposes, it didn’t explain why it would invest in what it believes to be a “scam” coin in the first place.