There's an interesting shift happening in how platforms think about user compensation. Recently, voices from major Web3 projects have been questioning whether active community members should actually benefit from the value they create. It raises a natural question: will emerging networks looking to build loyal communities follow suit? The idea of rewarding users for genuine participation rather than just extracting their attention could reshape how we think about platform economics and user retention in the decentralized space.
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StakeWhisperer
· 8h ago
Empowering the community, reflecting on the economic model. Focusing on user value and platform governance in the Web3 ecosystem.
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It should have been like this a long time ago. Traditional platforms have been leeching for so many years, and only now are they thinking of compensating users? This wave of Web3 truly addresses the pain points.
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ForkMonger
· 8h ago
lol "questioning whether" — you mean they're finally admitting their governance tokens are worthless extraction machines? classic protocol economics theater tbh
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MidnightGenesis
· 9h ago
It is worth noting that, from on-chain data, the changes in this compensation mechanism were not sudden... Contract modifications deployed late at night had already been foreshadowed.
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PanicSeller
· 9h ago
Finally, someone dares to speak out about this. Previously, those big projects only knew how to make empty promises...
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ChainWanderingPoet
· 9h ago
Wait, isn't this the same old story that crypto people keep shouting about? In the end, it's just another way to harvest retail investors...
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bridgeOops
· 9h ago
Well said, finally someone has pierced through this facade.
Web3 projects really need to recognize that users are the real benefactors.
How long can this routine last... or is it just another round of new ways to harvest profits from early investors?
To truly build a healthy ecosystem, users must have tangible benefits; otherwise, running away is only a matter of time.
Speaking of which, which project is actually seriously distributing profits now? Talk is cheap, but actions are needed.
There's an interesting shift happening in how platforms think about user compensation. Recently, voices from major Web3 projects have been questioning whether active community members should actually benefit from the value they create. It raises a natural question: will emerging networks looking to build loyal communities follow suit? The idea of rewarding users for genuine participation rather than just extracting their attention could reshape how we think about platform economics and user retention in the decentralized space.