Here's a hot take that probably won't land well: why does crypto keep leaning on social media as the backbone for spreading critical project information? Think about it—when Fortune 500 companies drop important announcements, you're not seeing them tweet it out as the primary channel. Yet somehow the blockchain industry has normalized treating Twitter and Discord like official communications hubs. Real institutional players maintain dedicated channels, legal documentation, and structured disclosure processes. Maybe it's time the space grew up and stopped treating temporary social feeds as substitute for legitimate information infrastructure. The dependency is fragile, unsustainable, and frankly embarrassing next to actual corporate governance standards.
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AirdropNinja
· 01-11 20:42
That's right, but we all know this is just the norm in crypto.
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AirdropF5Bro
· 01-11 14:58
ngl, this point actually hits... but on second thought, the crypto community has always been anti-institutional, right? Twitter and Discord actually seem more decentralized and more "democratic," right?
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FloorPriceNightmare
· 01-11 14:57
The crypto world is just about quick gains, and can't really build proper infrastructure.
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MissedTheBoat
· 01-11 14:55
That's true, but isn't this the current situation in our circle... Retail investors are crushed by information asymmetry, and they have to rely on Discord gossip to survive.
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BtcDailyResearcher
· 01-11 14:49
To put it bluntly, this is just retail investor mentality not having changed. They really think that posting on Twitter can replace official disclosures...
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NewPumpamentals
· 01-11 14:43
To be honest, this hits the nerve... But isn't this the norm in our circle? Let's wait until an actual institution takes over before saying anything.
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FloorSweeper
· 01-11 14:32
nah this is exactly the weak signal retail keeps missing... while they're glued to discord, real accumulation happens elsewhere. institutions already know this lmao
Here's a hot take that probably won't land well: why does crypto keep leaning on social media as the backbone for spreading critical project information? Think about it—when Fortune 500 companies drop important announcements, you're not seeing them tweet it out as the primary channel. Yet somehow the blockchain industry has normalized treating Twitter and Discord like official communications hubs. Real institutional players maintain dedicated channels, legal documentation, and structured disclosure processes. Maybe it's time the space grew up and stopped treating temporary social feeds as substitute for legitimate information infrastructure. The dependency is fragile, unsustainable, and frankly embarrassing next to actual corporate governance standards.