#代币经济学与设计 Yesterday, I tuned into the Twitter Space hosted by the founder of Lighter. After listening to the tokenomics segment, I have some thoughts that I must record.
What impressed me most is this logic: 50% of the tokens are allocated to the community, with a significant portion reserved for participation in the staking program. This isn’t an innovation, but the restraint in execution is rare. I didn’t see the typical pattern of "team and VC bigwigs, community sharing the pie," but instead emphasized that value ultimately consolidates in the tokens, with all stakeholders sailing together.
Regarding the identification of malicious actors and the reduction of staking rewards, they used clustering analysis, behavioral modeling, and even set up an appeal mechanism. Interestingly, they didn’t disclose the algorithm details, which is actually the right move—over-transparency could leave loopholes for "gaming the system." Judging by the low number of appeals, the overall accuracy of the identification seems acceptable.
But there’s a related issue from a follow-up perspective that’s worth considering: once the staking subsidies end, can the remaining genuine trading demand support the current activity level? Vladimir’s answer was that the token structure will incentivize alignment, and in the long run, market opportunities will far exceed the current state. It sounds like he’s saying "this is just the beginning," but whether the platform can truly attract trading firms and market makers in actual operation depends on subsequent fee design and product competitiveness.
Trading fees started in October, and the revenue in the first two months exceeded expectations, which is a good sign. The key is how to support the token valuation through layered fee structures, new products, cross-chain liquidity, and other dimensions moving forward. Relying solely on trading volume growth still carries risks.
Continuing to monitor the progress along this line.
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#代币经济学与设计 Yesterday, I tuned into the Twitter Space hosted by the founder of Lighter. After listening to the tokenomics segment, I have some thoughts that I must record.
What impressed me most is this logic: 50% of the tokens are allocated to the community, with a significant portion reserved for participation in the staking program. This isn’t an innovation, but the restraint in execution is rare. I didn’t see the typical pattern of "team and VC bigwigs, community sharing the pie," but instead emphasized that value ultimately consolidates in the tokens, with all stakeholders sailing together.
Regarding the identification of malicious actors and the reduction of staking rewards, they used clustering analysis, behavioral modeling, and even set up an appeal mechanism. Interestingly, they didn’t disclose the algorithm details, which is actually the right move—over-transparency could leave loopholes for "gaming the system." Judging by the low number of appeals, the overall accuracy of the identification seems acceptable.
But there’s a related issue from a follow-up perspective that’s worth considering: once the staking subsidies end, can the remaining genuine trading demand support the current activity level? Vladimir’s answer was that the token structure will incentivize alignment, and in the long run, market opportunities will far exceed the current state. It sounds like he’s saying "this is just the beginning," but whether the platform can truly attract trading firms and market makers in actual operation depends on subsequent fee design and product competitiveness.
Trading fees started in October, and the revenue in the first two months exceeded expectations, which is a good sign. The key is how to support the token valuation through layered fee structures, new products, cross-chain liquidity, and other dimensions moving forward. Relying solely on trading volume growth still carries risks.
Continuing to monitor the progress along this line.