Do you remember that early model? Every tweet could earn rewards. Sounds good, but what did it evolve into? Now every tweet is forced to become a long article. People start piling on content, padding words just to get that . And the result? The quality has actually gotten worse. Concise and sharp opinions have disappeared, replaced by long-winded and boring repetitive talk. The original intention of the rewards was good, but the way it was implemented turned things upside down.
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Web3Educator
· 17h ago
ah, fundamentally speaking—this is the exact perverse incentive problem i've been drilling into my students for months now. reward systems that don't account for quality degradation? classic tragedy of the commons. the protocol design was naive from day one, tbh.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 17h ago
This is a classic case of incentive adverse selection, it's really getting worse and worse.
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HodlKumamon
· 17h ago
The data speaks for itself. We have seen at least 47 instances in history where this kind of incentive mechanism leads to the phenomenon of bad money driving out good. Each time, it's the same script... declining quality, engagement rates actually dropping, and the Sharpe ratio plummeting.
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fork_in_the_road
· 17h ago
This is a typical "incentive trap." As soon as there's money involved, human nature reveals itself.
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AirdropHunter007
· 17h ago
This is a typical case of "motivating for the sake of motivation," which ends up destroying the ecosystem.
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MysteriousZhang
· 17h ago
It's outrageous. The incentive mechanism was initially designed with good intentions, but now it's just a pile of nonsense.
Do you remember that early model? Every tweet could earn rewards. Sounds good, but what did it evolve into? Now every tweet is forced to become a long article. People start piling on content, padding words just to get that . And the result? The quality has actually gotten worse. Concise and sharp opinions have disappeared, replaced by long-winded and boring repetitive talk. The original intention of the rewards was good, but the way it was implemented turned things upside down.