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Why the Establishment of SocialFi Originates from a Misunderstanding of Its Own Medium

"Why SocialFi's Establishment Stems from a Misunderstanding of Its Own Medium" This article critiques the failure of SocialFi projects by applying Marshall McLuhan's theory of "hot" and "cool" media. McLuhan posited that a medium's form—not its content—reshapes user behavior. "Hot" media (e.g., print, radio) deliver high-definition, complete information, promoting passive consumption. "Cool" media (e.g., cartoons, telephone calls) provide low-definition, fragmented signals, requiring active user participation to complete the meaning. Traditional social media platforms (like early Twitter) are quintessentially "cool." A tweet or like is an incomplete fragment; its significance emerges only through replies, shares, and community engagement—it's a participation engine disguised as a content system. SocialFi (e.g., Friend.tech) aimed to monetize social capital by attaching real-time, tradable prices to follows and posts. However, this didn't add an economic layer to a cool medium; it fundamentally transformed the medium itself. The explicit, high-resolution signal of price replaced the ambiguous, low-resolution signal of social interaction. The platform became a financial market dressed as a social network. Once the financial dynamics (speculative profits) faded, the underlying social fabric, which had been suffocated from the start, could not sustain it. The medium overheated and collapsed. This "heat death" pattern isn't unique to crypto. Over time, mainstream platforms often drift from cool to hot by adding features like public metrics, verification badges, and algorithmic feeds that optimize for clarity over participation, leading to user disengagement. The article proposes a viable alternative: the "condensation point." Here, capital is introduced locally and infrequently into a cool medium without saturating it. Examples include Substack (subscriptions), Patreon (memberships), and Bandcamp (music purchases). The core social medium remains cool and participatory, while capital condenses at specific, structurally separate points (e.g., a monthly fee). The key lesson: "Liquidity is heat." Adding it to a cool medium doesn't enhance it but alters its fundamental nature. The NFT boom and bust provides a starker example. Collecting is a classic cool medium, where value is built slowly through stories and community. By making floor prices, rarity scores, and real-time charts omnipresent, NFT platforms rapidly overheated the medium, turning collectors into traders and destroying the participatory culture that gave collections meaning in the first place. The conclusion is that for the next wave to succeed, designers must ask not how to price every social action, but how to let capital condense within a social system without disrupting the cool, participatory mechanics that create its enduring value.

marsbit05/14 09:39

Why the Establishment of SocialFi Originates from a Misunderstanding of Its Own Medium

marsbit05/14 09:39

Why Pricing Social Interactions is Doomed to Fail?

Titled "Why Putting a Price on Social Interaction Is Doomed to Fail," this article critiques attempts to monetize social networks directly through SocialFi models, arguing their inevitable failure stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of media dynamics. Using Marshall McLuhan's theory of "hot" and "cold" media, the author posits that social networks are inherently "cold" media. Their value isn't contained in individual posts but is co-created through user participation, interpretation, and fragmented, ongoing interaction (e.g., replies, shares). This ambiguity and need for user involvement are core to their function. The article asserts that SocialFi projects like Friend.tech failed because introducing real-time, tradable financial pricing (a definitive "hot" signal) into this "cold" environment doesn't add a layer—it replaces the medium's essence. The unambiguous price signal overshadows and nullifies the nuanced, participatory social signal. Users become traders, not participants, and when speculative profits vanish, the underlying social ecosystem—never genuinely cultivated—collapses entirely. This principle extends beyond crypto. The author argues platforms like Twitter have gradually "heated up" through metrics (likes, retweets counts, algorithmically defined value), shifting users from participants to performers and eroding organic engagement. The solution isn't to abandon capital but to manage its entry point. Successful models like Substack, Patreon, or Bandcamp allow capital to "condense" at specific, isolated nodes (e.g., subscriptions, one-time payments) without permeating and "heating" every social interaction. They preserve the core "cold," participatory medium while enabling monetization at designated boundaries. The NFT boom and bust serves as a stark parallel: the ancient "cold" medium of collecting (valued for story, community, gradual accumulation) was rapidly destroyed by platforms that introduced real-time floor prices, rarity scores, and trading dashboards, transforming collectors into speculators and vaporizing cultural value when prices fell. The core lesson: "Liquidity equals heat." Injecting high liquidity and definitive pricing into a "cold" participatory medium doesn't optimize it; it fundamentally alters and destroys its value-creating mechanism. The future lies not in pricing every social gesture but in finding precise, non-invasive points for capital to condense without overheating the entire ecosystem.

marsbit05/11 13:11

Why Pricing Social Interactions is Doomed to Fail?

marsbit05/11 13:11

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