X Personally Terminates InfoFi Incentive Model, The Era of 'Mouth Farming' Comes to an End

Odaily星球日报Publicado a 2026-01-16Actualizado a 2026-01-16

Resumen

X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, has officially terminated the API access for InfoFi applications that reward users for posting, effectively ending the "post-to-earn" model. This decisive move, announced by X product lead Nikita Bier, targets what the company identifies as a primary source of AI-generated spam and low-quality replies flooding the platform. The policy shift immediately impacted several prominent InfoFi projects. Tokens like KAITO and COOKIE experienced significant double-digit price drops. Projects such as Cookie DAO's Snaps platform have ceased operations, while Kaito has shut down its Yaps incentive program and is pivoting to a new, more traditional creator marketing model called Kaito Studio. X's core objection was not to the content itself, but to the fundamental structure of external, unpermissioned incentives directly driving platform engagement. This model was seen as compromising content quality and, crucially, undermining X's sovereignty over its own content ecosystem and user experience. The platform emphasized that it does not need the revenue generated from these API fees. The event signals a major recalibration, forcing InfoFi projects to either retreat to a pure data/tooling role or completely reinvent their business models to align with platform policies. The era of easily farming rewards for social media posts ("嘴撸时代") is over, as content control is firmly reclaimed by the platform itself.

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | Ethan (@ethanzhang_web3)

Last night, a product update from X's official channels caused quite a stir within the InfoFi community.

At 22:39 on January 15th, platform X announced the revocation of API access permissions for InfoFi applications, immediately affecting multiple apps reliant on "posting incentives." As the API was cut off, some projects announced the suspension of related functions or adjustments to their business directions. InfoFi-related tokens saw significant declines, with multiple InfoFi-related tokens (KAITO, COOKIE) recording double-digit percentage drops in a short period. Community members offered a rather straightforward summary – "The era of 'mouth farming' is over."

The strong reaction from InfoFi-related applications and tokens indicates that the impact of this change far exceeds a routine rule adjustment. It has altered the operational foundation of related applications and triggered a chain reaction in the market. This is not a minor tweak but a clear statement from X regarding a specific category of application models.

What Happened: X Formally Rejects the InfoFi Incentive Model

This time, X did not leave much room for explanation for InfoFi.

X's Product Lead, Nikita Bier, posted on the platform stating that X is revising its developer API policy and will no longer allow any applications that "reward users for posting on X" to continue accessing the API. In his statement, these applications were directly labeled as infofi and identified as a primary source of the recent AI spam content and reply pollution on the platform.

Unlike the "announce first, observe later" approach of previous platform governance, X's action this time was quite direct – API access permissions for related InfoFi applications have been revoked. The official reason given is also not complicated: external incentive mechanisms are driving a flood of task-oriented, templated content into the information feed, severely impacting the platform experience. X believes that once bots realize "there's no more money to be made from posting," the content environment will quickly self-correct.

It is worth noting that Nikita Bier specifically added a rather weighty statement: InfoFi applications had previously paid millions of dollars for API access, but X does not need this revenue.

This statement itself almost serves as a qualitative judgment on InfoFi's business model. Judging from the execution force and official wording, this adjustment is not targeting individual projects abusing the API but is rather a clear and unavoidable negative answer from X regarding the core InfoFi model of "external incentives directly intervening in platform content production."

The "aftermath solution" offered by X's official channels for teams whose developer accounts were terminated is equally telling: the platform will assist their business transition to Threads and Bluesky. In other words, X did not attempt to reform or absorb this incentive mechanism but clearly chose to remove it entirely from its own ecosystem.

What's Being Rejected is Not Content, But InfoFi's Incentive Path

If we only look at the official statement, this adjustment might seem like routine governance targeting AI spam content. But in the context of InfoFi, this reason is clearly insufficient to explain X's resolute stance.

The key issue might not be "whether the content has value," but rather who produces the content and why. The core logic of InfoFi is to directly drive users to perform actions like posting, replying, and interacting on the platform through external token or point incentives. While this model确实 boosts activity in the short term, it also rapidly alienates content production into "task execution." Posting is no longer about expressing opinions but a necessary step to claim rewards.

When the incentive itself is detached from the platform's governance system, the platform inevitably loses control over the motivation and quality of content. InfoFi applications don't care if a reply adds informational value; they only care if it meets the conditions for "settlement." For X, this means the information feed is being taken over by an external economic system.

From this perspective, AI spam is a consequence, not the cause. What truly crosses X's bottom line is the structural problem of "a third-party incentive layer being directly embedded into the platform's content distribution system." Once this model is tacitly approved, the platform's content order, recommendation logic, and even user relationships will gradually be influenced by the incentive designers.

This also explains why X, in this adjustment, left almost no room for InfoFi to reform. It implies that, in X's judgment, InfoFi is not an ecological participant that needs correction but rather a content production path that is no longer permitted to exist.

It is also why this API purge is an active reclamation of X's content sovereignty: when external incentives conflict with the platform experience, X chooses to cut off the former rather than cede control of the information feed.

From "Shutdown" to "Restructuring": The Collective Pivot of InfoFi Projects

X's API revocation did not remain at the policy level; it quickly triggered a chain reaction on the InfoFi project side.

According to Odaily Planet Daily's understanding, the first to provide a clear response was Cookie DAO. After communicating with the X team regarding the API and usage policy, the team announced the official shutdown of the Snaps platform and the termination of all ongoing creator incentive activities. Cookie stated bluntly in the announcement that this was a "difficult and sudden" decision, but the出发点 was not to abandon InfoFi but to ensure its data layer and core products remain compliant.

Judging from the wording, the shutdown of Snaps seems more like a passive choice to mitigate losses under the impact of the event. On one hand, Cookie emphasized that it always uses official data sources and remains an enterprise-level API client of X; on the other hand, the team also clearly stated that InfoFi is undergoing structural changes, and whether Snaps can exist in a "new form" still depends on further guidance from X. This wording itself reveals high uncertainty about the sustainability of the original incentive model.

In contrast, Kaito's adjustment appears more proactive. Kaito announced the cessation of Yaps and the incentive leaderboard, simultaneously launching a new Kaito Studio, explicitly bidding farewell to the "open, permissionless incentive distribution" path. According to the official statement, Kaito Studio will be closer to a traditional tiered marketing platform, where brands select creators for collaboration based on established criteria, covering platforms extending from X to YouTube, TikTok, and other social channels.

In explaining the reason for the pivot, Kaito did not avoid the problems of the InfoFi model itself. It pointed out that even after continuously raising thresholds and introducing screening mechanisms, low-quality content and刷量行为 (brushing/artificial inflation) were still hard to avoid; after communicating with X, the team also agreed that a "completely permissionless incentive distribution system" no longer meets the common needs of the platform, brands, and creators. Reading between the lines, it can be inferred that the end of Yaps is an active abandonment of the original InfoFi路线 (path).

But in any case, looking at both events together, a clear trend emerges: as the platform layer clearly tightens interface and incentive boundaries, InfoFi projects either choose to pause激进玩法 (aggressive playstyles) and return to data and tool attributes, or simply restructure their business logic, moving closer to models more akin to traditional marketing and content cooperation.

Currently, although token prices have fluctuated, a "collective collapse" of InfoFi projects has not yet occurred. What is certain is that the set of strategies reliant on platform APIs, driving posts and interactions directly through external incentives, can hardly continue to operate.

Conclusion: The Era of 'Mouth Farming' Ends, But InfoFi's Problems Remain

Judging from the reactions of the InfoFi projects, this change is not simply a "ban" or a "failure." Whether it's Cookie returning to its data layer positioning or Kaito pivoting to a Studio model closer to traditional marketing, it indicates that: InfoFi has not disappeared; it just can no longer exist in the form of "in-platform incentive arbitrage."

The so-called "end of the mouth farming era" does not mean the end of content being quantified or influence being priced, but rather the end of that open incentive path reliant on APIs, where the act of posting and replying itself was the settlement object. Against the backdrop of platforms reasserting sovereignty, the marginal space for this model is rapidly shrinking.

As for migrating to Threads or Bluesky, it seems more like a buffer solution than an answer itself. The real question is whether future InfoFi can find an irreplaceable value position without taking over the platform's content production rights.

X is just the first platform to explicitly press the button, but the signal it sends is clear enough: Content sovereignty is returning to the platforms.

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat was the main announcement made by X that impacted the InfoFi community?

AX revoked API access for InfoFi applications that rewarded users for posting on the platform, effectively ending the 'post-to-earn' incentive model.

QWho is Nikita Bier and what role did they play in this update?

ANikita Bier is X's Product Lead who announced the revision of the developer API policy, stating that applications incentivizing users to post on X would no longer be allowed API access.

QWhat reason did X provide for revoking API access from InfoFi applications?

AX cited that these applications were a major source of AI-generated spam and low-quality content, which degraded the platform's user experience.

QHow did InfoFi-related tokens like KAITO and COOKIE react to the news?

AInfoFi-related tokens such as KAITO and COOKIE experienced significant price drops, with some falling by double digits shortly after the announcement.

QWhat alternative platforms did X suggest for affected InfoFi applications?

AX suggested that affected InfoFi applications transition their operations to Threads and Bluesky as alternative platforms.

Lecturas Relacionadas

South Korean Exchanges 'Battle' Regulators, Challenging the Boundaries of Enforcement and Legislation

South Korea's cryptocurrency industry is engaged in a rare, direct confrontation with regulators. The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), the primary anti-money laundering (AML) watchdog, has recently imposed heavy penalties on major exchanges like Upbit and Bithumb for alleged violations involving unregistered overseas VASPs and AML procedures. However, exchanges are now actively challenging these actions in court and through industry associations. In a significant shift, the Seoul Administrative Court ruled in favor of Upbit's operator, Dunamu, overturning part of an FIU-ordered business suspension. The court found the FIU's penalty criteria and justification insufficiently clear. Similarly, the court suspended the enforcement of a six-month business suspension against Bithumb pending a final ruling, citing potential irreversible harm to the exchange. Beyond legal battles, the industry is contesting proposed legislative amendments. The Digital Asset eXchange Alliance (DAXA) strongly opposes a draft rule that would mandate Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) for all crypto transfers over 10 million KRW (~$6,800). DAXA argues this "poison pill" clause violates legal principles and would overwhelm the STR system, increasing reports from 63,000 to an estimated 5.45 million annually for major exchanges, thereby crippling effective AML monitoring. This conflict highlights a structural tension in South Korea's crypto governance: comprehensive digital asset laws are still developing, while regulators rely heavily on AML enforcement. The industry's move from passive compliance to active legal and legislative challenges signifies a new phase, pressing for clearer rules and more proportionate enforcement. While short-term disputes may intensify, this clash could ultimately lead to a more mature and sustainable regulatory framework for South Korea's vibrant crypto market.

marsbitHace 39 min(s)

South Korean Exchanges 'Battle' Regulators, Challenging the Boundaries of Enforcement and Legislation

marsbitHace 39 min(s)

After 50x Storage Surge, Justin Sun Always Looks to the Next Decade

Sun Yuchen, known for his controversial stunts like a $30 million lunch with Warren Buffett (canceled due to a kidney stone) and eating a $6.2 million duct-taped banana, is often overshadowed by a significant fact: his decade-long track record of spotting major investment trends. In 2016, he famously advised young people to invest in Bitcoin, Nvidia, Tesla, and Tencent instead of buying property. A hypothetical $20,000 investment in Nvidia and Tesla from that list would now be worth over 50 million RMB. His latest major call was on November 6, 2025, predicting a "50x storage opportunity" tied to the AI boom, which materialized with Sandisk's stock surging nearly 50-fold by 2026. Looking ahead, Sun now focuses on the next frontier: Physical AI. He identifies four key areas: 1. **Embodied AI/Robotics**: He sees this reaching its "iPhone moment," with companies like UBTech and Galaxy General leading in commercialization. 2. **Drones**: Viewed as the first commercially viable form of Physical AI, revolutionizing sectors from warfare (e.g., AeroVironment's Switchblade) to logistics. 3. **Spatial Computing**: Beyond VR, it's about AI understanding physical space, a foundational technology for robotics and autonomous systems, exemplified by Apple's Vision Pro. 4. **Space Exploration**: After a 2025 suborbital flight with Blue Origin, Sun advocates for space as the ultimate frontier, discussing blockchain's potential role in space asset management and data transactions. His investment philosophy involves betting on entire, inevitable trends rather than single companies. For robotics, he sees Tesla (the body/manufacturer) and Nvidia (the brain/AI platform) as complementary plays. In defense drones, he highlights companies making tanks obsolete (AeroVironment) and those augmenting fighter jets (Kratos). For space, he participated in Blue Origin's flight and anticipates SpaceX's potential IPO to redefine the sector's valuation. Sun Yuchen's vision frames the next two decades not as a revolution in information flow (like the internet), but in the fundamental operation of the physical world through AI-powered robots, autonomous systems, and spatial intelligence, ultimately extending human and AI activity into space. While many still focus on conventional assets, he continues to look toward the next technological horizon.

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

After 50x Storage Surge, Justin Sun Always Looks to the Next Decade

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

The Billionaires Behind the Most Expensive Midterm Election in History

"The Most Expensive Midterm Elections and Their Billionaire Backers" This analysis details the unprecedented scale of spending in the 2026 midterm elections, highlighting the key billionaire donors shaping the political landscape. Jeff Yass, founder of Susquehanna International Group, has contributed over $81 million, ranking third among individual donors behind George Soros ($102.6M) and Elon Musk ($84.8M). Yass is a major donor to Trump's MAGA Inc. and supports school choice and various candidates. Overall, federal committees have raised over $4.7 billion this cycle, with political ad spending projected to reach $10.8 billion. Republican-aligned groups are significantly out-raising their Democratic counterparts. "Dark money" from undisclosed sources continues to grow. The core stakes involve control of Congress and policy direction for Trump's final term. Donors are also motivated by specific issues: Sergey Brin and Chris Larsen are funding opposition to a proposed California wealth tax and supporting crypto-friendly policies. Other top donors include OpenAI's Greg Brockman and his wife Anna ($50M total to MAGA Inc. and an AI-focused PAC), Richard Uihlein ($45.3M to conservative causes), venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz (each over $44M to crypto/AI PACs and MAGA Inc.), Miriam Adelson ($42.6M to GOP leadership PACs), Paul Singer ($33.9M), and Diane Hendricks ($25.8M to MAGA Inc.). The article notes that the peak fundraising period is still ahead, with major primaries approaching.

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

The Billionaires Behind the Most Expensive Midterm Election in History

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

"Anthropic Nears Trillion-Dollar IPO, Fueled by Explosive Growth and 2028 'Intelligence Explosion' Warning Anthropic is considering a deal valuing the AI company near $1 trillion, potentially leading to one of the largest IPOs ever and surpassing SpaceX. Its revenue has skyrocketed, with Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) reaching $45 billion in May 2026—a 500% increase in just five months. This vertical growth curve is attributed to its key products, Claude Code and Cowork, dominating AI coding and enterprise collaboration. Beyond commercial success, co-founder Jack Clark issued a pivotal warning in an interview: there is a greater than 50% chance that by the end of 2028, AI systems will achieve recursive self-improvement—the ability to autonomously build a 'better version' of themselves, initiating an 'intelligence explosion.' This prophecy underpins the company's astronomical valuation, as the market prices in the potential for transformative and disruptive AI. Further signaling its ambition, Anthropic formed a $1.5 billion joint venture with Goldman Sachs and Blackstone, aiming to disrupt traditional consulting firms like McKinsey by deploying Claude AI for complex strategic work. This move tests AI's capacity to replace high-level cognitive labor, a precursor to its predicted autonomous evolution. The narrative presents a dual future: unprecedented economic opportunity alongside significant risks like economic restructuring and security threats. Anthropic's meteoric rise and Clark's 2028 prediction frame the coming years as a countdown to a potential technological singularity."

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

The Largest IPO in History Is Approaching, Surpassing SpaceX, 28 Years of AI Self-Iteration, Countdown to Intelligence Explosion

marsbitHace 1 hora(s)

Trading

Spot
Futuros

Artículos destacados

Cómo comprar ERA

¡Bienvenido a HTX.com! Hemos hecho que comprar Caldera (ERA) sea simple y conveniente. Sigue nuestra guía paso a paso para iniciar tu viaje de criptos.Paso 1: crea tu cuenta HTXUtiliza tu correo electrónico o número de teléfono para registrarte y obtener una cuenta gratuita en HTX. Experimenta un proceso de registro sin complicaciones y desbloquea todas las funciones.Obtener mi cuentaPaso 2: ve a Comprar cripto y elige tu método de pagoTarjeta de crédito/débito: usa tu Visa o Mastercard para comprar Caldera (ERA) al instante.Saldo: utiliza fondos del saldo de tu cuenta HTX para tradear sin problemas.Terceros: hemos agregado métodos de pago populares como Google Pay y Apple Pay para mejorar la comodidad.P2P: tradear directamente con otros usuarios en HTX.Over-the-Counter (OTC): ofrecemos servicios personalizados y tipos de cambio competitivos para los traders.Paso 3: guarda tu Caldera (ERA)Después de comprar tu Caldera (ERA), guárdalo en tu cuenta HTX. Alternativamente, puedes enviarlo a otro lugar mediante transferencia blockchain o utilizarlo para tradear otras criptomonedas.Paso 4: tradear Caldera (ERA)Tradear fácilmente con Caldera (ERA) en HTX's mercado spot. Simplemente accede a tu cuenta, selecciona tu par de trading, ejecuta tus trades y monitorea en tiempo real. Ofrecemos una experiencia fácil de usar tanto para principiantes como para traders experimentados.

302 Vistas totalesPublicado en 2025.07.17Actualizado en 2025.07.17

Cómo comprar ERA

Discusiones

Bienvenido a la comunidad de HTX. Aquí puedes mantenerte informado sobre los últimos desarrollos de la plataforma y acceder a análisis profesionales del mercado. A continuación se presentan las opiniones de los usuarios sobre el precio de ERA (ERA).

活动图片