2026-04-17 Sexta

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

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.

Odaily星球日报01/16 04:35

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

Odaily星球日报01/16 04:35

When Big Money Gets Serious, RWA Liquidity Issues Come to the Fore

Liquidity is the foundation of asset confidence, but the reality for tokenized real-world assets (RWA) like gold and stocks reveals a critical structural flaw. While tokenization promises enhanced capital fluidity and DeFi integration, most tokenized assets suffer from dangerously thin liquidity, making them impractical for meaningful capital deployment. Analysis shows extreme slippage in major tokenized gold assets (PAXG, XAUT). A $4 million trade incurs nearly 150 basis points (bps) of slippage on perpetual exchanges, compared to just 3 bps for a $20 million trade in traditional CME gold futures. Spot markets for these assets offer less than $3 million in effective depth. In AMM DEXs like Uniswap, average slippage consistently ranges between 25–50 bps, with individual trades experiencing premiums as high as 68%. The problem extends to tokenized equities. A $1 million trade in tokenized Tesla (TSLAx) sees ~5% slippage, while NVIDIA (NVDAx) reaches an unworkable 80%. Traditional markets handle the same trades with ~15 bps impact. This liquidity scarcity isn't just about high transaction costs; it destabilizes the entire market structure. Thin order books are prone to manipulation and price anomalies. A 10% price swing on a centralized exchange (CEX) can trigger cascading liquidations across interconnected DeFi protocols, demonstrating how localized illiquidity amplifies systemic risk. The core issue is structural. Market makers face high friction: slow, costly minting/redemption processes (10-50 bps fees, T+1 to T+5 settlement), inability to hedge efficiently, and significant opportunity cost compared to deeper crypto markets. Current solutions (AMMs, order books) disperse rather than concentrate liquidity. For RWA to scale, a new market structure is needed—one that leverages off-chain liquidity for price discovery, eliminates redemption delays, and doesn't force market makers to hold illiquid inventory. Tokenization hasn't failed; the supporting market infrastructure has yet to be built.

Odaily星球日报01/16 04:25

When Big Money Gets Serious, RWA Liquidity Issues Come to the Fore

Odaily星球日报01/16 04:25

Rumor: Coinbase to Acquire Farcaster, Still an Acquihire

In Silicon Valley, a common unwritten rule suggests that when a tech giant shows sudden interest in a startup—especially one with a similar product—the goal is often not to eliminate competition or acquire technology, but to acquire talent. This practice is known as an "acqui-hire." Recent rumors about Coinbase's potential acquisition of Farcaster likely follow this logic. Similar to Meta's acquisition of Manus, the focus is on the elite engineering team rather than just the product. Coinbase’s Base app already integrates Farcaster content, and Coinbase has no shortage of wallet products, indicating that the real target is Farcaster’s founder, Dan Romero. Dan Romero, who spent five years at Coinbase as a key executive overseeing international operations and backend systems, understands Coinbase’s compliance framework intimately. Since leaving, he has built Farcaster, demonstrating deep expertise in decentralized, community-driven Web3 ecosystems. Farcaster’s team, under Merkle Manufactory, remains small despite significant funding. It includes former Coinbase engineering lead Varun Srinivasan and other full-stack experts who efficiently developed a decentralized social protocol even used frequently by Vitalik Buterin. The acquisition could also create token opportunities: - DEGEN, Farcaster’s community currency, might become a core asset within Coinbase’s ecosystem. - ZORA, key for NFT minting, could strengthen as Base’s primary asset issuance layer. - CLANKER, an AI-driven token issuance tool, may evolve into a standard financial interface. - BANKR, an emerging DeFi project, could play a central role in future "social wallet" integrations.

marsbit01/16 04:02

Rumor: Coinbase to Acquire Farcaster, Still an Acquihire

marsbit01/16 04:02

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