# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Social

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Social", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

MOLT Plummets, AI Agent Carnival Ends? Analyzing Whether MOLT Can Surge Again

The article discusses the recent rise and subsequent decline of Moltbook, an AI Agent-driven social platform, and its associated meme tokens like MOLT, which plummeted nearly 60%. Moltbook, often compared to Reddit, is unique in that its core participants are AI Agents, not humans. Over 1.6 million AI agents have automatically registered, generating approximately 160,000 posts and 760,000 comments, while humans can only observe. The piece analyzes key tokens such as MOLT, CLAWD, and CLAWNCH, noting their prices fell significantly due to market skepticism about the platform's content quality and sustainability, despite initial hype. Moltbook originated from the OpenClaw project, which allowed AI agents to autonomously interact on a social platform via simplified APIs. However, the AI social interactions, while seemingly human-like, show high text repetition (36.3%), indicating limited originality. Security vulnerabilities were also exposed, with API keys and emails leaked, raising concerns about safety and authenticity. Some critics argue the interactions may be heavily scripted by humans rather than truly autonomous AI behavior. The article concludes that Moltbook highlights deeper issues AI faces in digital society, such as shifting from traffic-based to decision-making entry points, the illusion of scale in AI-native environments, and the need for reconstructed responsibility frameworks. It suggests that while Moltbook may not be immediately successful, it serves as a critical preview of future AI-integrated social systems, emphasizing the need for ethical foresight and robust identity and credit mechanisms.

marsbit02/05 11:07

MOLT Plummets, AI Agent Carnival Ends? Analyzing Whether MOLT Can Surge Again

marsbit02/05 11:07

2026 Airdrop Outlook: These Sectors and Projects Deserve Continuous Attention

2026 Airdrop Outlook: Key Sectors and Projects to Watch As the new cycle approaches, the crypto community is actively discussing potential airdrop opportunities. This analysis, based on a framework evaluating token necessity, project sustainability, and airdrop fairness, highlights promising projects across several sectors. Key sectors and notable projects include: - **Prediction Markets**: Polymarket (high maturity, confirmed airdrop plans), Kalshi, Myriad Markets, Predictfully, Melee Markets. - **Trading & Liquidity Protocols**: Titan Exchange, Backpack, Jupiter, Paradex, Bulk Trade (on Solana and other ecosystems). - **AI & Decentralized Compute**: Abstract Chain, RitualNet, Inference Labs, OpenMind AGI, PrismaXai (focusing on infrastructure and AI agents). - **Solana Ecosystem**: Hylo, Loopscale, Exponent Finance, DeFi Tuna (gaining traction as Solana activity increases). - **Privacy & Scaling Infrastructure**: Fairblock Network, 0xMiden, Umi Network, Inco Network (ZK-based and modular solutions). - **Real World Assets (RWA) & Payments**: KAST Card, Phygitals, MultipliFi, Tria (bridging crypto with real-world applications). - **Social & Information Protocols**: Kaito AI, Base, Xeet AI, Cookiedot.fun (exploring SocialFi and information value capture). Projects are increasingly prioritizing genuine user engagement—product usage, community discussion, and feedback—over mere transactional interactions. Airdrops serve as a means to connect with early supporters, and the greatest value lies in understanding and engaging with innovative projects that drive the ecosystem forward. Disclaimer: This is not investment advice. Conduct your own research and exercise extreme caution in the high-risk crypto market.

marsbit01/23 12:58

2026 Airdrop Outlook: These Sectors and Projects Deserve Continuous Attention

marsbit01/23 12:58

How Did the Idealism of Western Founders Get 'Taken Over' by Chinese Buyers?

Over the course of two days, two major decentralized social protocols, Lens Protocol and Farcaster, were acquired—by Mask Network and Neynar, respectively. Combined, these protocols had raised over $200 million, with Farcaster recently valued at $1 billion. This follows the earlier acquisition of Steem by Tron in 2020, meaning two out of three prominent decentralized social protocols are now been taken over by Chinese-led teams. The author explores why Chinese buyers are stepping in. One reason may be pricing: these acquisitions often target once-prominent projects now in decline. For instance, Farcaster’s monthly revenue has dropped over 95%, and Lens has only 50,000 monthly active users. Another factor is cultural: while Western founders often approach decentralized social with idealism—emphasizing user-owned data and censorship resistance—Chinese acquirers tend to view it as a business opportunity, prioritizing usability and growth over ideology. Suji Yan, founder of Mask Network, explicitly aims to move “decentralized social from the lab to daily life.” However, past acquisitions like Steem—which led to a community fork—highlight risks when new ownership clashes with original values. The piece questions whether true decentralization is possible when protocols can be sold, suggesting that technical decentralization doesn’t prevent centralized commercial control. Ultimately, the piece argues that the vision for a better social infrastructure remains, but the builders and operators may increasingly be pragmatic, commercially-driven teams—many from China.

比推01/22 12:42

How Did the Idealism of Western Founders Get 'Taken Over' by Chinese Buyers?

比推01/22 12:42

Web3 Social: Still Dominated by the Chinese

In a span of two days, two major decentralized social protocols, Lens Protocol and Farcaster, changed ownership. Lens was taken over by Mask Network, led by Chinese founder Suji Yan, while Farcaster was acquired by Neynar, one of its clients. Combined, these protocols had raised over $200 million, with Farcaster valued at $1 billion last year. This follows the earlier acquisition of Steem by Tron’s Justin Sun in 2020, meaning two out of three prominent decentralized social protocols are now been taken over by Chinese-led teams. The author suggests that Western founders often approach decentralized social with idealism—emphasizing user-owned data and censorship resistance—while Chinese acquirers tend to view it as a business opportunity. Both Lens and Farcaster have seen declining engagement, making them attractive targets for pragmatic operators focused on usability rather than ideology. However, past acquisitions like Steem—which led to a community fork—highlight the risks of centralized control over “decentralized” protocols. Mask Network has framed its role as “stewardship” rather than outright ownership, but the very idea of a “decentralized” protocol being acquired raises questions about how much these platforms are truly user-governed. Ultimately, the piece questions whether these acquisitions will lead to a more practical and widely adopted social web or simply repeat past conflicts between idealism and commercial reality.

marsbit01/22 04:11

Web3 Social: Still Dominated by the Chinese

marsbit01/22 04:11

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