A KOL deleted a post promising to give away 1 ounce of gold bars, but didn't realize the community had already taken screenshots. What's even better is that these pieces of evidence were recorded on the blockchain, becoming an undeniable digital record. It's quite interesting—in the Web3 world, it's genuinely difficult to completely cover something up because of the existence of decentralized storage and on-chain verification, which allows communities to spontaneously form supervision mechanisms. Precisely because of this, many believe that transparency and traceability will become standard features of future network ecosystems.
A KOL deleted a post promising to give away 1 ounce of gold bars, but didn't realize the community had already taken screenshots. What's even better is that these pieces of evidence were recorded on the blockchain, becoming an undeniable digital record. It's quite interesting—in the Web3 world, it's genuinely difficult to completely cover something up because of the existence of decentralized storage and on-chain verification, which allows communities to spontaneously form supervision mechanisms. Precisely because of this, many believe that transparency and traceability will become standard features of future network ecosystems.