Higher barriers to entry actually protect ecosystem quality. The real problem isn't gatekeeping—it's the wave of bad actors who plagiarize and rebrand others' work as their own, passing off derivative content as original innovation. These imposters aren't building; they're just copying. And here's the thing: when there's no friction, low-quality actors flood in and drown out genuine contributors. You end up with a community that can't distinguish signal from noise, where lazy knockoffs get the same visibility as original work. That's the actual gatekeeping nobody talks about—the hijackers controlling the narrative through volume and deception. A stronger filter—better community standards, real vetting, consequences for theft—would weed out the parasites and create space for legitimate builders. Not everyone needs to be in every room.
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FreeMinter
· 8h ago
ngl, this is the real truth. Copy-paste garbage truly destroys the ecosystem.
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Ramen_Until_Rich
· 16h ago
That's spot on, copycat scammers really deserve to be dealt with harshly.
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BearMarketLightning
· 01-07 07:50
Plagiarism has become a disaster, with a bunch of copy-paste guys somehow managing to make a name for themselves...
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wagmi_eventually
· 01-07 07:46
Exactly right, plagiarists are truly the cancer of the ecosystem.
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BearMarketMonk
· 01-07 07:44
At the end of the day, someone still needs to oversee it; otherwise, a bunch of copy-pasted garbage will drown out those who are truly making a difference.
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ApeWithNoFear
· 01-07 07:40
Copycats definitely should be gone, but the real issue is that the community can't tell who is genuinely building.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 01-07 07:27
Well... it seems to make some sense? Anyway, I only realized later that the real problem isn't actually the high threshold, but those copied, modified, and falsely claimed innovations.
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NFT_Therapy
· 01-07 07:25
Exactly right, plagiarists are indeed a cancer, ruining the entire ecosystem with chaos and corruption.
Higher barriers to entry actually protect ecosystem quality. The real problem isn't gatekeeping—it's the wave of bad actors who plagiarize and rebrand others' work as their own, passing off derivative content as original innovation. These imposters aren't building; they're just copying. And here's the thing: when there's no friction, low-quality actors flood in and drown out genuine contributors. You end up with a community that can't distinguish signal from noise, where lazy knockoffs get the same visibility as original work. That's the actual gatekeeping nobody talks about—the hijackers controlling the narrative through volume and deception. A stronger filter—better community standards, real vetting, consequences for theft—would weed out the parasites and create space for legitimate builders. Not everyone needs to be in every room.