InfoFi is reshaping how we handle information in Web3. Instead of drowning in noise, the ecosystem rewards genuine insight and real credibility—turning meaningful contributions into actual value.
The tooling matters here. With mechanisms like X Score and fraud detection systems, you're looking at a network that actually separates the signal from the spam. People who add real utility get rewarded. Spam gets filtered out.
As adoption grows, this kind of quality control becomes increasingly critical for any protocol serious about sustainable growth.
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LostBetweenChains
· 4h ago
The information economy indeed requires a certain threshold; otherwise, it's all garbage signals, and no one can see clearly.
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TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-12 12:47
actually if you read the contracts tho... x score incentives are just textbook greater fool theory dressed up fancy. watched this pattern before lmao
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UnruggableChad
· 01-12 12:46
Wow, someone finally started to seriously deal with this pile of Web3 spam.
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StableCoinKaren
· 01-12 12:45
The information economy sounds good, but how many protocols can truly stick to rewarding quality? Most still prioritize traffic above all.
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ForkPrince
· 01-12 12:37
Ensuring the quality of information is indeed a necessity; otherwise, Web3 would just be a garbage dump.
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down_only_larry
· 01-12 12:33
NGL signals and spam separation sound good, but can it really be achieved? These days, there are too many hyped-up projects.
InfoFi is reshaping how we handle information in Web3. Instead of drowning in noise, the ecosystem rewards genuine insight and real credibility—turning meaningful contributions into actual value.
The tooling matters here. With mechanisms like X Score and fraud detection systems, you're looking at a network that actually separates the signal from the spam. People who add real utility get rewarded. Spam gets filtered out.
As adoption grows, this kind of quality control becomes increasingly critical for any protocol serious about sustainable growth.