This message is enough to mark the end of an era. The product leader of a major social platform and Solana fund partner's speech yesterday directly exposed the lifeline of the current InfoFi track—Kaito was the first to hit the pause button.
Honestly, over the past few years, few KOLs from the top to the middle to the bottom have been able to avoid the benefits brought by Kaito. Early on, some NFTs were sold starting at 10 ETH, and during Kaito's TGE, airdrops were available to everyone. And now? Business has been cut, but instead, there's a wave of applause. This logic is quite thought-provoking.
Actually, Kaito's gameplay design is quite clever—the project side, the promotional front, and KOLs form a self-driving closed loop. They have been studying algorithms, measuring account quality (SF, CT metrics), and calculating the heat value of each tweet (mindshare). It is this system that allows a group of people to quickly grow their accounts through algorithmic research, connect with big players, and become big players themselves; some project badges are full, and they can get a share at each TGE, with top influencers even earning tens of thousands of dollars a month.
The era creates heroes. Doing different things in different cycles, if you want results, you have to fight for it. Those who have benefited from the era's red tides should still be grateful to Kaito.
But here’s the key— the end point of algorithms always points to human nature, and the end point of rewards always points to interests. When everyone figures out that algorithms favor certain types of tweets and that high-frequency interactions can quickly break the circle, the game rules start to distort.
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LiquidityNinja
· 11h ago
In plain terms, everyone who has benefited from the dividends should thank Kaito, but when it comes to cutting business, there's a chorus of applause... The contrast is truly remarkable.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 11h ago
Basically, this wave of Kaito being cut is like a collective act of hypocrisy; everyone has benefited from the gains but pretends nothing has happened.
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HodlVeteran
· 11h ago
Another era's ship has capsized, I was on this ship back in the day, and I'm still licking the wounds of blood loss now [Dog Head]
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MEVSandwichVictim
· 11h ago
Uh... basically, the game of harvesting "leeks" has finally been exposed, and it should have stopped long ago.
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LuckyHashValue
· 11h ago
Haha, this wave is absolutely spot on. It feels like the entire ecosystem is about to be reshuffled.
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Kaito's algorithm really exploits human nature to the fullest. Looking back now, we should actually thank it.
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Wait, what about the big players who relied on mindshare to grow their accounts? Are they switching to other platforms?
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The track has changed, the dividends are gone, and all that's left are storytelling skills.
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Honestly, those who managed to ride this wave back then were quite lucky. Now, criticizing it seems even more hypocritical.
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The set of algorithms that broke through the circle—someone will eventually hit the stop button, just didn't expect it so soon.
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When everyone adds fuel to the fire, it burns brightly; when everyone calls for a crackdown, it falls apart. That's so true.
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Instead of being grateful, we should reflect. Kaito's demise might indicate problems with the entire InfoFi model.
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The era of earning several thousand dollars a month is gone forever. How do we continue to play now?
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That logic is indeed thought-provoking. Those who benefited are now the biggest supporters of cutting it off.
This message is enough to mark the end of an era. The product leader of a major social platform and Solana fund partner's speech yesterday directly exposed the lifeline of the current InfoFi track—Kaito was the first to hit the pause button.
Honestly, over the past few years, few KOLs from the top to the middle to the bottom have been able to avoid the benefits brought by Kaito. Early on, some NFTs were sold starting at 10 ETH, and during Kaito's TGE, airdrops were available to everyone. And now? Business has been cut, but instead, there's a wave of applause. This logic is quite thought-provoking.
Actually, Kaito's gameplay design is quite clever—the project side, the promotional front, and KOLs form a self-driving closed loop. They have been studying algorithms, measuring account quality (SF, CT metrics), and calculating the heat value of each tweet (mindshare). It is this system that allows a group of people to quickly grow their accounts through algorithmic research, connect with big players, and become big players themselves; some project badges are full, and they can get a share at each TGE, with top influencers even earning tens of thousands of dollars a month.
The era creates heroes. Doing different things in different cycles, if you want results, you have to fight for it. Those who have benefited from the era's red tides should still be grateful to Kaito.
But here’s the key— the end point of algorithms always points to human nature, and the end point of rewards always points to interests. When everyone figures out that algorithms favor certain types of tweets and that high-frequency interactions can quickly break the circle, the game rules start to distort.