An interesting phenomenon has been observed. A leading exchange has recently been making frequent moves, trying to increase its presence across multiple blockchain ecosystems. First, it mimicked the approach of a certain social media founder, advocating for improved creator incentive mechanisms. Later, after a shock in the SOL ecosystem, it replicated the same tactics, attempting to attract attention and engagement with similar rhetoric.
Honestly, this "copy-paste" marketing strategy is quite effective. Different personas, but the narrative is remarkably similar—both focus on themes like ecosystem prosperity and user incentives. It’s just a different entity, performing the same act again. Some even jokingly say that it’s no longer just an exchange, but more like an amplified version of a certain aggregation app—same logic, same rhythm, just on a larger scale.
This also reflects a current trend in the crypto market: mainstream trading platforms are increasingly relying on topic creation and public opinion guidance rather than pure product innovation. Some learn, some copy, and everyone is using the same script to tell different stories.
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GasFeeTears
· 13h ago
This is incredible. It's just copying and copying again, re-skinning it as a new product launch.
Big exchanges have played out this trick so many times; the stories are all the same template.
I just want to know, who benefits from copying and copying like this in the end?
Anyway, it's not us retail users, hahaha.
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PaperHandsCriminal
· 15h ago
Haha, I'm so familiar with this copy-paste method. Has the exchange become addicted to it?
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The term "ecological incentives" is now so overused that it's worn out. Changing the ecosystem to tell the same story again is truly brilliant.
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I think, this is just like my pattern of cutting losses — finding an excuse to repeat it, claiming each time that this time is different.
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Wait, how is this logic any different from my routine of chasing gains and cutting losses... just rebranding and selling the same thing.
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Basically, it's just an upgrade in rhetoric. Actual product innovation? Wake up, everyone.
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Oh heavens, isn't this the fundamental reason I keep falling into traps... I actually believed in the same old tricks.
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Now the exchange is just an old actor who can tell stories. Reusing the same script until it's worn out? That's hilarious.
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Really? How many new tricks can be spun from the phrase "prosperity of the public chain ecosystem"? Anyway, I haven't heard any.
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So, we traders are just repeatedly harvested by these routines, and we're quite cooperative too.
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GovernancePretender
· 22h ago
Copy-pasting can go viral, but us who actually build products don't get any traffic. It's frustrating.
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LucidSleepwalker
· 01-15 22:28
Does copying and pasting this set really fool people? It's just a different skin with the same old tricks.
Big exchanges are just telling stories now; the products are nothing new.
I've seen this logic many times, always the same incentive rhetoric.
Can't they come up with some real innovation? It's always these superficial things.
Basically, it's all about hyping concepts; anyone who believes it is getting scammed.
Wait, so they have no intention of improving their products at all?
How many times do they need to tell the same story before stopping?
I also want to learn this kind of marketing tactic, to create a new persona for myself haha.
That's why I don't really trust the marketing accounts of top exchanges.
Once you see through it, with this level, they still want to lead the ecosystem?
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GasFeeCryer
· 01-13 10:01
Copy-pasting has become so proficient, it's really time to start a marketing training class.
Playing with exchanges is no different from creating accounts, just missing the live selling part.
With incentives and ecological prosperity, changing the public chain and tweaking the copy—I've seen this routine too many times.
So, who still believes these clichés? It's just a different way of cutting leeks.
This is the real copy trading, copied from Twitter to various ecosystems.
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CoconutWaterBoy
· 01-13 10:01
Copy and paste after all, does this exchange really treat us like fools or do they themselves not know how to innovate anymore?
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TokenUnlocker
· 01-13 09:58
It's obviously fake. This set of scripts has been changed three times, but it still feels the same.
Copy and paste to harvest the leeks, I laughed.
Really should give these exchanges a patch; they all learn from the same template.
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StakeTillRetire
· 01-13 09:56
Basically, it's just rephrasing the same story with a new coat of paint, as long as the chives like to listen.
A set of scripts that work everywhere—this move is truly brilliant.
Copy and paste without even changing a word—do they really think we're fools?
Performance review completion rates are off the charts. Innovation? What's that?
Daily marketing scripts—what about real technical progress?
They're just betting on our poor memory.
It's always about incentives and ecosystems—tired of hearing that.
Anyway, product innovation is too difficult; they just create concepts quickly.
Who is this thriving ecosystem really benefiting?
Such deep routines—users should wake up now.
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DeFiVeteran
· 01-13 09:51
It's just a copy-paste contest. Changing the skin and claiming to be innovative—laughable.
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This is called "me too" marketing. The effect is indeed maximized, but it's just not interesting.
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Old tricks, all the same—nothing more than grabbing attention. But what about real product strength?
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No wonder it's an exchange; everything they do is copy and paste, at most changing a phrase.
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Wait, how long can this act fool people? Someone will see through it eventually.
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In the era where topics rule, innovation is ignored, and only big news generates buzz.
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I just want to know who the next copy target will be, haha.
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Same old routine, yet they still boast about their ecosystems. Anyone who believes it is naive.
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Forget it, instead of waiting for innovation, it's better to make quick money—since it's all the same anyway.
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The phrase "ecosystem prosperity incentive mechanism" has become so overused that ears are getting calloused.
An interesting phenomenon has been observed. A leading exchange has recently been making frequent moves, trying to increase its presence across multiple blockchain ecosystems. First, it mimicked the approach of a certain social media founder, advocating for improved creator incentive mechanisms. Later, after a shock in the SOL ecosystem, it replicated the same tactics, attempting to attract attention and engagement with similar rhetoric.
Honestly, this "copy-paste" marketing strategy is quite effective. Different personas, but the narrative is remarkably similar—both focus on themes like ecosystem prosperity and user incentives. It’s just a different entity, performing the same act again. Some even jokingly say that it’s no longer just an exchange, but more like an amplified version of a certain aggregation app—same logic, same rhythm, just on a larger scale.
This also reflects a current trend in the crypto market: mainstream trading platforms are increasingly relying on topic creation and public opinion guidance rather than pure product innovation. Some learn, some copy, and everyone is using the same script to tell different stories.