If retail investors organize and form an alliance, with a combined shareholding exceeding 51%, can they secure a seat on the board of a major exchange? It sounds like a promising governance experiment😄 This actually reflects an interesting question: between centralized exchanges and decentralized governance, do retail investors truly have a voice? If decisions could be changed solely through alliances, many controversial decisions might have already been overturned. But from another perspective, this idea itself demonstrates the Web3 era's expectation for a reallocation of power.
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PretendingSerious
· 3h ago
Retail investors holding 51%? Sounds easy to say, hard to do. It's a miracle if these people can work together in harmony.
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MEVSandwich
· 15h ago
Can retail investors band together to make a difference? Or is it just the same old trick?
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VibesOverCharts
· 01-13 15:59
Uh, retail investors' alliance holding 51% to take over the board? That sounds ridiculous. Those big capital players have already started acting.
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just_vibin_onchain
· 01-13 15:59
Haha, retail investors' alliance taking 51% and thinking they can join the board? That idea is really naive. The exchange folks probably already have a backup plan in place.
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VirtualRichDream
· 01-13 15:55
Want to join the board with just 51%? That's funny. Exchanges already have anti-dilution clauses in place.
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LiquidityWitch
· 01-13 15:52
51% sounds cute until you realize the real alchemy happens in the dark pools anyway... retail coordination is just theater when whales already got the seats locked down ngl
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BoredRiceBall
· 01-13 15:49
The 51% figure sounds impressive, but can retail investors really band together? I'm skeptical.
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ExpectationFarmer
· 01-13 15:44
51% sounds easy, but in reality, retail investors can't unite to operate it. They've already split up, haha.
If retail investors organize and form an alliance, with a combined shareholding exceeding 51%, can they secure a seat on the board of a major exchange? It sounds like a promising governance experiment😄 This actually reflects an interesting question: between centralized exchanges and decentralized governance, do retail investors truly have a voice? If decisions could be changed solely through alliances, many controversial decisions might have already been overturned. But from another perspective, this idea itself demonstrates the Web3 era's expectation for a reallocation of power.