Creators, there's a new track now. After X platform shut down InfoFi yesterday, they immediately announced a $1 million reward for high-quality articles. Simple and straightforward—exposure becomes the only judging criterion, and the popularity on the timeline is your report card.
However, there's a catch: currently, it is only open to users in the United States. Well-known creators abroad have sensed the business opportunity, and influencers like Dan have already expressed their stance under the official tweet, seemingly ready to go.
Whether this incentive policy can truly ignite creative enthusiasm remains to be seen.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 12h ago
It's the same old story, popularity is just justice.
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0xLostKey
· 12h ago
Rushing to spend 1 million just to get people to write viral hits? Hotness is justice, and this routine has been played out in Web3 already.
Another America-first game, domestic creators continue to be left behind.
Dan and the others are already sharpening their knives; the next wave of content farms is coming.
The real question is—who defines "quality"? The traffic brokers are laughing.
InfoFi is cooling down; how long can it last? Betting five cents on changing the rules within half a year.
It feels like the last wave of benefits before cutting leeks.
Reward mechanisms driven by popularity, in plain terms, encourage garbage content.
Big V eats the meat, small accounts drink the soup—just old stories with new packaging.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 12h ago
1 million USD sounds like a lot, but it all depends on exposure? Isn't this just going back to the old trick of traffic being king?
Only opening to the US is even more ridiculous. What, should creators in other regions go hungry?
It's just another game of cutting leek, no matter how loud the hype, it doesn't change the essence.
It feels like this policy is all about bidding rankings. Big V with capital get the meat, small creators can't even get a sip of soup.
Content quality no longer matters; what's important is how many fans you have... This is far from the original intention of content creation.
Dan's team indeed has sharp instincts, but once this wave of popularity passes, it will inevitably fade away.
X's attempt to prolong its life is understandable, but this move still seems a bit weak.
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On-ChainDiver
· 12h ago
1 million USD sounds attractive, but honestly, it's all about traffic being king. The quality of content that can be produced is questionable.
It's only open to the US again, domestic creators have to step aside.
Dan and the others are already sharpening their knives; let's wait and see what happens next.
How long this thing can stay popular is uncertain; it feels like a temporary fix.
Shutting down InfoFi and then pouring money in—Elon really knows how to play; it's a bit outrageous.
Judging by exposure? Isn't this just encouraging clickbait? The content is about to take off.
American creators will laugh last; we're used to that.
Popularity is truth, but this logic is a bit dangerous.
Let's wait and see; anyway, my content definitely won't make it to the trending list haha.
The traffic-first approach—when will it ever change?
Creators, there's a new track now. After X platform shut down InfoFi yesterday, they immediately announced a $1 million reward for high-quality articles. Simple and straightforward—exposure becomes the only judging criterion, and the popularity on the timeline is your report card.
However, there's a catch: currently, it is only open to users in the United States. Well-known creators abroad have sensed the business opportunity, and influencers like Dan have already expressed their stance under the official tweet, seemingly ready to go.
Whether this incentive policy can truly ignite creative enthusiasm remains to be seen.