Dan Romero pfp
Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
There's a lot to like about Ethereum culture. The worst part about Ethereum culture, however, is the invented purity tests. If you don't like something, don't use it. Even better: build an alternative! It's a permissionless, decentralized and open source-friendly ecosystem. You can just fork things! The hard part is getting people to use your version and keep using your thing. So naturally the apps / platforms / chains that have usage and users attract the most armchair opinions. And in an environment where there isn't a massive influx of new people, the finger-pointing and scapegoating only intensifies. The way out is more people with funded wallets transacting regularly onchain who are actually using the apps that people are building.
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Tim pfp
Tim
@cryptim.eth
I’ll admit I’m armchair quarterbacking the coining everything movement but there is valid constructive criticism. I listened to Jesse get a lot of flack in an x space and it doesn’t seem like the constructive criticism is taken seriously. This is turning people away from eth all together, not just turning them away from Zora and that’s not a good look imo
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Dan Romero pfp
Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
How do you know if feedback is taken seriously?
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