@tesmopro@Sssebi Is this graph supposed to show how useless Cardanos ecosystem is? Because it’s doing a great job!
It’s also not even accurate at all ahahaha, the real metrics are far worse
Charles has not said lacking control over the treasury was a problem and rather having no executive functions or DAOs is. Stop using big words and pretending like you have any idea what’s goings on. You have your head buried in the sand and are spreading false hope to idiots to keep them invested, the only disingenuous person here is you.
Charles himself is telling you that he’s fucked up with decentralised governance and did it the wrong way and you’re still so far deep in denial that you think what’s happening in this ecosystem is good and that the naysayers or just bad actors 😂 you’re sick in the head little guy
@moodybtc This is what happens where you’re in a cult. Rationalise everything you can to ignore just how terrible reality is. What’s sad is most of these people will still be believers when they’ve lost 99.8% of their money and one guy is using it all to refuel his helicopter 😂
No truer statement that I’ve read on this cesspool of a fucking app.
Most of crypto and all of Cardano is a larp. Most of yall just too stupid to see it.
I wanted to hijack this otherwise great thread by @CashAnvil here to highlight the fact that I believe this is a significant issue pervasive throughout the Web 3 (and others) sphere. Gatekeeping.
- these guys don't have much $ADA, their opinions don't matter
- these people have never tried or used [staking/defi/whatever], their opinions don't matter
- this guy doesn't have a GitHub commit history, his opinion doesn't matter
- this gal doesn't have a PhD, her opinion doesn't matter
The list goes on. This is a classic appeal to authority fallacy, usually used to attempt to silence or minimize voices that are critical or skeptical of our own opinions.
It's also why so many aspects of Web 3 have failed to find product market fit (PMF).
We have spent countless millions of dollars (across crypto, but also internal to Cardano) researching and building technologies, goods, and services that we have convinced ourselves and others that people want or need, only to be shown time and again that the demand just isn't there.
Then, when people ask why we should keep spending money on this (or this much money on this), or give you a loan, or why your business is going to succeed where so many have failed they are met with these appeal to authority challenges to belittle and attempt to silence that criticism rather than learn from it.
As an industry we've failed, repeatedly, to do the one most important thing in business: figure out what our customers actually want.
When was the last time an app asked you to fill out a customer service or satisfaction survey? When was the last time you (as an application builder or employee) asked people why they DON'T use your service?
There's some nugget of truth to every criticism, whether you want to hear it or not. There are ways you can improve your communications, marketing, or user experience every time someone asks a question you think should otherwise be obviously answered. And, of course, you'll never make everyone happy.
So, in closing, ask open questions and be receptive to the answers and feedback you get regardless of where they come from (and try to read through the tone to get at the actual criticism with getting defensive), you just might learn something.
Signed
- the Saturday CEO of Cardano