Hi $kas. Time for a much requested post.
Join me for a deep dive of Bitcoin's and Kaspa's respective fee markets, and a painfully detailed explanation of why I think Kaspa can offer beautiful game theoretic solutions to subsidy that no other network can
https://t.co/T9OUBa2jA7
I would even go even further and ask Binance to delist $kas futures from their platform.
Why kas futures is ok but kas on spot is not?
They can ignore kas fully, better for everyone
🎯 $KAS is not here to fit in. Its here to make change. $KAS has been exposing how ridiculous exchanges operate in this day and age. If you truly care about cryptoCURRENCY, the cypherpunk movement, PoW, and being able to USE this in our daily lives $KAS is at the forefront.
A Call Back to the Roots, Yonatan’s Mic Drop Heard Around Crypto Land (1.2 Million Views and Counting)
Yesterday, Yonatan Sompolinsky, (@hashdag ) founder of Kaspa and co-creator of GHOSTDAG, declined an invitation from @binance after being listed among the top 100 blockchain figures. His post, now seen by more than a million people, was not about the contest or the award. It was about something much larger.
In a few sharp paragraphs, Yonatan did what few in this industry have the courage or credibility to do. He reminded everyone what cryptocurrency and blockchain tech was meant to be.
“Crypto has turned from a euphoric cypherpunk project to a house-friendly casino.”
That line will likely be quoted for years. It captured the quiet frustration many have felt watching the original cypherpunk vision turn into a spectacle of speculation, personality cults, and meme markets.
Yonatan’s message was not anti-exchange. (maybe) It was a call for accountability. Binance, as the largest exchange in the world, does not simply reflect the market; it defines it. The decision to list a meme coin within weeks while ignoring a fair-launched, PoW-based, Nakamoto-consensus project like Kaspa is not neutral. It shapes what the market values and what it forgets.
When Yonatan wrote, “Binance is part of what defines "strong,” he reminded the industry that power brings responsibility. Exchanges, influencers, and funds who claim to support “strong projects” cannot hide behind market demand when they are the ones setting it.
Kaspa and the Continuation of the Original Thesis
Kaspa’s story has always been about carrying forward Satoshi’s unfinished work. A fair launch. No ICO. No founder rewards. A network built by miners, not marketed by investors. It remains one of the few examples of what can still be called cypherpunk crypto, a system that values decentralization, permissionless access, and proof of work as a defense against capture.
In a world of quick gains and token theatrics, Kaspa represents the opposite approach: build first and earn trust later. Its achievements speak for themselves. Ten blocks per second, the only live implementation of BlockDAG consensus, and the upcoming DAGKnight upgrade which will redefine performance in distributed systems. Alongside it comes vProgs, a programmable validation layer that extends Kaspa’s architecture while preserving its pure PoW principles.
Cryptoland and the Meme Park Era
At @Kaspa_Commons, we have been talking about this shift since we launched in May, although the movement has been around since 2014. The rise of what we called “Cryptoland” has turned much of the industry into a spectacle of entertainment and extraction rather than innovation and freedom. Yonatan’s post gives voice to that quiet disillusionment felt across the real builder community.
Cryptoland has its rides, mascots, and ticket booths. But beyond the flashing lights there remains a small circle of engineers and believers working toward what this movement was always meant to be: an open, decentralized system for digital value and data transfer that cannot be censored or co-opted.
The post’s viral reach was not about rejecting an invitation. It was about reclaiming the microphone. Yonatan voiced what many in the trenches have been too exhausted or too cautious to say. The mission has been corrupted, but it is not lost.
For many, this was a reminder that the cypherpunk fire still burns, and that it now burns brightest inside Kaspa.
In a time when “crypto” has become synonymous with speculation, Yonatan’s words cut through the noise. They remind us that decentralization, fairness, and proof of work are not nostalgic ideals. They are the foundation.
Four years after Kaspa’s fair launch, the project and its community still stand on those principles. In that sense, Yonatan’s post was more than a protest. It was a declaration of purpose.
Kaspa is not asking for recognition. It is reminding the world what real innovation looks like and why it still matters.
Respect to $KAS founder @hashdag
He had the courage to decline a top-100 blockchain award in Dubai and he did it for the right reasons.
He called out what most founders stay silent about:
The capture of crypto by centralized gatekeepers.
When a fair-launched, 10 BPS blockDAG network like #Kaspa , built on pure Nakamoto Consensus, parallel block validation, and zero premine, is ignored while exchanges push meme tokens with insider liquidity, it is proof that incentives have replaced integrity.
Hashdag’s statement is precision.
He exposed the structural imbalance where CEXs define “strength” by volume and hype instead of protocol quality.
Crypto has turned into a stage where hype outweighs utility, marketing beats engineering, and exposure replaces substance.
Hot air has become more valuable than real technology, real teams, or real knowledge.
Oracle dependencies, API throttling, and listing politics are shaping markets in ways no algorithm can justify.
This is how true decentralization dies:
Not by hacks, but by silence.
Hashdag refused to be part of that silence.
More founders should do the same.
Refuse the staged awards.
Refuse the centralized validation.
Build, prove, publish and make crypto accountable again.
- by $MASTR project