On-chain reputation on @base is mostly misunderstood.
What actually matters (and what doesn’t):
1) Behaviour before incentives > after rewards
2) Depth of contract interaction > tx count
3) Repeated usage under one wallet > hopping
4) Time-weighted activity > bursts
5) Sybil resistance > vanity metrics
Most dashboards fake this.
Stay Based
Most platforms ask you to tell people what you’ve done.
@TalentProtocol flips that idea.
Instead of building another resume, it builds a living record of your work.
Your GitHub activity, open-source contributions, ecosystem participation, and projects become part of a public builder profile that speaks for itself.
What stood out to me is that Talent isn’t optimized for attention. It doesn’t care how many followers you have or how viral your latest post was. The focus is on actual contributions and measurable impact.
In a space where everyone claims to be building, proof matters.
Talent creates a way to showcase that proof transparently, making it easier for builders to earn recognition, discover opportunities, and connect with teams that value execution over self-promotion.
The future internet needs better ways to recognize people for what they create, not just what they say.
Talent is one of the more interesting attempts to solve that problem.
#BASE #Basebuild #BuildOnBase
@CryptoTeluguO Every crypto trader eventually discovers their true superpower >>
But their liquidation price has become one of the strongest support and resistance indicators too. 🙄
@MarcinPress@arbitrum@nansen_ai@HyperliquidX Leaving a place where you’ve made an impact is never easy, but this feels like an exciting next step.
Looking forward to seeing what you help build at Nansen. 🚀
A lot of people underestimate how far consistency can take them.
Keep learning,
keep showing up,
and
the results eventually follow.
#SocialMining@TheDAOLabs
Consistency is a career move, too. 🚀
@I_am_vikg1s, a Daoversian since 2024, perfectly captures the spirit of our community:
"When there is a willingness to learn there will always be a way to make it happen." ✊
@Zun2025 Most people only notice security tools when something goes wrong. Good to see the focus here is making recovery faster and less painful when it actually matters. Nicely done 👍
🎉 I'm eligible for the DSCVR Airdrop.
Early community members are being rewarded.
Have you checked yours yet?
Go to
👉 https://t.co/sopHU8xjOL
Click start
Choose Non Evm-Wallet
Sign in with your Internet Id
Connect your profile
Connect your any EVM Wallet
Check eligibility and allocation
Done
#DSCVR #Airdrop
Hey @Base Community, we're at 5,829 Subscribers on @YouTube. I need 171 of you to Subscribe so we can hit 6K in April!!
We will be uploading more videos / shorts daily, so make sure to subscribe!! https://t.co/xzgDEYCWLQ
@TheDAOLabs@2mrpc@0xcaosheng_888 This is one of the biggest hidden problems in Web3. Communities scale when workflows become simple and accountability becomes visible.
The new X algorithm is slowly killing low-effort content, and honestly, it was needed.
Likes matter less now.
Replies, watch time, bookmarks, and real conversations matter more.
The biggest shift?
You can’t fake attention for long anymore.
Accounts that actually make people stop, read, and interact are starting to win again.
Feels like X is rewarding signal over spam.
Must read @TheDAOLabs
https://t.co/jUWy60Atpp
Spent some time exploring Checkpoint Exchange and I honestly think a lot of people are underestimating what this could become.
Right now, crypto “points” are everywhere:
> Loyalty systems
> Trading rewards
> Ecosystem incentives
> XP programs
> Quest campaigns
> Pre-token engagement systems
But the problem is they’re fragmented, illiquid, and hard to track.
Checkpoint is trying to turn that entire layer into a market.
The core idea is actually pretty simple:
You can:
. track points across protocols
. check wallets for accumulated rewards
. discover active campaigns
. view point valuations
. trade/tokenize points exposure
. monitor ecosystems before TGE events
This changes how people interact with incentive systems.
Before:
You farmed points and hoped they became valuable someday.
Now:
Points themselves start behaving like an asset class.
That’s a big shift.
The interesting part is the psychological change this creates.
Once users can measure, compare, and potentially trade points exposure:
farming becomes more strategic
projects become more competitive
early participation becomes more financialized and “reputation” starts getting priced
And whether people like it or not, that’s probably where the industry is heading.
What I also find interesting is the visibility layer.
Most people are blindly farming ecosystems without knowing:
which campaigns matter
which wallets are ahead
where smart money is positioning
which protocols are generating real traction
Checkpoint starts surfacing that data in one place.
That creates exposure for:
. early users
. active wallets
. ecosystem contributors
. protocols running campaigns
. communities building before token launches
The future opportunity here isn’t only “points trading.”
It’s becoming infrastructure for the entire pre-token economy.
If this evolves correctly, I could easily see it becoming:
> A discovery layer for emerging ecosystems
> A leaderboard layer for onchain reputation
> A liquidity layer for reward markets
> A speculation layer before TGE
an analytics layer for airdrop farming behavior
And honestly, this fits where crypto is moving:
attention —> participation —> rewards —> liquidity.
Most people still think points are just temporary marketing tools.
Checkpoint is betting that points become financial primitives.
That’s a much bigger thesis than people realize.
@CheckpointEX