New Version, Worth Being Seen! #GateAPPRefreshExperience
🎁 Gate APP has been updated to the latest version v8.0.5. Share your authentic experience on Gate Square for a chance to win Gate-exclusive Christmas gift boxes and position experience vouchers.
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Honestly, I’ve never been the type to get excited just by seeing the Oracle track.
This line is too easy to go off course. At first, it was touted as a "infrastructure revolution," but later I realized what was in people's minds was "when will this coin pump." When real issues arise and liquidation happens, it suddenly becomes clear that those security promises are just dreamy words on a PPT.
Recently, I’ve been paying attention to APRO again, not because it’s spun some new story.
But because it has exposed a problem everyone knows but pretends not to see.
The trouble with oracles, frankly, isn’t about slow speed or high costs on the surface.
The most critical issue is this—
**You simply cannot verify whether it’s correct or not.**
Prices can be fed, on-chain events can be fed, but as soon as disputes arise, responses from various projects become vague: enough nodes, high decentralization, mechanism design is fine. I’ve heard this rhetoric so many times my ears have calluses.
When things really blow up, people only care about three things:
Who pays the bill? How to analyze and review? Is that data accurate or not?
What APRO is doing isn’t so much about speeding up data supply, but about fully exposing the "accountability chain."
How to challenge data when it’s questioned? How to verify after the challenge? Who is truly responsible if there’s an error? How are losses shared?
Simply put, it’s not just about selling "data" itself, but about wrapping the data with an accountability and assurance mechanism.
If you think this is overinterpreting, take a look at the current demand gap in RWA and compliant payments. Institutional clients happen to need this kind of "traceable, accountable, compensable" infrastructure.
This is the real watershed in the Oracle track.