Zama's blueprint for the future? It's not your typical project update. This is about fundamentally rewiring how value, identity, and opportunities get distributed across the web.
Picture this: creators stop being mere users. They become equity holders. Social platforms? They'd ditch the attention-extraction playbook and morph into genuine economic ecosystems instead.
What if the internet stopped treating you as the product and started recognizing you as a partner? That shift—from participant to stakeholder—could redefine digital economies entirely. When platforms align incentives with their communities rather than mining engagement for ad revenue, we're talking about structural transformation.
Zama's vision taps into something deeper than token mechanics. It challenges the premise that social infrastructure must be parasitic. Maybe the next iteration of the web isn't about who captures attention best, but who shares prosperity most effectively.
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CryptoComedian
· 7h ago
Laughing until I cried—here we go again with another story of "platforms and creators thriving together." The last time I heard this narrative was back in 2021.
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orphaned_block
· 7h ago
NGL, this is exactly what I wanted to see. The step from being a product to becoming a shareholder can truly change the game.
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FomoAnxiety
· 7h ago
Sounds nice, but can it really change the profit-driven nature of the platform? I think it still depends on whether it can actually be achieved.
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LightningAllInHero
· 7h ago
To put it bluntly, they just want the platform to stop leeching profits, but I just want to ask... how many platforms are actually willing to share their profits?
Zama's blueprint for the future? It's not your typical project update. This is about fundamentally rewiring how value, identity, and opportunities get distributed across the web.
Picture this: creators stop being mere users. They become equity holders. Social platforms? They'd ditch the attention-extraction playbook and morph into genuine economic ecosystems instead.
What if the internet stopped treating you as the product and started recognizing you as a partner? That shift—from participant to stakeholder—could redefine digital economies entirely. When platforms align incentives with their communities rather than mining engagement for ad revenue, we're talking about structural transformation.
Zama's vision taps into something deeper than token mechanics. It challenges the premise that social infrastructure must be parasitic. Maybe the next iteration of the web isn't about who captures attention best, but who shares prosperity most effectively.