Looking back, the initial judgment was indeed biased. I remember that before that wave of market activity started, there were many voices criticizing a certain leading exchange. However, I was continuously monitoring this exchange's developments on social media at the time. Now, looking back, many of the concerns raised back then have been proven unnecessary. The market's perception of the same platform truly changes over time with the accumulation of data and experience. This also reminds us that when making judgments, we should not rely solely on temporary public opinion trends.
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ForkItAll
· 3h ago
Honestly, this wave really got slapped in the face. Those who followed the trend and shorted are now crying.
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StealthDeployer
· 11h ago
Face-slapping scene, those who were bearish at the time were really too hilarious.
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AllInDaddy
· 16h ago
Face-slapping moment, back then there were a bunch of skeptics, now they all shut up.
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gas_guzzler
· 01-16 16:15
To be honest, public opinion is just a sieve that misses a lot of key information. At that time, I was also influenced by the hype, but now I see that the exchange was indeed wrongfully accused.
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SerumSquirrel
· 01-15 14:51
Haha, that's why I always say don't be swayed by public opinion. Doing your own research is the key.
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DefiSecurityGuard
· 01-15 14:49
nah hold up... *analyzing contract patterns* this "changing perception" narrative is exactly how honeypots rebrand themselves. seen this 47 times this month alone. just saying—don't let fomo override DYOR. not financial advice obviously, but red flags don't disappear just cuz sentiment shifted lol
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 01-15 14:40
This wave indeed slapped many pessimists in the face; public opinion really can't be trusted.
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RugPullProphet
· 01-15 14:37
Listen, how are those people who were bearish back then doing now?
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TooScaredToSell
· 01-15 14:36
Ha, this is what we often call a "face-slapping scene." Public opinion really can't be trusted.
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ForkInTheRoad
· 01-15 14:27
That's why I don't follow the crowd. When a bunch of people are shouting short, it's actually the best entry signal.
Looking back, the initial judgment was indeed biased. I remember that before that wave of market activity started, there were many voices criticizing a certain leading exchange. However, I was continuously monitoring this exchange's developments on social media at the time. Now, looking back, many of the concerns raised back then have been proven unnecessary. The market's perception of the same platform truly changes over time with the accumulation of data and experience. This also reminds us that when making judgments, we should not rely solely on temporary public opinion trends.