Once you treat gaining traffic as the only goal, there is only one path left.
Whether creating products or content, whether focusing on AI or other directions, the result is the same — in the end, it all comes down to piling up low-quality content. This is an inescapable fate.
Interestingly, those who are solely focused on chasing traffic have actually thought this through long ago. They don't dislike low-quality content; rather, they are consciously producing it. Why? Because this is the game rules they have chosen. Under these rules, quality becomes a burden.
In other words, when traffic becomes the only North Star, values are compromised. This is not a bug; it’s a feature.
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GhostAddressMiner
· 01-18 19:10
Basically, it's an issue of incentive mechanisms, and the same applies on the chain—once there's profit to be made, nodes will start to act maliciously. Nothing new.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-18 18:51
Traffic drugs, once addicted, you can't quit
That's so true. I watched helplessly as a bunch of projects went from having ideas to becoming daily update machines
Being able to tell a good story, but insisting on breaking it into ten postable fragments. Truly the most heartbreaking self-censorship I've seen
The biggest irony in Web3 is that, ultimately, decentralization is still hijacked by traffic algorithms
Quality kills quality, this logic works really well in the crypto circle
It has truly become the norm to compromise, who still cares about value, right?
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TopEscapeArtist
· 01-18 18:47
I used to think the same way, but later I realized I was the one "consciously producing low-quality content," and I even justified it as a technical weakness that requires stopping losses. Now I watch the K-line every day and question my life—it's truly the fate of traffic.
Once you treat gaining traffic as the only goal, there is only one path left.
Whether creating products or content, whether focusing on AI or other directions, the result is the same — in the end, it all comes down to piling up low-quality content. This is an inescapable fate.
Interestingly, those who are solely focused on chasing traffic have actually thought this through long ago. They don't dislike low-quality content; rather, they are consciously producing it. Why? Because this is the game rules they have chosen. Under these rules, quality becomes a burden.
In other words, when traffic becomes the only North Star, values are compromised. This is not a bug; it’s a feature.