Joined July 2022
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Nexus did a $1 airdrop after 3 different testnet phases. Am i surprised? not really. Airdrops like this only create antipathy They already don’t have a real community, and projects that burn users like this usually just fade away. That’s probably the plan from the start..
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- farm users with airdrop hype - quietly TGE and give everyone $1 - dump tokens and disappear
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7 years in this space. I’ve seen way too many friends get drained for life-changing money. Grateful that my "tuition fee" has only been $1k so far. I’m not a cybersecurity dev, just a regular guy who’s incredibly paranoid about my opsec. The simple but effective security stack that kept me alive: 1) Dedicated hardware: Separate macbook for crypto only. Windows is a security nightmare. 2) Browser hygiene: Dedicated, clean browser profile for txs. Zero random extensions to avoid cookie theft. 3) Bookmark everything: Never google a dApp. use bookmarks or type the url manually. Google ads are just drainers in disguise. 4) Authenticator: SMS 2FA is insufficient. use an authenticator, and ideally, keep it on an air-gapped device. 5) Burners: Use burner wallets for risky airdrops or on-chain tasks. Don't expose your main bags to unknown contracts. 6) Ignore the dust: If you don't know where that random token/nft came from, ignore it. interacting with "free money" is the easiest way to get drained. 7) No mobile hot wallets: I never keep any wallet apps on my phone. We visit too many websites and download too many apps on mobile to ever trust it. 8) Analog over digital: Never store seeds or passwords on your pc, cloud, or notes. Strictly analog. 9) Wallet segmentation: Split your holdings. never keep all your eggs in one basket or one asset, even in stables. 10) No self-messaging: Never send your wallet info or personal passwords to yourself or a friend over whatsapp/telegram. Those logs are permanent. 11) Physical privacy: Be mindful when using your laptop in public. Shoulder surfing is real. 12) Revoke: Always revoke permissions after interacting, don’t be lazy, use Rabby. 13) Passphrase: Always use a passphrase on your hardware wallet. Even if someone finds your 24 words, they’re still looking at an empty wallet lol. 14) Trust no one: Friends, family, it doesn’t matter. The biggest drains always start in the DMs. Accounts get hijacked and deepfakes are everywhere now. Never click a link or download a file from a message, no matter who sent it. And just remember: Security is boring as hell until your balance hits zero. Stay safe.
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Efficiency has no feelings.. Hating on Coinbase for 700 layoffs is pure brainrot. If you still think complaining stops the automation wave, you’re already cooked. Adapt or enjoy being the 1945 elevator operator.
Hot take: Coinbase is getting too much hate for the layoffs. In 2026 alone: Oracle: 30,000 layoffs Amazon: 16,000 layoffs ASML Holding: 1,700 layoffs Atlassian: 1,600 layoffs Snap Inc: 1,000 layoffs Autodesk: 1,000 layoffs "Coinbase: 700 layoffs" Pinterest: 15% layoffs Meta: 20% layoffs Block Inc: 40% layoffs Tech companies have been laying people off for years now. It's the new normal, accept it.
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This isn’t just a Coinbase thing Entire tech industry is quietly rewriting how companies work - Google cutting across recruiting, support, some engineering while doubling down on AI - Microsoft pushing copilot everywhere → fewer people needed for the same output - Amazon trimming ops middle layers, automating aggressively - Meta “year of efficiency” wasn’t a phase… it became the model - Duolingo replacing contractors with AI-generated content - Shopify “prove AI can’t do it before hiring” And then you read Brian Armstrong’s post again It clicks - junior roles getting squeezed first - managers can’t just manage anymore - small teams AI > big orgs - one-person teams are becoming real - output up, headcount down
This is an email I sent earlier today to all employees at Coinbase: Team, Today I’ve made the difficult decision to reduce the size of Coinbase by ~14%. I want to walk you through why we're doing this now, what it means for those affected, and how this positions us for the future. Why now Two forces are converging at the same time. We need to be front footed to respond to both. First, the market. Coinbase is well-capitalized, has diversified revenue streams, and is well-positioned to weather any storm. Crypto is also on the verge of the next wave of adoption, with stablecoins, prediction markets, tokenization, and more taking off. However, our business is still volatile from quarter to quarter. While we've managed through that cyclicality many times before and come out stronger on the other side, we’re currently in a down market and need to adjust our cost structure now so that we emerge from this period leaner, faster, and more efficient for our next phase of growth. Second, AI is changing how we work. Over the past year, I’ve watched engineers use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks. Non-technical teams are now shipping production code and many of our workflows are being automated. The pace of what's possible with a small, focused team has changed dramatically, and it's accelerating every day. All of this has led us to an inflection point, not just for Coinbase, but for every company. The biggest risk now is not taking action. We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast, and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core. What this means To get there, we are not just reducing headcount and cutting costs, we’re fundamentally changing how we operate: rebuilding Coinbase as an intelligence, with humans around the edge aligning it. What does this mean in practice? - Fewer layers, faster decisions: We are flattening our org structure to 5 layers max below CEO/COO. Layers slow things down and create coordination tax. The future is small, high context teams that can move quickly. Leaders will own much more, with as many as 15 direct reports. Fewer layers also means a leaner cost structure that is built to perform through all market cycles. - No pure managers: Every leader at Coinbase must also be a strong and active individual contributor. Managers should be like player-coaches, getting their hands dirty alongside their teams. - AI-native pods: We’ll be concentrating around AI-native talent who can manage fleets of agents to drive outsized impact. We’ll also be experimenting with reduced pod sizes, including “one person teams” with engineers, designers, and product managers all in one role. In short: AI is bringing a profound shift in how companies operate, and we’re reshaping Coinbase to lead in this new era. This is a new way of working, and we need to leverage AI across every facet of our jobs. To those who are affected I know there are real people behind these decisions — talented colleagues who have poured themselves into this company and our mission. To those of you who will be leaving: thank you. You’ve helped build Coinbase into what it is today, and I am sincerely grateful for everything you've done. All impacted team members will receive an email to their personal account in the next hour with more information, and an invitation to meet with an HRBP and a senior leader in your organization. Coinbase system access has been removed today. I know this feels sudden and harsh, but it is the only responsible choice given our duty to protect customer information. To those affected, we will be providing a comprehensive package to support you through this transition. US employees will receive a minimum of 16 weeks base pay (plus 2 weeks per year worked), their next equity vest, and 6 months of COBRA. Employees on a work visa will get extra transition support. Those outside of the US will receive similar support, based on local factors and subject to any consultation requirements. Coinbase prides itself on talent density. Our employees are among the most talented people in the world, and I have no doubt that your skills and experience will be highly sought after as you pursue your next chapters. How we move forward To the team that is staying, I know this is a difficult day. We’re saying goodbye to colleagues and friends you've been in the trenches with. But here’s what I want you to know as we move forward together: Over the past 13 years, we have weathered four crypto winters, gone public, and built the most trusted platform in our industry. We’ve made it this far by making hard decisions and by always staying focused on our mission. This time will be no different – nothing has changed about the long term outlook of our company or industry. And most importantly, our mission has never been more important for the world. Increasing economic freedom requires a new financial system, and we’re building it. The Coinbase that emerges from this will be more capable than ever to achieve our mission. Brian
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The biggest mistake people make is assuming crypto will stay the same while technology evolves. People see “quantum broke small keys” and jump straight to “bitcoin is dead in 3 years” Going from 6-bit to 15-bit doesn’t mean you’re anywhere close to 256-bit. And even if quantum becomes a real threat, crypto isn’t static. it can upgrade. We’ve seen forks, protocol changes, major upgrades before. moving to quantum-resistant cryptography is possible if needed. Also think about it: If the risk was this close and this obvious, would regulation and adoption be accelerating like this?
Apr 26
Why aren’t more people talking about this? In 2.5 years, Bitcoin may be fully hackable. A researcher, using publicly accessible technology, was able to break into a 15-bit cryptographic key using quantum computing. Now Bitcoin is stored at 256 bits, but here’s what’s scary. 7 months ago, someone was able to break into a 6-bit key. That’s 2.5x growth in a very short time period. Assuming the rate of growth is the same, we reach 256 bits in under 3 years. That is NOT good.
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NFTs are dead. Anything without real utility dies sooner or later, narratives just buy time. Finance always comes back to real value, and crypto is feeling this harder than ever now. Long term in crypto only works with things that actually do something. Everything else is just hype, and the same cycle keeps repeating in different categories.
Apr 7
NFTs didn’t die… The fakers died. The grifters died. The hype died. What’s left is real builders, real holders, and real communities that refused to quit for years. That’s the strongest foundation any market can have. Bullish AF.
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Just because something is dead doesn’t mean it can’t come back. but waiting years for old narratives to revive in this space just makes you miss every new "hype cycle".
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Most crypto accounts’ last 1 year: > discovers InfoFi > decides to become a content creator > spams AI content to climb leaderboards > makes a few bucks and calls himself an expert > wakes up one day, InfoFi is gone > realizes he knows nothing about crypto > rebrands as AI expert or finance guy
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I’ve been in this space since 2019 and one of the biggest things i’ve learned is simple: if everyone is doing something, don’t. at least be very careful. These days my feed is basically two things: - people quietly leaving the space, or suddenly pivoting to completely different niches - accounts that only post FUD all day and the funny part is, some of these same accounts spent years promoting scam projects under the “future of tech” narrative. Honestly, seeing some of them leave doesn’t bother me. but at the same time, it feels a bit ungrateful. Yep, opportunities are limited right now. it makes sense to explore other areas. but fully leaving the space? not something i’d ever do. I respect everyone’s opinion and effort, except those who were shilling scam tokens for $200 and now suddenly decided they’re “finance experts” or “AI experts”.
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Fake raises, fake partnerships, fake announcements all year. Then April 1 comes and we all pretend this is the only day things aren’t real lol.
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HEADS UP🚨 Looks like the @Infinit_Labs X account might be hacked. The latest post doesn’t look legit at all. Don’t interact with it, don’t click anything.
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- 53% of all tokens are already dead. - 86% of all failures happened in 2025 alone. The biggest reason behind the decay in altcoins is the idea of “making tokenization easier.”
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Everyone’s still arguing CEX vs DEX while both sides keep getting farmed. Over $2.4B lost in just one year and people still act like security is a solved problem. Doesn’t matter if it’s centralized or onchain, if there’s money, it’s attackable. Security is still one of the weakest layers in crypto.
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Most altcoins didn’t fail because the product was bad. They failed because the token was never meant to carry the success. People keep calling this a liquidity problem, like capital just hasn’t “arrived” yet. But nothing is broken. The system is working exactly as designed. Protocols generate real fees, real users, real traction, and the token still sits there with no claim on any of it. At the same time, the setup never changes: - VC gets in early - Supply is cheap before launch - Public enters after the narrative So even when everything goes right, price doesn’t have to follow. Because the upside was already distributed before you even got access.
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The biggest problem is: tokenization lost its shine. Back then it actually had some magic. People saw it as innovation. As long as tokenization is still used as exit liquidity, there’s no real altseason coming back. At least not the way people remember it. VCs weren’t this rotten before either. They were never saints, but the level of corruption now is way worse. Now tokenization gives people scam vibes by default. and honestly can you blame them? - Projects launch at insane FDVs - early money gets the cheap supply - retail gets the story - two months later the chart is down 90% Not even talking about the stuff that launched years ago. If the whole tokenization model is still built around dumping on the market, more VC money won’t bring altseason back. It’ll just fund a cleaner version of the same scam.
Crypto hates VCs but for strong altcoin season we need VC money. VC money funds salaries, operations, and VERY importantly, market making. When tokens launch, teams and airdrop farmers sell into liquidity partly backed by VCs. Key point is that $1 of VC money creates more than $1 of market cap for the whole industry. And because most tokens are held and not sold, so small inflows move market caps disproportionately. I couldn’t find an exact multiplier for alts, but for BTC, Bank of America calculated a 118x multiplier in 2021. Back then, $93M of inflow moved BTC’s market cap by $11B. For alts the multiplier MUST be much higher due to thinner order books, more supply locked in vesting and staking etc. $5M into a $50M MC shitcoin with 90% supply locked pumps the price way more than $5M into Bitcoin. Of course, in a bearish market and when VC money dries up, altcoins dump the most. Problem is that this bull run we got ~50% less VC money ($26B) vs $66b in 2020-22. At the same time, projects raised at all time high valuations $37M USD. So: -> less money for similar number of projects at way higher valuations. -> Every project ended up getting a smaller cash injection but listed at a super high FDVs. -> More tokens competed for less liquidity and the multiplier had less impact this cycle. Low float high FDV launches were bad for retail but in the short term it created a wealth effect in crypto that made you feel rich on paper, so you ended up getting greedy, trade memecoins and maybe lost a lot :(( VC also served as exit liquidity for airdrop farmers ... who sold their airdrops. In any case, VC capital is what funds the industry... It's especially needed now when so many crypto projects are shutting down.
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You have a lot of money. would you invest in something that’s almost guaranteed to go down? everything people call “altcoins” is down 90%. no smart investor looks at alts as a long-term play. and they’re right..
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Remember those scammy projects asking for face scans over some dumb tasks or a $10 reward? Once they’re done, founders cash out by selling thousands of users data and disappear. Trying to filter bots with face scans in a “decentralized” space is a scam.
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I was really looking forward to Token2049 Dubai this year. After seeing all this “fatigue” on CT, i wanted to see how the turnout would be and what people actually think on the ground. But now it’s cancelled because of a damn war. If nothing stupid breaks out in asia, i’ll be at the Singapore one.
The safety and experience of our community always comes first. In collaboration with our partners and stakeholders, and in light of the ongoing uncertainty in the region and its impact on safety, international travel and logistics, TOKEN2049 Dubai will be postponed to 21–22 April 2027. Full update: token2049.com/dubai/announce…
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Long before Hyperliquid, right after the $HMX airdrop, there was another Perp DEX airdrop hype. Kinza, KiloEx, dappOS Marginly, ZarosFi… and a bunch of other garbage perps showed up out of nowhere. 99% of them used TGEs as exit liquidity and disappeared. From that wave, the only one i remember still standing is GRVT. Same thing in every category. Hype hits, projects flood in, most of them are gone in weeks. This is exactly what ends up corrupting tokenization over time.
☠️Who still remember this @binance backed project? 🧑‍🌾Farming community since 2023 ⚠️Postponed TGE multiple times ⚠️No social media post in last 5 months 🤔R u still farming this? I stopped long back 💙Like 🔁RT
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