This unlocks something new for communities:
โ Ideation rounds where the best ideas self-fund
โ Knowledge markets that reward real expertise
โ Project funding through thread-level buy-in
โ Content discovery that surfaces what actually matters
Postcoins are live now.
If you run a community on Common, enable it in the integrations page and post something worth owning.
If you're on Common, find a thread worth buying into early.
๐ common.xyz
For creators: post on Common, enable Postcoin, and earn when your ideas resonate.
Trading fees get split between the creator, the community treasury, and the protocol. You get rewarded for valuable content not just posting often.
Where this gets interesting:
โ Communities running ideation rounds: best ideas rise by market signal
โ Knowledge markets that reward deep expertise
โ Project funding through thread-level buy-in
โ Content discovery that actually surfaces what matters
Postcoins are live on Common now.
Create a thread. Enable Postcoin. See what your ideas are worth.
๐ common.xyz
Read the full breakdown: blog.common.xyz/introducing-โฆ
What if every thread had its own token?
Today we're launching Postcoins on @commondotxyz a new way to create, discover, and reward ideas inside your community.
Here's how it works ๐งต
Most platforms rank content by likes and engagement. That rewards volume, not value.
Postcoins add a market signal. When someone puts real skin in the game on a thread, it means something different than a heart emoji.
Better signal โ better content discovery.
Postcoins turn any thread on Common into a tradable token.
One click when you post. Your idea gets its own coin with its own market. People buy in if they think the idea matters and price moves on a bonding curve.
Quality content rises. Noise doesn't.
You've got a DAO with 10K members and 100M tokens.
Normally, you'd need a team of 20 people: devs, analysts, ops, treasury managers, marketers.
What if you didn't?
What if one person could run a billion-dollar protocol with agents doing the execution? ๐
4/ The future of organizations isn't bigger teams.
It's smaller teams of humans making decisions. Armies of agents executing.
Common is the infrastructure that makes that possible.