The biggest misconception in Web3 is that failed projects mean the model itself is broken.
@TheDAOLabs
This case study proves the opposite.
When communities are empowered, contributors are aligned, and teams honor their commitments, sustainable growth happens. The success stories of
@nemofficial,
@MultiversX,
@avax, and
@RWA_inc_ demonstrate what is possible when accountability meets community-driven execution.
At the same time, the
@AutonomysNet situation serves as a reminder that no ecosystem can thrive without trust, transparency, and contractual integrity.
Too many people obsess over vanity metrics, followers, impressions, signups, and engagement spikes. The real metric is whether a project creates lasting value for its community and upholds the commitments it makes.
This is why
#SocialMining stands out. It doesn't just reward activity; it creates a framework where accountability, reputation, and measurable contribution matter.
Kudos to TheDAOLabs and
@nipek14 for breaking down both the successes and the failures. The future of Web3 belongs to ecosystems that prioritize trust, community empowerment, and long-term sustainability over short-term hype.
Web3 isnāt the failureāpoor vetting is.
In Social Miningās story, weāve seen 4 projects thrive through community empowerment, and one fail due to a breach of contract:
ā
@nemofficial
ā
@MultiversX
ā
@avax
ā
@RWA_inc_
ā
@AutonomysNet
Weāre dissecting the hook of successāand failureābehind them
ššš