Most of us in the Web3 space share a common frustration with how centralized platforms handle content distribution. The algorithm prioritizes engagement metrics over actual user preferences—you end up scrolling through content from accounts you don't follow while missing updates from those you genuinely care about. What gets pushed isn't what matters to you; it's what keeps you scrolling longer. Sure, it works for platform metrics, but it fragments communities into isolated bubbles. Everyone's stuck in their own echo chamber, rarely seeing diverse perspectives. This is precisely why decentralized alternatives matter—we need systems where users control their own feeds, not algorithms designed around ad revenue.
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Most of us in the Web3 space share a common frustration with how centralized platforms handle content distribution. The algorithm prioritizes engagement metrics over actual user preferences—you end up scrolling through content from accounts you don't follow while missing updates from those you genuinely care about. What gets pushed isn't what matters to you; it's what keeps you scrolling longer. Sure, it works for platform metrics, but it fragments communities into isolated bubbles. Everyone's stuck in their own echo chamber, rarely seeing diverse perspectives. This is precisely why decentralized alternatives matter—we need systems where users control their own feeds, not algorithms designed around ad revenue.