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After years of navigating the crypto world, I'm already disinterested in projects that shout about revolution and vision but fail to deliver. It's always grand narratives; once you actually try to use them, they either become useless or can't be practically implemented. RSS3's operational logic, however, is completely different — it doesn't hype concepts or create buzz; instead, it focuses all its energy on tackling the most difficult part.
The degree of information fragmentation in the Web3 world is obvious to everyone. Social platforms, various protocols, on-chain activity data — all scattered in different directions. Users' interaction records, content assets, digital footprints are dispersed everywhere. Trying to consolidate these into a single place is difficult enough, let alone truly owning one's data. On the surface, it's decentralized, but in reality, information-level decentralization has not been achieved.
What RSS3 is doing hits exactly this pain point. By connecting isolated information islands through decentralized protocols, it restores true sovereignty over user data, aggregating digital footprints from different sources into one place. Whether for easy access or autonomous management, this transparency is rare in Web3.
I'm optimistic about RSS3, not because of short-term gains. It's because it has found the right direction and is willing to focus on doing the work. It doesn't rely on flashy marketing tricks or follow trends, but concentrates on refining the real experience of information aggregation and circulation. Ordinary users want convenience and sovereignty; professionals need efficiency and accuracy — it can deliver both. No complicated operations, no superficial gimmicks, with a clear core value and a real demand. This is the kind of project that has the potential to go far.
Many haven't fully grasped RSS3's value yet, thinking it's just a data query tool. Little do they know, it's building the underlying information infrastructure for the entire Web3. Today's data aggregation is just the starting point; the future has enormous potential.
Honestly, this is what Web3 should really be doing.
The pain point of data fragmentation really hits the mark, but there are very few projects willing to put in the effort to solve it.
However, I am still a bit worried that the implementation might fail again; trust costs are too high in this circle right now.
The prerequisite is that it shouldn't just become a query tool, or else it wouldn't be very meaningful.
Really feels like they're focusing on doing the work, unlike some projects that are busy harvesting profits every day
Scattered data everywhere is indeed annoying, finally someone is taking it seriously
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Honestly, regaining control of data rights is more appealing than anything else. Other projects are still just bragging.
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I give full marks for not hyping concepts. Web3 really lacks this kind of calmness.
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Fragmented information is indeed disgusting. The RSS3 angle is quite on point.
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Work on underlying infrastructure is the most boring but also the most valuable. Most people can't understand it.
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While everyone is chasing the hot trends, some are quietly building the foundation. That's how the gap widens.
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The demand for aggregated data is indeed a necessity, but few can do it well.
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This is the reason for long-term holding. Without a story, just talk about efficiency.
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Many haven't truly understood it yet. Just look at the comments to see.
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Web3 is missing this pragmatic type, not the concept-driven type.
That said, data aggregation is indeed a real need, but whether RSS3 can truly be implemented depends on what happens next.
It's not that I don't believe in it; it's just that there are too many pitfalls in this industry. Let's wait and see how it performs.
I'm already fed up with data fragmentation. Every time I want to check something on my chain, it feels like a treasure hunt.
Not following trends, not hyping, just this alone is worth betting on.
This is what Web3 needs, not those scythe projects.
Many people really haven't understood it, thinking it's just a query tool.
This is the kind of vision you should have when playing with coins.
Data fragmentation has been a real pain for a long time, and finally someone is taking it seriously.