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I’ve always said the same thing and I stand by it, I can’t be bought and I can’t be sold. I’ll always say what I genuinely think, whether people agree with it or not.
Lately I’ve been seeing a lot of hate directed at Seyong. From the outside looking in, most of it feels less like legitimate criticism and more like frustration at how quickly @tryfomo App has grown and embedded itself into the culture of crypto.
If you zoom out for a second, the footprint they’re leaving in this space is expanding at a pretty aggressive pace. That doesn’t just happen randomly. In crypto, attention is the most honest metric there is. When something keeps attracting users, conversation, and capital, it usually means the product found its place in the market.
From the small interaction I’ve personally had with @seyong, he actually came across humble and very down to earth. No ego, just someone focused on building. No favoritism whatsoever.
What’s interesting is watching the reaction to that growth. Whenever something new starts capturing mindshare, two things always happen at the same time. One group of people gravitates toward it because it clearly resonates. Another group gets louder because the center of gravity of the timeline starts shifting.
And when the center of gravity shifts, a lot of the old attention structures break.
So you start seeing narratives form criticism, outrage, endless discourse. But if you look closely, some of that energy doesn’t actually come from people harmed by the product. It often comes from people who built their own presence around controlling conversation, engagement cycles, or narratives.
When a platform suddenly begins attracting the attention that used to belong to those engagement loops, the reaction can look like “criticism,” but a lot of the time it’s just the ecosystem recalibrating.
Crypto is brutally honest about one thing:
If something truly adds no value, it disappears very quickly.
But if something keeps growing, keeps pulling in users, and keeps expanding its footprint, then it’s probably doing something right, whether people like it or not.
Sometimes the backlash isn’t really about the product.
It’s about who is no longer controlling the attention.
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