People fixate on isolated fraud cases—a few compliance failures here, some regulatory oversights there. That's missing the forest for the trees.
The real problem runs deeper. We're not looking at scattered bad actors anymore. It's systemic. The entire infrastructure is built on layers of opacity, misaligned incentives, and structural vulnerabilities that nobody wants to fix. Once you zoom out, you realize fraud isn't the exception—it's embedded in how the system operates.
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GhostChainLoyalist
· 11h ago
This is the crypto world—everyone knows it's messy, but they pretend not to see it.
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TokenUnlocker
· 11h ago
Damn, someone finally said it. The entire system is a pile of shit, it's not just a few rat droppings.
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GasFeeCryBaby
· 11h ago
That's not right. Doesn't that mean the entire system itself is completely broken, and patching it won't help?
System Design is just a black box; just thinking about it makes me sick.
The framework is already broken, and you still want to rely on a few regulatory patches? Wake up.
This is exactly why I refuse to admit it; the root cause is rotten.
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ser_ngmi
· 11h ago
To put it simply, everyone is focusing on the superficial black swans, but no one sees that the entire system itself is rotten to the core.
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MaticHoleFiller
· 11h ago
Damn, now that's the truth... The entire system is a pile of shit, and everyone just wants to turn a blind eye.
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0xLostKey
· 12h ago
Basically, the entire system is rotten through, and it's not anyone's fault.
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 12h ago
Systemic decay is not just a problem with a few bad actors... the entire architecture is rotten from the ground up.
People fixate on isolated fraud cases—a few compliance failures here, some regulatory oversights there. That's missing the forest for the trees.
The real problem runs deeper. We're not looking at scattered bad actors anymore. It's systemic. The entire infrastructure is built on layers of opacity, misaligned incentives, and structural vulnerabilities that nobody wants to fix. Once you zoom out, you realize fraud isn't the exception—it's embedded in how the system operates.