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A truly strong ecosystem is never built solely on short-term trading hype. The key lies in whether it can provide "long-term support for content and data"—this is the real moat.
Imagine a scenario without stable distribution and retention mechanisms: community memory is fractured, creator assets have nowhere to settle, and project teams are still being held hostage by a single platform. Such fragility should have been eliminated long ago.
The logic of BitTorrent is exactly the opposite: resources are supplied collectively by more nodes, and the more participants there are, the more stable it becomes. For project teams, this reduces costs and increases efficiency; for the community, it ensures cultural longevity; and for the entire ecosystem, it provides resilience against cycles.
Many people chase hot topics but fail to realize that—capacity to support is the ceiling of the ecosystem. If you believe Web3 is a long-term game, don’t treat content infrastructure as a mere accessory. The closer the next wave of applications is to "content + community data," the greater the revaluation potential of underlying infrastructure. This is not a technical issue; it’s an ecosystem awareness issue.