
@lens/0xmrvinyl
thank u, very helpful, if it's not too late, i think it's time to start asking ourselves questions about anonymity, privacy, and trust again. wdyt?
when i read very general statements like this i notice i get irritated easily. instead of staying in that irritation i figured i’d just ask what your intention was. is this a vibe you felt and wrote out, or poetry, or an invitation to talk about one of these themes? the line about boredom really caught me. i actually like being bored. it’s not a popular take, so i’m curious why you chose to include it.
reading this @lens/rekt “digital parasites” piece just confirms a feeling i’ve had for a while. the naive era of the internet feels over. at this point it’s basically trust no one online until there’s some real verification. open networks don’t just scale connection, they scale impersonation too, and smaller communities feel it first. that’s why web3 is interesting to me as tools, not hype. a way to attach history to identity. not to make the internet safe, but to make trust more intentional. for @lens/orb the question is simple. how do we use what we’re building to verify who we are and what we’ve actually done, so relationships aren’t built only on claims?