We often talk about the fragmentation of liquidity in DeFi, but after pondering for a long time, I believe the real bottleneck is a deeper level of trust fragmentation. Each chain and each application feels like a closed community that requires you to re-register and start from zero to accumulate points. A terrible consequence of this is that the power of capital is infinitely amplified: large investors can quickly buy credibility anywhere with funds, while the long-term behavioral value of ordinary users is trapped within a single chain and cannot be effectively accumulated.
So when I see what @0xSoulProtocol Soul Labs is doing, my first reaction is that their approach is very right. Essentially, they are building a cross-chain, unified trust account system. Your on-chain behavior, contribution records, and community participation won’t be reset just because of cross-chain transfers. Instead, it’s like a social profile that follows you around. This change is fundamental:
First, it rebalances the power structure. The accumulation of credibility is no longer solely strongly correlated with the amount of capital. A small address that has been active on Ethereum for two years and has continuously contributed to several DAOs can smoothly transfer its accumulated trust value to a new chain and gain recognition from new protocols. This offers long-term thinkers real compound interest, rather than just liquidity advantages for whales.
Second, it provides project teams with an anti-inflation tool. Currently, many protocols engage in subsidy wars to make data look better, but most incentives are often drained by sybil attacks and arbitrageurs. If there is a verifiable, continuous identity layer, protocols can more accurately allocate weights and incentives to users with genuine history and long-term willingness. This can fundamentally improve incentive efficiency and community health.
I believe that the future explosion of Web3 applications will inevitably require a foundational, portable identity and reputation layer. It will not replace specific chains, but become a basic service that all on-chain applications can call upon. Whoever has a richer and more trustworthy interaction history will be able to gain higher initial weight and trust in the new ecosystem.
The value of attempts like Soul Labs lies exactly here. It is not just a technical protocol but also an exploration of establishing a civic identity system for the entire Web3 society. When trust can be accumulated and flowed, only then can we say goodbye to the awkwardness of constantly being a newcomer, and truly enter a new phase where value and behavior are deeply bound.
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We often talk about the fragmentation of liquidity in DeFi, but after pondering for a long time, I believe the real bottleneck is a deeper level of trust fragmentation. Each chain and each application feels like a closed community that requires you to re-register and start from zero to accumulate points. A terrible consequence of this is that the power of capital is infinitely amplified: large investors can quickly buy credibility anywhere with funds, while the long-term behavioral value of ordinary users is trapped within a single chain and cannot be effectively accumulated.
So when I see what @0xSoulProtocol Soul Labs is doing, my first reaction is that their approach is very right. Essentially, they are building a cross-chain, unified trust account system. Your on-chain behavior, contribution records, and community participation won’t be reset just because of cross-chain transfers. Instead, it’s like a social profile that follows you around. This change is fundamental:
First, it rebalances the power structure. The accumulation of credibility is no longer solely strongly correlated with the amount of capital. A small address that has been active on Ethereum for two years and has continuously contributed to several DAOs can smoothly transfer its accumulated trust value to a new chain and gain recognition from new protocols. This offers long-term thinkers real compound interest, rather than just liquidity advantages for whales.
Second, it provides project teams with an anti-inflation tool. Currently, many protocols engage in subsidy wars to make data look better, but most incentives are often drained by sybil attacks and arbitrageurs. If there is a verifiable, continuous identity layer, protocols can more accurately allocate weights and incentives to users with genuine history and long-term willingness. This can fundamentally improve incentive efficiency and community health.
I believe that the future explosion of Web3 applications will inevitably require a foundational, portable identity and reputation layer. It will not replace specific chains, but become a basic service that all on-chain applications can call upon. Whoever has a richer and more trustworthy interaction history will be able to gain higher initial weight and trust in the new ecosystem.
The value of attempts like Soul Labs lies exactly here. It is not just a technical protocol but also an exploration of establishing a civic identity system for the entire Web3 society. When trust can be accumulated and flowed, only then can we say goodbye to the awkwardness of constantly being a newcomer, and truly enter a new phase where value and behavior are deeply bound.