To truly move funds onto the blockchain and operate them, the first step is to overcome a key barrier: financial infrastructure must be sufficiently open. Only then can funds flow freely worldwide according to users' own wishes. Everyone should have the right to choose how to manage and use their funds — this is the very possibility that open technology can provide.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 16h ago
That's correct, but the reality is that most people are still using centralized exchanges. True free flow is still a long way off.
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MergeConflict
· 16h ago
Basically, it's a decentralized dream, but when it comes to the critical moment, who will back it up?
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CryptoNomics
· 16h ago
alright, but here's the thing—if you run the correlation matrix on actual on-chain liquidity patterns vs. regulatory capture across major chains, the "free flow" hypothesis breaks down pretty fast. statistically significant? sure, under ceteris paribus conditions that basically don't exist.
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rug_connoisseur
· 16h ago
It sounds good, but how many projects are truly implemented? Most of them are just empty talk.
To truly move funds onto the blockchain and operate them, the first step is to overcome a key barrier: financial infrastructure must be sufficiently open. Only then can funds flow freely worldwide according to users' own wishes. Everyone should have the right to choose how to manage and use their funds — this is the very possibility that open technology can provide.