📢 Gate Square Exclusive: #WXTM Creative Contest# Is Now Live!
Celebrate CandyDrop Round 59 featuring MinoTari (WXTM) — compete for a 70,000 WXTM prize pool!
🎯 About MinoTari (WXTM)
Tari is a Rust-based blockchain protocol centered around digital assets.
It empowers creators to build new types of digital experiences and narratives.
With Tari, digitally scarce assets—like collectibles or in-game items—unlock new business opportunities for creators.
🎨 Event Period:
Aug 7, 2025, 09:00 – Aug 12, 2025, 16:00 (UTC)
📌 How to Participate:
Post original content on Gate Square related to WXTM or its
In the current entrepreneurial ecosystem, it is not difficult to find that many projects have serious valuation bubbles. These projects often excel at telling grand visions, but their actual value is hard to support their high valuations. This phenomenon inevitably reminds one of certain exaggerated behaviors in the matchmaking market.
However, in this extravagant ocean, there are still some projects that stand out as particularly precious. Take Camp as an example; it has demonstrated extraordinary strength in the 'AI + content' track. Unlike other projects, Camp has not fallen into hollow conceptual marketing but has focused its attention on a specific and crucial issue: how to record the remix process of content on the blockchain and achieve automatic profit sharing.
The core of Camp lies in tracking the evolution of content, recording who adapted whose work, how it was adapted, and the usage and revenue distribution of the final content. This approach directly targets the core of content value circulation, aiming to protocol the remix network and establish a complete set of standards.
In contrast, Story Protocol is more like a copyright registration system, and there are essential differences in positioning and functionality between the two. Camp's approach not only protects the rights of original creators but also encourages creators to engage in re-creation, promoting a positive cycle of content and maximizing value.
When assessing projects, we need to be wary of those high-valued projects that are solely supported by 'hype'. Truly valuable innovations should focus on solving real problems rather than promoting empty concepts. The example of Camp reminds us that when selecting investment targets or partners, we should pay more attention to the underlying logic and business model of the project, rather than being misled by flashy packaging.
Of course, this does not mean that all high-valued projects lack substance. The key is for us to keep our eyes open and carefully identify the true value and potential of the projects. In this rapidly changing technological world, projects that can solve real problems and create genuine value are the ones that deserve our attention and anticipation.