So, RootData’s got this new project claiming thing, right? Apparently, it lets teams verify and manage their profiles, which somehow boosts transparency scores by 30% and sends traffic through the roof-220% jump, they say. Big whoop. What’s next, they’re gonna cure world hunger with a blockchain?
- RootData’s bragging that over 20 projects-Bitway, Flock, Morph, Solv, and some other fancy names-claimed their profiles last week. Wow, 20. That’s almost a whole season of Curb Your Enthusiasm episodes.
- Certified projects that bother to update their info see a 30% spike in transparency scores. Great, now everyone’s transparent. What’s next, politicians telling the truth?
- Over 120 projects are now certified, controlling their tokenomics, investor data, and syndicating to 220+ partners. Because who doesn’t love more control in their life? Except maybe my ex-wife.
Web3 asset data platform RootData-yeah, I know, another Web3 thing-says its project claiming feature is taking off. Big names like Bitway, Flock, Morph, and Solv are “settling in.” Settling in? Sounds like they’re moving into a retirement home. Anyway, completing the claim process apparently makes their transparency scores jump 30%, which somehow translates to a 220% increase in “heat value.” Heat value? Is this a dating app or a blockchain platform?
Claiming: Turning Static Listings into Managed Profiles (Because Who Doesn’t Love More Work?)
According to RootData’s explainer-which I’m sure was riveting-teams can claim their projects for free, get verified, and manage key datasets. Tokenomics, investor lists, team members, roadmaps-you name it. And with a one-click sync system, updates go live across 220+ partners. One click? That’s it? What’s the catch? Oh right, it’s Web3. There’s always a catch.
RootData’s transparency score measures “completeness and timeliness of project information.” Because nothing says trust like being timely. Last time I checked, my cable bill was timely, and I still hate it. Anyway, they claim projects with higher disclosure levels perform better. Shocking. Turns out, when you’re not shady, people trust you more. Who knew?
Transparency: The New Black (Box)
RootData and Binance Square are telling teams to treat transparency as a competitive edge, not a chore. Because nothing screams “I’ve got nothing to hide” like voluntarily sharing all your data. Meanwhile, projects missing key info risk being labeled “black box” listings. Great, now we’re judging projects like we judge exes-“too mysterious” is just code for “probably lying.”
So, if you claim your profile and keep it updated, you get higher transparency scores, better rankings, and broader syndication. Because in Web3, if you’re not syndicating, are you even trying? Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got a pretzel to argue with.
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2026-04-03 20:07