🚨 It’s time we talk about how completely BIG TECH has failed us.

in Crypto Talk • 2 days ago

🚨 It’s time we talk about how completely BIG TECH has failed us.

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From Google to Facebook to Apple—every single one of them is complicit. We’re living in a massive surveillance state where these corporations track every click, every purchase, and every single conversation we have to serve us targeted ads and build their profiles. Yet, somehow, with all that invasive data collection and "advanced AI," they magically turn a blind eye to the massive, unchecked FRAUD happening right under their noses on their own platforms. šŸ›‘

Right now, their app stores and ad networks are completely infested with fraudulent actors. These scammers are continuously pumping out new, malicious applications and deepfake ads specifically designed to prey on non-technical, everyday people. And the most frustrating part? They are heavily targeting and exploiting the cryptocurrency space. šŸ’ø

Just recently, researchers found dozens of fake crypto wallet apps slipping right past Apple’s supposedly "strict" App Store vetting, and regulators are actively warning about a massive rise in crypto investment scams plastered all over Meta (Facebook and Instagram). Scammers hype up fake tokens, trick people into handing over their wallet keys, drain their savings, and disappear.

And what do the Big Tech gatekeepers do about it? Absolutely nothing.

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They let the scam ads run because they get paid for the clicks. They allow these exploiters to operate freely, completely ruining the ecosystem for the real individuals and legitimate developers who are working hard to build genuine, innovative Web3 and crypto companies. These legitimate startups have their reputations dragged through the mud and face impossible hurdles because Big Tech refuses to clean up its own backyard.

Instead of protecting people from getting ripped off, Google, Apple, and Meta continue to push their own sanitized narratives, collect their ad revenue, and let innocent people get absolutely exploited.

It’s completely unacceptable. We need to stop letting these trillion-dollar companies off the hook while they profit from our exploitation. If they have the technology to watch our every move, they have the technology to stop the scammers. They just choose not to. šŸ˜”šŸ“‰

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The core argument here—that Big Tech has centralized control over information, identity, and monetization—is becoming harder to ignore. Platforms that were supposed to democratize expression have effectively become gatekeepers, deciding visibility, reach, and even economic survival.

What’s interesting is that this isn’t just a ā€œsocial media problemā€ā€”it’s an infrastructure problem. When the same entities control data, compute, and distribution, decentralization becomes more of a narrative than a reality. Even studies on platforms like Steemit have shown that ā€œdecentralizedā€ systems often end up with concentrated control and reward manipulation.

That’s why the next phase isn’t just about blockchain—it’s about who runs the nodes and how open that layer really is.

Projects like node.quranium.org are worth watching in this context. Instead of just talking decentralization, they’re pushing toward accessible node infrastructure, which is where real power shifts happen. If individuals and smaller communities can actually participate at the node level—not just as users—then we might finally move beyond platform dependency.

Big Tech didn’t just fail us—it showed us exactly where the control points are. The question now is:
šŸ‘‰ do we rebuild the same structures on blockchain… or do we actually decentralize them this time?