Hive is a meme, not a blockchain.

In the world of social blockchains, Hive always positioned itself as a bastion of pure decentralization: an ecosystem where users create content, curate, and earn rewards without intermediaries. However, in recent weeks, Hive has stopped being synonymous with financial freedom and has become synonymous with a meme. The trigger was as simple as it was ridiculous: a veteran user publicly demanded $90,000 for “six years of services rendered” to the community.

The incident began with a post that quickly went viral on Hive forums and on X. The user, who called himself a historic contributor — moderator of groups, tireless curator, and project promoter since its early days — published a detailed thread listing his “invested hours”: moderated forums, written guides, organized events, and even code reviews. According to his calculations, six years of “selfless” dedication amounted to a retroactive salary of $90,000. He wasn’t asking for HIVE tokens or rewards within the ecosystem. He wanted fiat dollars, transferable to his bank account. “This is not begging, it is justice,” he wrote.

What followed was predictable and brutally funny. In less than 48 hours, the screenshot became a meme template. “Hive, the only place where you work for free for six years and then demand an executive salary” was one of the most shared. Others edited the image with the user sitting on a throne made of Lego blocks while demanding his “fair pay.” On TikTok and X, parodies appeared: “I also curated posts on Hive for 6 years, where’s my 90k?” Even crypto accounts with no connection to Hive joined the joke.

The thesis is clear: Hive did not become a meme because of a hack, a rug pull, or a price crash. It became a meme because this episode exposed the central contradiction of many decentralized communities. They sell themselves as heroic volunteering (“build the future!”), but when someone demands real payment, the house of cards collapses into collective laughter. Suddenly, everyone remembered that most “contributions” on Hive, Steem, and similar platforms have always been voluntary or rewarded with volatile tokens. Demanding a retroactive salary in dollars was like breaking the fourth wall: it revealed that, for many, “decentralization” meant free labor disguised as utopia.

The damage to Hive’s image is real, but perhaps necessary. The platform, which was already struggling to gain traction against Threads or Bluesky, is now the favorite joke of crypto skeptics. “Hive: where even the idealists want a paycheck” sums up the sentiment. In an ecosystem that promised economic empowerment, one user ended up proving the opposite: that six years of passion can end in an invoice that nobody wants to pay.

In the end, memes don’t lie. They show the crack. Hive is no longer just a blockchain; it is the perfect example of how economic reality always ends up turning digital utopias into material for laughter. And, by the way, into $90,000 worth of pure irony.

Disclaimer:

The information provided through this channel does not constitute financial advice and should not be construed as such. This content is for purely informational and educational purposes. Financial decisions should be based on a careful evaluation of your own circumstances and consultation with qualified financial professionals. The accuracy, completeness or timeliness of the information provided is not guaranteed, and any reliance on it is at your own risk. Additionally, financial markets are inherently volatile and can change rapidly. It is recommended that you conduct thorough research and seek professional advice before making significant financial decisions. We are not responsible for any loss, damage or consequences that may arise directly or indirectly from the use of this information.



0
0
0.000
0 comments