DUO Guest Author @thelastdash with Things You Should Never do in a Web 3 Community

Welcome to a DUO guest author post by @thelastdash
If you are interested in being a guest author be sure to let us know, 50% profit share on the post and 5 DUO tokens are up for grabs!
More info and rules about the guest author spot here

If you need any help or have questions about DUO, the team is here for you! Leave a comment or reach out on discord

@bitcoinman gave @thelastdash an advance that is being paid back in the form of guest author posts however @bitcoinman will let his share go to @duo-curator.

This post is written by a guest author. The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the DUO team. The DUO team check the guest author posts with ai and plagiarism detection tools


Top 3 DUO stakers

More info about this coming soon

1 @rainbowdash4l

banner in the works

2

3 @wearelegion

banner in the works


In today's digital age, the Web 3 communities are increasingly shaping online spaces, as more individuals connect daily for a decentralized movement. These Web 3 communities are founded upon the principles of freedom of speech, openness, collaboration and inclusivity. Nevertheless, there are some behaviors or actions that one needs to avoid doing in order not to break unwritten rules and continue playing a positive part in the community. In this article we will explore some of these behaviors or actions that we have to avoid while on a Web 3 community.

Web 3 community is a group of crypto enthusiasts and investors who believe in a community project. They devote their assets and efforts to support the project and invest resources and time. The aim is to see how the project succeeded through a combined effort. Within such communities, discussions and interactions of members mainly revolve around the community interest, usually crypto. The thing that connects people, whether a meme token or just a speculative digital asset. In such a community, there are some unwritten rules that one should be careful not to break.

While the Web 3 community may seem an ideal place to promote a project you are involved in, constantly promoting yourself or projects can be considered spam. Self-promotion is the fastest way to be ignored in a community, and maybe leads to a ban. It sends only one message to the community, which is that you are not a proponent of the community, and you should not be seen around. Instead, use the time to create real connections of engagement and contribute to the community in meaningful ways. In this way, you will gain confidence and respect for other members and attract potential collaborators for your project.

Although everyone in the community is equal, there are those that are more equal than others. These are the people I called the OGs. They are the first investors and whales of the community project, any abuse that is done against this set of people is an abuse to the community. But the question is: How can you know who the OGs or whales are in the community? If you don't want to get into trouble in the community, pay attention to what you say and how you respond to people during interactions. One thing we need to know is that each project has the best interest for all their best investors and does everything in their power to protect them. If you step on the wrong leg, the community team certainly acts and you will have trouble.

Each web 3 community has a product that is the focus of the community. Any action that seems to compete with the community product is against community activities. An example is when one who tries to promote a crypto project in another crypto project community in a very obvious way to get recommendations. You simply prevent people's attention from the product of your host community to another competitive community product. Although no one can say anything about your actions, the community team is watching everything you do, and will certainly deal with you behind the scenes.

Although everyone says GM in a community, you need to know that not everyone is your friend. In fact, no one is your friend. There are reasons why most people are hiding behind anonymous avatars on a Web 3 community. Everyone is trying to hide their identity and what they are from the public. Talking about your victory too often exposes you to potential fraudsters and hackers who can find a way to use your vulnerability to get into what you sing about.

No matter how large or small the size of your crypto portfolio, never be tempted to reveal it in the community. You can talk about the assets you own, you can even write about them, but never reveal the actual amount of your portfolio worth. Although there is nothing hidden on the blockchain, no one has a name on their wallets, except for some exceptional cases like Hive's accounts. Let anyone who wants to know what is your portfolio worth do it on their own, you do not have to attract unnecessary attention in the community.

One thing you should know is that none of the things mentioned in this post is a set out rule in any we 3 community, but there are as unwritten rules that when they are broken, they are able to give someone trouble. Whatever it is, stay safe and be careful with what you say and do in any web 3 community.

Select a repo


DUO Guessing game

Yesterdays winning number 15
No winners so we moving up the prize
Current prize 0.2 DUO
Range 1-11
Leave your guess in the @duo-promo comment on this post
good luck!

Most meaningful comment goes to @caspermoeller89
and he gets 0.2 DUO !

The most meaningful comment on this post gets 0.2 DUO

You can trade DUO with the links bellow
https://tribaldex.com/trade/DUO
https://hive-engine.com/trade/DUO

HOC/DUO discord link

Link to the DUO white paper here

If you no longer want to be tagged in the guest author posts please just let us know and we will remove you. Thanks!

@itharagaian @wearelegion @oahb132 @borniet @servelle @juanvegetarian @thebighigg @bulliontools @bitcoinman @crazyphantombr @dbooster @freecompliments @caspermoeller89 @trumpman @tokenpimp @enginewitty @bradleyarrow @daveks @trautenberk @melinda010100 @shiftrox @tengolotodo @esmeesmith @davedickeyyall @youloseagain @gwajnberg @adamada @cwow2 @flemingfarm @elevator09 @imagenius.dac @thewobs94 @misterc @postapopgamer @justclickindiva @godfish @eolianpariah2 @rainbowdash4l @sylmarill @scoutroc @costanza @hiveph @rollingstar87 @coolguy123 @lourica @stuartcturnbull @ronnie10 @gratefuleveryday

Posted Using INLEO



0
0
0.000
25 comments
avatar

Get your guesses in here

0
0
0.000
avatar

@thelastdash
Well written article! 👏🏼
And some of those advice are some sound advice. Not revealing the actual holdings are in general a good idea, not just on web3 social media's 😃

The thing that confuse me the most about all this is

select a repo

😆

0
0
0.000
avatar

Even me, I am confused about it, and don't know how that comes in. Perhaps it is through the medium of sending the post to Duo that, that might come about. @bitcoinman can check that out.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Pretty good tips but it's also sad that you have to hide yourself and have to make a secret about the amount of crypto or money you have. I've read a book where they said the opposite. You should talk about money and investments so you can learn the right things which you don't learn in school.
!BBH !ALIVE !DUO

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations @duo-curator! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You have been a buzzy bee and published a post every day of the week.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

0
0
0.000
avatar

Even when we have a free expression we should know that some behaviors and actions can inflict in community regulations, it is good to know that you try to share your knowledge by educating the community.

Thank you for your participation as Author Post!

0
0
0.000