Back then, when EOS was hacked and the hacker's address was frozen, it was heavily criticized. Now, the same operation by Sui goes unpunished.
Decentralization? Laughable. Whether it's centralized or community-managed, let's first get the hacker's money back!
Sui's operation is truly clean and efficient:
Hacker's address? Frozen! Assets? Seized! Transactions? Fully audited on-chain!
Comparable to an on-chain FBI, with impressive execution.
Don't talk to me about "decentralization faith"; that stuff is now at most printed on T-shirts or hanging in white papers as decoration. When a risk event really happens, every chain instantly transforms into a "parent chain,"
controlling things more tightly than Ethereum, and managing with more flexibility than the Federal Reserve.
In the past, we thought:
> "Web3 is a future without intermediaries."
> Now we understand:
> "Web3 is a future where project parties can act as intermediaries at any time."
What was promised as "code is law" has now turned into "project party is law"—freeze when necessary, seize when needed, no nonsense, and you have no choice but to agree.
Did you think you were playing with on-chain governance?
In reality, it's just "on-chain self-indulgence"; if something happens, your wallet address won't even get a chance to explain.
So stop pretending to be a warrior; the basic logic in the crypto circle is just one:
"Make more money, lose less money." Faith isn't worth anything; profit is king.
It's not that I'm extreme; this is just a gentle reminder after the illusion of "decentralization" has been shattered.
Next time, don't ask "is it DeFi"; first ask if "Dev can Freeze it." #美国加征关税 #黑客攻击 #加密市场回调 $SUI