Flip the Binance Square Creator Task Desk, flip to @Solv Protocol is doing task rewards.

It has been a while since I heard news about $SOLV, but whenever it comes up, I definitely think of the following 3 things:

1. "Reborn with 1800 BTC, this time I want to get back everything that Solv owes me! Through issuing tokens!"

The lady with 1800 bitcoins caused quite a stir; those interested can look it up. At that time, it brought significant public relations challenges to the Solv team, and if not handled well, it could have led to disaster.

Looking at the subsequent storyline, the Solv team successfully navigated this challenge. I have to say that even bad publicity can be turned into good, especially when the team can ultimately manage to smooth things over, turning bad situations into good ones.

2. At the beginning of June this year, an article titled "Singapore's Total Crackdown on Web3" by author Spinach Spinach circulated throughout Web3, forcing the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to come forward and explain, "We are not as he said, there was no total crackdown; we are just regulating the Web3 offshore teams in Singapore according to the policy set three years ago, which requires them to apply for a license." This author was previously also a member of the Solv team, but later briefly went to a public chain in Hong Kong and left.

It feels like the job status of Web3 workers is very unstable; many altcoin projects will lay off staff after issuing tokens, leaving only core development and a small amount of market operations, with everything else outsourced. A large number of altcoin projects sell NFTs and scam investors, and before TGE, they rug pull. The better ones may take advantage of issuing tokens to cash out and lie flat to restart the next altcoin.

Apart from working in public chain exchanges and some major protocols related to financial infrastructure, the most stable jobs are probably freelance programmers and KOLs. Programmers writing smart contracts are in urgent demand for any project; they switch to the next one after completing a product. KOLs with basic user traffic can take on various project operations and promotions as outsourcing; if they do well, they can even form their own teams to do agency work and take on complete project promotion planning and execution orders.

3. The price of $SOLV plummeted after launching on exchanges in January, and many KOLs criticized the project team for high opening prices leading to losses for retail investors at any time. However, looking back at the price today, with BTC prices continuously rising over the past six months, Solv's BTC staking business has naturally benefited from the favorable market conditions, and Solv's price has shown fluctuations that look quite healthy.

#BTCUnbound