Before #币安投票下币 , I saw a sea of foreigners in the organizational structure, and I was a bit worried that Binance was really moving towards the direction of traditional large enterprises, suffering from the 'big company disease,' becoming increasingly outdated and distancing itself from users.

It's obvious that I can feel that the recent actions finally have a bit of the momentum from when it started, especially after that heyibinance 6-hour Space. Although this vote to delist isn't exactly a benefit for users, it does purify the industry environment:

Continuously adding new coins without removing the old ones, isn't that just dispersing funds? It would be better to remove a bunch of zombie coins to avoid selling the shell and then coming back to play tricks for harvesting. Moreover, community voting for delisting also eliminates the risk of being pressured by project parties, providing a good reason.

I looked at the observation list; many of the coins in there are memories of the early batch, and they were once extremely popular. For example, the jaw-dropping $Jasmy, the top choice of the DeFi era $Bal $Badger, and the representative of BSC's glorious period $Alpaca. The most wronged should be $GPS, which has recently taken the heat for MM.

One issue is that Binance hasn't said how many will be delisted this time; it could happen that project parties who don't want to be delisted come out to buy votes for other exchanges, right? 'Dead friends don't die, poor friends do'; this could be seen as a benefit.

Currently, I would choose $CREAM (the ATM of Maji) $SNT (the first generation blockchain WeChat) $BETA (a DeFi that has never pumped but only dumped since being listed on Binance) $MBL (on-chain video distribution, thoroughly debunked narrative), and I haven’t thought of another one, so I’ll just pick an ugly one at random.