Recently, I discovered an interesting phenomenon: many crypto projects promote ecosystem collaborations by simply posting a signed contract photo. And then? Users have no idea whether the other party truly has regulatory qualifications, whether the partnership has actually been implemented, or if the agreement is just a show.
Lista DAO has introduced a new approach—the Ecosystem Collaboration Qualification Public Display Wall. At first glance, this might seem unremarkable, but upon closer inspection, it’s different.
What is the usual routine? "We have reached a strategic partnership with XX organization," and then nothing more. But the public display wall reveals all the details. The scope of business of the partner organization, compliance license numbers, regulatory jurisdiction—these things that were once hidden in a black box are now exposed. Even more impressively, core agreement terms (duration, scenarios, responsibilities) and progress reports can be checked directly.
I specifically looked at the information pages for cross-border payments and trust collaborations. Singapore MAS licenses and Hong Kong SFC license numbers are clearly listed, and the offline payment merchant list and transaction verification portals for lisUSD are also accessible. This is no longer a case of "I say there is a partnership, so there is a partnership," but rather verification under sunlight.
What does this mean? Previously, when discussing projects, the focus was on "whether there is a partnership." Now, it shifts to "what actual benefits can these collaborations bring me." From information asymmetry to transparent rules, this change actually indicates that users are becoming more rational—no longer falling for hype narratives.
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Recently, I discovered an interesting phenomenon: many crypto projects promote ecosystem collaborations by simply posting a signed contract photo. And then? Users have no idea whether the other party truly has regulatory qualifications, whether the partnership has actually been implemented, or if the agreement is just a show.
Lista DAO has introduced a new approach—the Ecosystem Collaboration Qualification Public Display Wall. At first glance, this might seem unremarkable, but upon closer inspection, it’s different.
What is the usual routine? "We have reached a strategic partnership with XX organization," and then nothing more. But the public display wall reveals all the details. The scope of business of the partner organization, compliance license numbers, regulatory jurisdiction—these things that were once hidden in a black box are now exposed. Even more impressively, core agreement terms (duration, scenarios, responsibilities) and progress reports can be checked directly.
I specifically looked at the information pages for cross-border payments and trust collaborations. Singapore MAS licenses and Hong Kong SFC license numbers are clearly listed, and the offline payment merchant list and transaction verification portals for lisUSD are also accessible. This is no longer a case of "I say there is a partnership, so there is a partnership," but rather verification under sunlight.
What does this mean? Previously, when discussing projects, the focus was on "whether there is a partnership." Now, it shifts to "what actual benefits can these collaborations bring me." From information asymmetry to transparent rules, this change actually indicates that users are becoming more rational—no longer falling for hype narratives.