
Murphy|4月 17, 2026 07:00
Searching for projects on the chain can easily lead to pitfalls. A project with high transaction volume and community popularity, but what is the team's background and financing information? Is there any data manipulation? Most of the time, it's impossible to find out.
It's not that my judgment is poor, it's that information barriers limit my judgment. The announcement of OKX Boost's collaboration with RootData is an important step towards solving this problem.
In the past, the success of a project depended entirely on the project team's loud voice on Twitter and their efforts to attract attention. Now OKX Boost has released real transaction data, continuing to bring real user exposure to the project; RootData is responsible for project review and quality assessment, helping to improve the level of information disclosure.
Although it's a collaboration, I think RootData has made a big profit this time.
It not only produces reports, but also utilizes OKX's real transaction data to improve its database. Once the model is established, RootData's database becomes the "Bloomberg terminal" of Web3, filling up the moat directly.
For OKX users, this move optimizes the experience and enhances transparency. In the future, the projects seen on the Boost list will have an additional layer of information quality screening, no longer relying solely on oneself to be "scared".
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