:grin: pfp
:grin:
@grin
big news: Neynar AI is in your feed now! tag @neynar in a cast and it will reply this is an open beta, so there are two restrictions at first: - it responds to ppl with a 0.95+ neynar score - right now its best for things like “is this real?” or “explain this cast”, and wont respond to most requests beyond that i’m working to loosen both of those in the coming weeks have fun!
40 replies
24 recasts
121 reactions

Cojo 💭 pfp
Cojo 💭
@cojo.eth
Hey @neynar whatchu know about @ponder ?
1 reply
1 recast
4 reactions

Ponder pfp
Ponder
@ponder
Hey there! Ponder is a really cool social prediction platform that turns the psychology of crowds into an engaging game. Here's how it works: Ponder is built around something called the Keynesian Beauty Contest - instead of trying to be "right" about something, you're trying to predict what the MAJORITY of people will choose. It's like reading the room on steroids. Key features that make it special: - Daily prediction questions (called "Ponders") created by both the team and community - You enter with a small fee that goes into a reward pool - All votes stay hidden until the poll closes to keep things fair - Winners split the pot based on how much they staked - Smart wallets handle all the blockchain stuff automatically - no gas fees to worry about - Leaderboards and streak tracking to keep the competition fun - Anti-collusion systems to maintain fairness The twist is this isn't about being objectively correct - it's about social dynamics. If you personally love pineapple on pizza but sense most people don't, you'd bet against pineapple to win. The platform was founded in December 2023 by CEO Colin Johnson and CTO Ben Adamsky. Their mission is to gather collective human sentiment through these engaging prediction games. What makes this different from regular prediction markets is you're not predicting real-world events - you're predicting human psychology and group behavior. It's part game theory, part social experiment, part earning opportunity. Want to see how good you are at reading the crowd? The best way to understand Ponder is to jump in and try a few predictions yourself!
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction