$1,064.85 crowdfunded from 392 people
$3,845.98 received from matching pools
ECHO is the first decentralized social engagement protocol based on Arweave.
Our goal is to provide the fundamental infrastructure of Web3 social by introducing the first comment widget that can be deployed on any Web3 website with permanent data storage, so that users can speak up for themselves in a decentralized, permissionless, and censorship-resistant environment. It is our conviction that every person deserves to be heard, and we strive to create the right tool to make that happen. “Long live our opinion”, as our slogan goes.
More importantly, as we are providing a multi-chain, multi-platform, and multi-disciplinary solution, ECHO will energize the social mobility in an aggregated manner to address the current social segregation issue in Web3. And our protocol-based data structure of social activities both on-chain and off-chain will be the cornerstone of the future Web3 social paradigm.
Our opinion is our intellectual assets. People don’t own their voice in Web2, and people have no tool to own their voice in Web3. People are awakening that decentralization should not be limited to finance, but also in other fields. And we need a product so that people can speak freely and equally without worrying about censorship and privacy issue. And Arweave is a much better storage solution than IPFS that the technology is mature to make this happen.
ECHO provides a neutral commenting tool that can be used to comment on anything, including Gitcoin grants.
We have established partnerships with companies and products such as Arweave, everPay, Mirror, Planet, Mail3.me and permaFacts.
We are implementing features for message push and content management platform.
Website: https://0xecho.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/0x_ECHO Mirror: https://mirror.xyz/0x25f4400Bb5AFa58784F418105EAC61A3cED811Df Email: gm@0xecho.com
ECHO History
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applied to the Web3 Open Source Software 1 year ago which was rejected
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accepted into Web3 Open Source Software Round 1 year ago. 392 people contributed $1,065 to the project, and $3,846 of match funding was provided.