🚨 BREAKING: NIKITA STRIKES INFOFI

The Spaces convened as X abruptly revoked API access to InfoFi/AttentionFi platforms, igniting a wide-ranging debate on motives, impact, and the future of crypto marketing on X. The host and many speakers argued the move is unlikely to fix bots or "AI slop," noting spam predates InfoFi and is incentivized by X’s monetization and Grok-boosted replies. Others, like Jonah, celebrated, claiming it will curb bots and improve engagement. Immediate fallout included Kaito, Cookie, and YouWho sunsetting reply apps and announcing pivots (e.g., Kaito Studio), while related tokens fell sharply. Practitioners shared execution best practices (tier-based access, KYC badges, real usage gating) and said properly run campaigns delivered ROI. Several guests framed X’s decision as protecting ad revenue and consolidating creator payouts, with reports of short notice to affected platforms. The room forecast a shift back to traditional and agency-led deals, with risks of undisclosed promotions, and urged creators—especially smaller ones—to pivot to authentic content, video, and brand-building while joining creator networks. Overall, participants expect InfoFi to evolve beyond X, data access to continue in gray areas, and quality-focused marketing to replace farmed replies.

X API Revocation: What Happened, Why It Matters, and How Key Voices See the Fallout

Event Overview

  • A sudden policy change from X (Twitter) led by Nikita Bier revoked API access for InfoFi/AttentionFi platforms (e.g., Kaito/Yapper, Cookie, YouWho). The revocation appears to have been executed immediately, with some platforms reporting maintenance mode and interrupted services.
  • The announcement reportedly included language suggesting affected developer businesses could transition to Threads or Bluesky, which many participants viewed as provocative and unprofessional.
  • The Spaces session itself experienced a technical “rug” (freeze/blank), adding to anxiety about platform stability.

Participants and Roles Noted

  • Chill Pill (host; referred to as QP/Chopo): Moderates, challenges assumptions, stresses the move is a scapegoat and not a real fix.
  • Dibs (creator): Calls decision “insane,” emphasizes creator revenue on X is poor, expects platforms to say they were blindsided.
  • Srini/Sereni: Flags controversial reactions (e.g., Fuji Penguins’ comment), highlights the “go to Threads/Bluesky” line as self-sabotage for X.
  • R2 (creator/marketer): Argues bots predate InfoFi, sees this as a policy/business decision; expects pivots and major changes; notes X fines, verification issues, and API pricing shifts.
  • Insomniac: Suggests gray-area data collection persists; offers conspiracy angle (Kaito needed X to cleanly kill Yaps).
  • Gigs (creator): Sees mixed reactions; presumes some platforms prepared.
  • Jonah (creator): Applauds the change, claims this solves bots (others dispute).
  • Bandit (creator): Says they knew ahead of time; mixed feelings but acknowledges X’s rights over API.
  • Andrew (creator, joined Reach agency): Predicts creator/KOL agencies will 10x; urges creators to keep building.
  • David (advisor): Says projects got short notice; expects agencies to absorb budgets; criticizes porn/OF slop remaining unaddressed.
  • Alisa (creator): Encourages small creators to persist; asserts X’s strength as a conversation network remains.
  • Emilios (technical): Notes third-party scraping is against X policy; everyone is in monitoring/wait-and-see mode.
  • Joey (Sir Joey): Focused on impact to ongoing campaigns; notes Lombard team working solutions; queries “AttentionFi vs InfoFi” distinctions.
  • Benjamin: Frames this as monetization-first move; worries about loss of democratization for smaller accounts.
  • Yang Xin (Flipster): Offers detailed execution perspective—Flipster used Kaito badges tied to real activity (KYC, trading volume/referrals), showing platform can be used to drive legitimate acquisition.
  • Yuri (Wallchain): Argues AI slop/bots existed pre-InfoFi and across platforms (YouTube/Instagram); says InfoFi’s efficiency (e.g., CPM ~$2) made it a serious ads competitor; sees this as recognition of InfoFi’s power and expects future evolution despite compliance hurdles.
  • Elano: Optimistic—fewer “bullets,” more direct paid content deals; expects fewer bot replies.
  • Akuma, Andres, Ola, Faded: Various takes—embrace change, pivot opportunities, caution against panic; Faded highlights market inefficiencies and need for genuine ROI.

Immediate Impacts and Signals

  • Operational: Platforms (Kaito/Yapper, Cookie, YouWho) posted “sunsetting” notices for current InfoFi products (Yaps/Snaps). Kaito announced “Kaito Studio” pivot toward tiered, traditional marketing while maintaining other products (Pro API, Launchpad, Markets). Cookie similarly sunsetting certain products.
  • Markets: Tokens tied to these ecosystems sold off sharply (Kaito down ~23% in two hours; broader “InfoFi tokens” under selling pressure). Traders discussed buying dips; host warned “no financial advice.”
  • Campaigns: Ongoing campaigns are most affected. Teams like Lombard are exploring transitional solutions. Some platforms (Wallchain) claim continued data access or limited technical effect.

Claimed Motivations (and Counterpoints)

X’s stated/implicit rationale

  • AI slop and bots: Nikita’s line-of-argument frames incentivized content and platform APIs as enabling spam/AI slop and bot engagement.
  • Monetization, payments, and Grok: Messaging around Grok “enhancing replies” and pushing creator payments suggests a broader strategy to centralize attention/engagement within X’s native systems.
  • Ads revenue protection: Multiple speakers suspect this is about reclaiming marketing budget from InfoFi platforms into X Ads.

Counterpoints from creators/marketers

  • Pre-existing bot/slop problem: Engagement groups, fake giveaways, and impression farming long predate InfoFi; Twitter’s own monetization changes (verified engagement, payout thresholds) incentivized impression farming.
  • Not a real bot fix: Revoking API access doesn’t remove bot farms or AI slop; slop is endemic across social networks.
  • Scapegoat narrative: The host (Chill Pill) and others see this as punishing a transparent layer while leaving long-standing issues and other slop (porn/OF farming, rage-bait) intact.
  • Democratization lost: InfoFi created transparent paths for small creators to monetize and for projects to allocate budgets efficiently, reducing gatekeeping/backdoor deals. Removing it risks re-expanding undisclosed shills and private KOL cartels.

Platform Responses and Pivots

  • Kaito: Sunsetting Yapper/Yaps; launching Kaito Studio focused on “tier-based traditional marketing,” retaining Pro API, Launchpad, and Markets; intends to work with projects to transition and continue using analytics.
  • Cookie: Sunsetting Snaps; communicated ongoing operations beyond Snaps.
  • YouWho: Announced sunsetting (Yaps); some debate among listeners whether they “knew” ahead of time.
  • Wallchain (Yuri): Positions as “AttentionFi,” claims efficiency advantages and suggests evolution continues despite current restrictions.

Operations and Data Access

  • Gray-area data collection: Developers previously used brokers/scraping to avoid high API fees; some expect a reversion to non-official methods. Emilios cautions that X enforces against such practices; compliance remains a risk.
  • API economics: Speakers noted X’s API became pricier and more constrained after Elon’s acquisition; service quality complaints increased; subscription costs for Premium/Verified rose.

Creator Economy: Who Wins, Who Loses

  • Likely winners: Authentic creators and established KOL agencies (e.g., Reach) that can deliver higher-quality content and measurable outcomes. Andrew expects a 10x opportunity for effective agencies.
  • Likely losers: Slop farmers posting repetitive, low-effort content; farm networks reliant on incentivized replies.
  • Small creators: Divided views—some fear loss of democratized monetization; others argue transparent agency/KOL lists and direct deals can still include smaller accounts if tied to quality and niche expertise.
  • Content shift: Several predict movement toward video, clipping value from Spaces/podcasts, and documented ROI. “Back to crime season” comments reflect expectations of undisclosed shills, testnet farming, giveaways, and “vibe coding” returning; others believe market maturity will reward substance.

Marketing ROI, Ads, and Measurement

  • Efficiency vs Ads: Projects used InfoFi for transparent distribution and analytics (leaderboards, mindshare, badges). Wallchain (Yuri) cites CPMs as low as ~$2, suggesting InfoFi outperformed many traditional channels.
  • Execution matters: Flipster (Yang Xin) showed how badges tied to real trading/referrals yielded legitimate acquisition via Kaito. Poor execution by some projects (throwing money at campaigns without controls) contributed to slop and backlash.
  • Ads angle: Tunic reported X insiders cited InfoFi and agencies “taking space from X Ads,” with X wanting to funnel projects into better ad tooling.

Bot/AI Slop Analysis

  • Prevalent across platforms: AI slop thrives on YouTube, Instagram, etc.; not specific to InfoFi. X’s push for verified engagement and payouts arguably increased incentive for impression-farming.
  • Grok and incentive loops: Encouraging AI-enhanced replies and creator payouts can create perverse incentives if detection and moderation aren’t robust.
  • Expected outcomes: Most speakers doubt revocation alone reduces bots/slop in a meaningful way. Some (e.g., Jonah) insist it will; others call that naïve.

Community and Ethical Issues

  • Communications tone: The “go to Threads/Bluesky” line was broadly viewed as antagonistic and off-brand, especially given affected platforms were paying X significant fees.
  • Racism/xenophobia: Srini noted “Fuji Penguins” comment about impacts on Indian SMEs that was seen as racist; participants expect more overt xenophobia resurfacing in replies as slop wars reignite.
  • Undisclosed promotions: Several anticipate a resurgence of non-disclosed KOL shills and backdoor deals—warning followers to be vigilant.

Market and Risk

  • Token drawdowns: Immediate sell-offs across InfoFi-related tokens (e.g., Kaito) as markets digested the shock. Some attendees opportunistically bought dips; others advocated calm and reassessment.
  • Project continuity: Ongoing campaigns and platform-specific products will need alternate measurement and distribution pathways; some firms claim continued access, others pivot or sunset.

Actionable Guidance for Stakeholders

  • Creators:
    • Focus on quality and niche expertise; invest in video, thoughtful threads, educational long-form, and measurable outcomes.
    • Build relationships with reputable KOL agencies and maintain disclosure standards to sustain trust.
    • Diversify platform presence (YouTube/TikTok/LinkedIn) without expecting wholesale migration from X.
  • Projects/Marketers:
    • Redesign campaigns to track real user actions (e.g., trading volume, referrals, onchain activity) and guardrails against bot participation.
    • Vet agency partners; ask for case studies, ROI benchmarks, and compliance posture regarding data access.
    • Prepare contingency plans for ongoing campaigns and communicate transparently to communities.
  • Platforms (InfoFi/AttentionFi):
    • Prioritize compliance and alternatives to official API while avoiding policy violations.
    • Lean into analytics, tiered creator programs, and brand-safe distribution; publish clear product roadmaps for transitions.
  • Community:
    • Expect more undisclosed promotions; demand transparency from creators; curate timelines aggressively.

Open Questions

  • Enforcement scope: Is API revocation total or selective? Will data brokers and scraping be actively policed at scale?
  • Ads product evolution: Will X roll out crypto-native ad tools that match InfoFi’s efficiency and transparency?
  • Monetization policies: Will X adjust payout structures to reduce slop incentives (e.g., better detection, quality scoring)?
  • Platform pivots: How robust will Kaito Studio and similar pivots be, and can they preserve the democratization benefits while improving quality?

Key Quotes and Distilled Viewpoints

  • Chill Pill: “This is a scapegoat… bots/slop existed long before InfoFi. Removing APIs won’t fix the core problems.”
  • Dibs: “Certifiably insane… expect blindsided platform statements. Creator revenue here is poor; this cuts a huge user base in one tweet.”
  • Srini: “The ‘move to Threads/Bluesky’ line is suicidal communications for X.”
  • R2: “Bots are out of control; fines and verification issues are piling up. Expect platform pivots; InfoFi won’t die—it will evolve.”
  • Jonah: “This solves bots 100%.” (Most disagree.)
  • Andrew: “Agencies and good creators will 10x. Keep building; thresholds remain but the opportunity grows.”
  • David: “Short notice from X; agencies will swallow budgets. Slop was rampant; sad that porn/OF slop remains untouched.”
  • Alisa: “Stay. X remains the best conversation network; small creators can still grow.”
  • Yang Xin (Flipster): “Properly executed badges tied to real activity turned InfoFi into real acquisition.”
  • Yuri (Wallchain): “AI slop/bots predate InfoFi and exist everywhere. InfoFi’s efficiency threatened X Ads; this is recognition of InfoFi’s power.”

Bottom Line

  • The revocation is real, immediate, and driven by a combination of slop/bot narratives, monetization consolidation, and ads revenue protection.
  • Most participants believe it will not solve the bot/AI slop problem on X, but it will reshape crypto marketing workflows: fewer open leaderboards and incentivized replies; more agency-mediated, tiered creator deals with stronger measurement and compliance.
  • Quality creators, disciplined projects, and transparent agencies are poised to benefit, while low-effort slop and farmed engagement will lose ground.
  • InfoFi won’t “die”—it will migrate, adapt, and likely re-emerge in more compliant, brand-safe, and ROI-driven forms.