The greatest power on the internet is not traffic, but the power/authority to delete.


Whoever can delete can rewrite everything.
The world you see is actually a filtered version.
@Permaweb_DAO is taking this power directly.
Permaweb’s logic is not complicated: once content is written in, it no longer belongs to the platform.
No one can recover it, and no one can replace it—when data is cut loose from control, it begins to exist independently.
If you look at it from another angle, the traditional internet is like a whiteboard: you can erase and rewrite it anytime.
Permaweb is more like a wall—once it’s written on, it leaves a mark. This isn’t a difference in features; it’s a change in rules.
When the power to delete disappears, expression itself will change: people will be more cautious, but the information will also be more complete.
History is no longer curated by platforms; it’s naturally preserved.
You start to realize that publishing isn’t a one-time act—it’s a long-term presence. It’s not about being freer; it’s about carrying more weight.
When content can’t be deleted, expression truly becomes responsibility.
@Galxe @GalxeQuest @easydotfunX @wallchain #Ad #Affiliate @TermMaxFi
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