> pic related
TOPKEK DMM IS A SCAM
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thedefiant.substack.com
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I trust journalists fully and that's why I've sold all of my DMG
>literal used car salesman project uses classic used car salesman lies
who saw that coming
thedefiant.substack.com
>Partnerships with reputable companies like Coinbase are hailed as a badge of honor in crypto; a quality seal which often attracts token buyers. Unfortunately, those badges aren’t always real, and that may be the case with billionaire Tim Draper-backed DeFi project DMM. “The company is not aware of any partnership with DMM,” a Coinbase spokesperson said in an email. DMM CTO Zachary Rynes said in a Twitter message the partnership in part refers to the company’s integration with Coinbase Wallet’s WalletLink. But Coinbase Wallet is a separate product from Coinbase and WalletLink SDK is open to anyone who wants to integrate with it; it doesn’t constitute a partnership.
Fake news..
Team have already responded fudders BTFO
Someone sent an email to their customer support and they said they had no idea and it was reported as news
Lol
>tfw the fud only enabled them to reply while dropping bullish hints
This shit is actually going to explode, isn't it. Imagine not being at least 30% in.
>every deal that is in progress
that means they are not partners yet
hahahahahahahahaa
Price just hit $1 again after the teams rebuttal..
fudders seething
Scam lol
3 Kinds of Envy
1. Depressive envy
When someone you know does better than you, it often feels like you are a loser, a failure, or inferior. You think that their success reflects your failure.
>2. Hostile envy
Because the other person’s success has resulted in your feeling that you can’t stand it, you may want them to fail. You enjoy hearing about successful people getting divorced, arrested, or even having accidents. Schadenfreude is tempting, because if the other person fails — after succeeding — we feel better knowing we both have “lost.”
3. Benign envy
This is a neutral kind of envy; you observe that someone else has succeeded, and you admire them and give them credit for what they have done. Benign envy leads us to pay attention to what the other person is doing — because we often think we can learn something.
Many people experience both depressive and hostile envy. For example, one man described how he felt depressed when he thought about a colleague who got promoted. He then acknowledged that he also wished his colleague wouldn’t continue to succeed.