This one just dropped and I think the crypto community needs to pay attention — especially those of us who use X to build audiences.

X (formerly Twitter) announced it will automatically lock accounts that post crypto-related content for the first time, requiring identity verification before the account can continue. The measure is specifically targeted at killing crypto phishing scams, which have become one of the most prevalent fraud vectors on the platform in 2026. OANDA

On the surface, this sounds like good news — and in many ways it is. Crypto Twitter has been absolutely overrun with fake airdrop links, impersonation bots, and wallet-draining scams. Anything that reduces that noise is a net positive for the ecosystem.

But there's a real downside worth discussing. The verification requirement creates friction that disproportionately affects new, legitimate creators. Someone posting their first crypto analysis or sharing a news article shouldn't have to jump through identity verification hoops before their post is visible. That chilling effect on new voices is real.

There's also the centralization angle. A single platform controlling which crypto accounts can operate freely — based on opaque algorithms — is exactly the kind of centralized gatekeeping that blockchain was meant to make irrelevant. The irony is not lost on me.

For context: platforms like Lens Protocol and Farcaster have been building decentralized social infrastructure precisely because of scenarios like this. When X tightens the screws on crypto content, it accelerates migration to censorship-resistant alternatives.

My take: protect yourself from scams, yes. But also build your presence on platforms you actually own. This Binance Square account, for example, exists on infrastructure that can't lock you out over a crypto post.

What platform do you use most for crypto content besides Binance Square? Drop a comment 👇

Not financial advice.

#CryptoTwitter #Web3 #Binance #BinanceSquare #DecentralizedSocial