There is an interesting phenomenon in the tech industry: when a leading company suddenly shows exceptional enthusiasm for a small team, especially when they already have a similar product, it's often not about wanting to eliminate the competitor or buy the code, but rather about targeting that team. This is commonly known as Acqui-hire (talent acquisition).



Recently, there have been rumors that a top compliance platform intends to acquire Farcaster. If you look closely, this is essentially the same logic. Farcaster's founder, Dan Romero, worked at this platform for a full five years, and he wasn't just an ordinary employee—he was an executive responsible for international expansion and backend operations, a key figure close to founder Brian Armstrong.

The interesting part is that this exchange's Base app has long integrated Farcaster's content. Even after shifting focus to wallets, they still have a wallet product. What is truly scarce is talent like Dan. With such a background, the acquisition is more than just a business deal; it feels like a reunion with a close friend.

Similar stories are repeated in the tech circle. The case of Meta acquiring Manus is similar—Zuckerberg was interested not only in the tactile glove technology but also in the engineering elites who built it. In the competition among crypto exchanges at this stage, talent is becoming an increasingly critical factor. In the current phase of building new ecosystems like Base, finding founding teams that understand Web3 and have execution capability is worth far more than imagined. If this acquisition goes through, it essentially represents a proactive move by top platforms in the battle for Web3 talent.
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ProofOfNothingvip
· 01-18 06:17
Dan went from an internal executive to a founder and then was acquired. Isn't this a perfect closed loop... Truly a win-win situation.
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notSatoshi1971vip
· 01-16 13:49
In plain terms, the most valuable thing is people. Dan's five years of experience are right there; anyone would want him.
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MidnightSellervip
· 01-16 05:02
Dan is indeed impressive. Five years of executive experience is not for nothing, no wonder people are envious. Talent positioning is becoming more and more popular; buying code is not as good as buying brainpower. Web3 is now all about recruiting people. Whoever has a founding team that understands the industry will win. There's a mole. This wave of return feels quite ironic, huh? Honestly, good code is everywhere, but talents like Dan Romero, who understand both business and execution, are truly rare. Acqui-hire is now a common tactic, but this deal with Farcaster is indeed promising.
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GhostChainLoyalistvip
· 01-16 05:00
The industry competition has become so intense that it's all about recruiting people. Without quality talent, even the best product line is useless.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 01-16 04:56
This is the real truth. It looks like the acquisition is actually just recruiting people. Dan's background is indeed valuable.
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WagmiWarriorvip
· 01-16 04:56
Dan, this guy definitely has some skills. He came from the internal management team and started his own Farcaster. Now he's become the hot commodity... This is the magic of Web3. People who can get things done are always in demand wherever they go.
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CrashHotlinevip
· 01-16 04:51
Dan is really impressive. After five years as an executive, he went straight into entrepreneurship and achieved this. The circle is so small that he'll be poached soon... The truly scarce resource is still people. Anyone can write code, but not many can execute. The acqui-hire strategy has been fully understood in Web3. Don't be fooled by the large funding numbers; talent acquisition is the real core.
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RegenRestorervip
· 01-16 04:51
Dan, this guy really has good luck. Five years of executive experience and he's become a hot commodity. Big companies that truly understand the industry are like this—buying people is more important than buying products. Founders who understand Web3 are indeed rare. So, the most valuable thing about Farcaster is actually the founding team; the code is secondary. This strategy has never failed in the tech industry—talent is always the most expensive. But it also depends on what Dan wants; is returning really worth it?
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LiquidityWhisperervip
· 01-16 04:46
In simple terms, it's about recruiting people. Founders like Dan, who come from executive backgrounds, are indeed rare—understanding product, operations, and the Web3 ecosystem.
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