Someone in the community said that a major exchange's coin listing quota was eaten up and complained about the high fees, but is that really the case?
Actually, the key is to see where these quotas are actually going.
There are often rumors online that exchanges are wildly "harvesting" project teams through listing fees. I looked into the recent 20 major exchanges' listing projects, and I found something interesting—many of the so-called "hidden fees" people talk about don't actually exist.
The real issue isn't the fees themselves, but rather that everyone still has some misunderstandings about this mechanism. The allocation, flow, and final transaction of quotas are all traceable. Instead of blindly following the crowd and saying they've been "eaten," it's better to do the math yourself. Sometimes, project teams claiming they've been scammed should also reflect—maybe they just didn't understand the rules from the start.
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MeaninglessApe
· 2025-12-20 14:46
Forget it. Instead of listening to those rumors, it's more reliable to analyze the data yourself.
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MetaMasked
· 2025-12-19 16:31
Wake up, those guys who got eaten probably just didn't understand the rules.
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GateUser-00be86fc
· 2025-12-19 16:03
Blaming the project team again, the exchange is never at fault, right?
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CrashHotline
· 2025-12-19 16:02
Instead of shouting every day that you're being eaten, why not check the data yourself?
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 2025-12-19 15:54
Here we go again with this set? I'm just asking, who has really looked at this data carefully?
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BearMarketBro
· 2025-12-19 15:50
Another project team getting cut is crying over there. Who told you not to do your homework?
Someone in the community said that a major exchange's coin listing quota was eaten up and complained about the high fees, but is that really the case?
Actually, the key is to see where these quotas are actually going.
There are often rumors online that exchanges are wildly "harvesting" project teams through listing fees. I looked into the recent 20 major exchanges' listing projects, and I found something interesting—many of the so-called "hidden fees" people talk about don't actually exist.
The real issue isn't the fees themselves, but rather that everyone still has some misunderstandings about this mechanism. The allocation, flow, and final transaction of quotas are all traceable. Instead of blindly following the crowd and saying they've been "eaten," it's better to do the math yourself. Sometimes, project teams claiming they've been scammed should also reflect—maybe they just didn't understand the rules from the start.