
Wizdom
2.4K posts

Wizdom
@Wizdroidd
Crypto Enthusiast || Creative Designer || AI Prompt Engr || Web Designer


👉 A personal note on the noise, the lies, and why I’m still building Lately, I’ve received a lot of hate, FUD, and even death threats from certain people in the community. Some of those threats have already been reported to the authorities. Despite all of that, I’m still here. I’m still building. And I’m still ignoring the noise. What I’m seeing lately is not criticism grounded in facts. It’s conspiracy theories, hallucinations, and people repeating accusations they never took the time to verify for themselves. So let’s address a few of them directly. 1) “You rugged the community” This claim falls apart the moment anyone looks at the public history of our work. We started building this project at the beginning of January 2022. We made the code public in March 2023. That is easily verifiable on GitHub across all repositories related to Phase One. For example, when we made the mobile app repository public, it already contained 229,000 lines of code written by our team during that period: github.com/ice-blockchain… Since then, our team has written millions of lines of code across the broader codebase over the past four years. So let me ask a simple question: does it make any sense that a team would invest years of work, millions in cost, build publicly, show its faces, attend conferences, go live on streams, and continue shipping for years — only to “rug” at the lowest point? If the goal had ever been to scam people, there were far easier moments to disappear. We did not disappear. We kept building. That matters. The work was real. The cost was real. The commitment was real. And it has all been visible for anyone willing to look. What is not serious is hiding behind anonymous accounts, refusing to verify public information, and then throwing around the word “scam” as if that replaces evidence. 2) “You changed from ICE to ION so you could mint tokens and dump on the community” This is another false narrative pushed by people who either do not understand how bridge contracts work, or do not care to understand. We did not migrate from ICE to ION because of some secret plan to mint coins and scam users. We were sued by Intercontinental Exchange over trademark infringement related to ICE. That legal battle went on for years. We won in the US, and then the fight continued in the EU. Based on legal advice, we changed the ticker from ICE to ION. That is why the migration happened. Reference: fxnewsgroup.com/forex-news/exc… Now let’s address the bridge contract allegation clearly. The fact that the ION BSC bridge contract contains mint functionality does not mean we can mint unlimited tokens whenever we want. That is how bridged assets work. The ION bridge between Ice Open Network and BSC follows a lock-and-mint / burn-and-unlock model: When a user bridges ION from Ice Open Network to BSC, the original ION is locked on the Ice Open Network side. Then the corresponding bridged amount is minted on BSC. When a user bridges back from BSC to Ice Open Network, the bridged ION on BSC is burned. The original ION is then unlocked on Ice Open Network. So yes, the BSC contract has mint functionality. It has to. That is part of bridge logic. It does not mean the team can arbitrarily create supply out of thin air. This is visible in the verified contract code on BscScan, where minting is part of the bridge mechanism involving validation logic and functions such as voteForMinting, not a simple “owner prints tokens” button: #code" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">bscscan.com/token/0xE1ab61…
The total supply remains 21B ION. Bridging does not create extra supply. It mirrors already locked tokens across chains. And if anyone wants to verify major allocations and wallets independently, they can do that on our official whales page: explorer.ice.io/whales You can clearly see the main pools there, including: Elector — staked coins from community users Rewards — community rewards pool, vested and locked BSC Bridge — coins allocated to bridge activity to BSC Team — team allocation, locked and vested Ecosystem Growth and Innovation — locked and vested Treasury — treasury allocation, also locked with vesting These addresses can also be cross-checked against our Coin Economics page: ice.io/coin-economics Everything is public. The contract is public. The distribution is public. The allocation model is public. So before repeating the claim that “the team can mint unlimited ION on BSC,” verify the data first. 3) “You stole $50M from investors in your previous project” This is another lie that keeps getting repeated by people who read one headline and then build a fantasy around it. I have never hidden the fact that I worked on another blockchain project before this one, and I have spoken openly about using the lessons from that experience to build ION better. The false “$50M stolen” narrative comes from a PR article that said we had raised approximately $50M. The reality is much simpler: at the time, we were in discussions with potential VCs who had shown interest. The money was never actually raised. That headline created a completely false impression, and now years later some people are using it as if it were proof of a crime. Use common sense for a second. If someone had really stolen $50M from investors while being publicly known, publicly visible, operating openly, and continuing to appear in public, do you seriously think that person would just be freely walking around with no consequences? The answer is obvious. No money was stolen. No $50M raise was completed. That narrative is fiction built on a misleading PR statement and amplified by people who want drama more than truth. 4) “You’re a hacker, ran a botnet, and all the rest of the nonsense” This is another story that has been twisted far beyond reality. Years ago, there was an article about a business I was involved in within the IP industry, and ever since then some people have used that to paint me as some kind of criminal mastermind. It is nonsense. What I can say is that in competitive internet industries, smear campaigns are real, trust attacks are real, and dirty tactics are common. I’ve seen that firsthand. A lot of people online read one article, make zero effort to understand the context, and then confidently spread the worst possible interpretation as if it were fact. Again, use logic. If I were what some of these anonymous accounts claim I am, do you think I would be operating publicly, showing my face, speaking live, attending events, and continuing to build in full view? People are free to question me. They are not free to replace evidence with fantasy. Where we are now As we announced a few days ago, we are not going anywhere. We are still building. Yes, for the time being we have chosen to develop closed-source, and we will make things public when we are ready. This time we are taking a different approach: building products that bring revenue and utility from day one, with a strong focus on users outside of crypto so adoption can be much broader and much faster. My history has taught me something very clearly: the bigger the project, the more noise comes with it. More lies. More hate. More people projecting their own frustration onto the team that kept working while they were busy posting theories. That changes nothing for me. We will keep building. We will keep shipping. We will keep fighting when necessary. And we will not stop because anonymous people on the internet decided to confuse fiction with facts. If you want to criticize, do it with evidence. If you want to verify, the data is public. If you want to spread lies, at least understand that I’m not going to bend to them. I’m still here. Still building. Still moving forward. That’s all that matters.


Trendlines, what a stupid concept.





































