POB Looses its Value

Proof of Brain and its POB token appear to have entered a critical decline, raising serious concerns about long-term viability rather than short-term market fluctuation. Trading activity is extremely thin, with buy orders rarely exceeding twenty dollars, which signals a lack of confidence and almost no organic demand. While low liquidity alone does not prove a scam, the broader context is troubling.
Core developers seem to have disengaged, updates have stopped, and there is no functional front-end website to support POB blogging, making participation difficult even for motivated users. A decentralized protocol still depends on active builders, interfaces, and social momentum, and without those elements the system slowly collapses under its own inertia. Decentralization does not automatically create value or demand, especially when token distribution is concentrated among unfriendly or inactive stake holders who neither build nor curate. In this case, governance by silent stakeholders discourages newcomers and freezes innovation.
The absence of communication, roadmap clarity, or visible maintenance creates the impression of abandonment, which further suppresses demand and reinforces a negative feedback loop. At this stage, the platform feels less like an evolving ecosystem and more like a stalled experiment kept alive only by legacy holders. That does not definitively confirm malicious intent, but it does suggest structural failure. A dying platform can look like a scam from the outside even if it began with honest goals. Without renewed development, community coordination, and a usable interface, Proof of Brain risks becoming irrelevant, regardless of its decentralized design or past ambitions.
Time, transparency, and leadership are required to restore trust, liquidity, and meaningful participation globally.