DYOR stands for โ€œDo Your Own Research.โ€ Itโ€™s the golden rule of the industry and serves as both a strategy and a disclaimer. Because crypto is decentralized and largely unregulated, it becomes a magnet for hype, and one tends to see unfair promotion of coins and outright scams. When someone tells you to DYOR, they are reminding you that you shouldn’t put your money into a project just because a TikTok influencer or a random Twitter account said itโ€™s “going to the moon.”

If one is really interested in a particular project, they’d start looking under the hood. This would include reading the project’s white paper to understand its technical goals. One will want to know its tokenomics and how the coin will be distributed. You would also want to know if the project solves a real-world problem or if it is just a digital meme.

It would be important to read up on who the founders are and if their identity is public or anonymous. It would also help to see if the discussions around the project on Discord or Telegram are not just about hype and price prediction but have a technical aspect to it as well. Youโ€™ll often see DYOR at the end of an analysis or a news post.

Ultimately, DYOR is about personal accountability. In crypto, you are your own bank; if you lose money because you followed a blind tip, thereโ€™s no “undo” button.

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