The post POAP Moves to Maintenance Mode as Founders Eye Next Generation of Digital Collectibles appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The pioneering Web3 attendanceThe post POAP Moves to Maintenance Mode as Founders Eye Next Generation of Digital Collectibles appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The pioneering Web3 attendance

POAP Moves to Maintenance Mode as Founders Eye Next Generation of Digital Collectibles

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The pioneering Web3 attendance protocol will stop onboarding new issuers on March 16, as its team turns its attention to building open infrastructure for digital collectibles.

POAP, the blockchain-based platform that turned event attendance into digital collectibles, is entering maintenance mode — ending active development on its current platform after nearly seven years as a fixture of the Web3 community.

In a post on X, POAP co-founder and general manager Isabel Gonzalez announced that starting March 16, 2026, new issuers will no longer be able to create POAPs through the platform’s issuer interfaces. Existing issuers, integrations, and collector-facing tools will continue to function, but the platform itself will no longer receive active development.

“Some operations may also run more slowly as we reduce the resources allocated to the service,” Gonzalez wrote.

The decision, she said, reflects both what POAP accomplished and where its growth ultimately stalled.

“The platform found a clear niche and a group of users who made thoughtful use of it,” she acknowledged. “At the same time, POAP did not expand much beyond that niche.”

From ETHDenver Hackathon to Web3 Staple

POAP’s origins trace back to February 2019, when founder Patricio Worthalter distributed the first digital badges to attendees of the ETHDenver hackathon. Participants claimed the tokens through a link distributed at the event, receiving an ERC-721 NFT that served as a verifiable blockchain record of their attendance.

The idea caught on quickly.

By 2020, POAP migrated to the xDai sidechain — now known as Gnosis Chain — to reduce gas fees and scale issuance. As the crypto ecosystem expanded, POAPs became a popular way for communities to recognize participation and create on-chain memories.

Discord communities, DAOs, DeFi protocols, and metaverse platforms adopted POAPs to reward engagement, gate token drops, experiment with governance, and build loyalty programs.

The platform’s reach soon extended beyond crypto-native communities. Brands including Adidas, Porsche, Johnnie Walker, and TIME Magazine experimented with POAP-based campaigns to engage event audiences and reward participation.

In 2022, POAP raised $10 million in a seed round led by Archetype, with participation from investors including Sapphire Sport, Collab+Currency, Protocol Labs, and MetaCartel Ventures.

By mid-2023, more than 6.7 million POAPs had been minted by over 37,000 unique issuers.

Growth That Hit a Ceiling

Despite that adoption, Gonzalez’s announcement acknowledges the limits of POAP’s model.

The platform successfully carved out a niche — particularly within crypto-native communities — but struggled to evolve into the broader infrastructure for digital collectibles that the team had originally envisioned.

The company had already hinted at sustainability challenges. In April 2023, POAP announced it would begin charging commercial clients for access to its services, ending years of unlimited free minting for all users. At the time, Gonzalez said the change was intended to support the platform’s “long-term sustainability.”

That shift appears not to have generated enough momentum to sustain further expansion.

“Running POAP has made it clear to us that digital collectibles are still an emerging medium,” Gonzalez wrote. “The tools that exist today often reflect the constraints of the systems they were built on, rather than the needs of the communities using them.”

A Pivot, Not a Shutdown

Gonzalez framed the move not as a shutdown but as a strategic shift.

The POAP team is now focusing on building what she described as “a standard for open collectibles” alongside a platform that would offer a canonical implementation — a more permissionless and sustainable foundation for digital collectibles.

“If collectibles are going to become a durable part of how people organize events, recognize participation, and preserve shared moments, they will need better foundations,” she wrote.

The current POAP platform could eventually connect to whatever system the team builds next, though Gonzalez said those details remain undecided.

For existing issuers, the immediate impact is limited. Their drops remain intact, integrations continue to function, and previously minted POAP tokens will remain on-chain.

The main change taking effect March 16 is that new issuers will no longer be able to join the platform.

The End of an Era for Web3 Memory-Making

POAP’s move into maintenance mode marks the end of an important chapter in Web3’s social infrastructure.

For years, a POAP badge was one of the simplest and most recognizable signals in the crypto community — proof, literally, that you were there. Wallets filled with POAPs became a kind of on-chain résumé, documenting conferences attended, communities joined, and moments shared across the crypto ecosystem.

Whether the next iteration of what POAP is building will recapture that cultural significance — and expand it beyond crypto-native communities — remains an open question.

But Gonzalez closed the announcement with a note of gratitude for the community that helped shape the platform.

“Many of the most interesting ideas about digital collectibles did not come from us but from the people experimenting with the tools,” she wrote.

“Thank you to everyone who helped test the limits of what this first version could do.”

Source: https://thedefiant.io/news/nfts-and-web3/poap-moves-to-maintenance-mode-as-founders-eye-next-generation-of-digital-collectibles

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