also a lot of "rugpull" comments are a meme that get repeated in any uncertainty or accident, i spill my coffee "rugged again". in this case the team didn't know who their bidder was until after the auction ended.
As much as I'd like to take your word on that you'll need to offer something more to actually demonstrate it's true as there is other speculation here it caused a dip and I have no idea which of you is correct.
I get the daily trading volume of ETH itself is large but don't see ready statistics for ETH->USD.
Why do you think that I am being snarky? I thought it was the very first question anyone would ask?! If you can't even do this basic thing that only devs would use (hence I assume it to be a much easier first target to get working as they are technical and can jump through hoops if necessary), then I imagine there's very few things you can make work, currently?
That said, it's nice to see there's some serious work going into this new stuff... driven by a non-profit foundation https://radicle.foundation/ , that does make me take it more seriously, I will check it out.
The answer is that decentralization is in many ways considered a spectrum. We're a long ways away from being able to interact with web3 with no centralized points. As an example, you're reliant on your ISP, DNS, and the web of trust (involving tiers of certificate authorities) to even connect to a web3-enabled site from your browser. The most popular wallet for interacting with smart contracts in the browser is source-available, but not open source.
Of course, any interactions with the blockchain directly (calling methods of deployed smart contracts, or transferring tokens), are decentralized, but if you want to verify the source code of the contract you're interacting with, the most convenient way again involves relying on a centralized service (etherscan or similar for other blockchains), while the decentralized way would involve downloading the contract source yourself, compiling it, and comparing that with what's on the blockchain.
also a lot of "rugpull" comments are a meme that get repeated in any uncertainty or accident, i spill my coffee "rugged again". in this case the team didn't know who their bidder was until after the auction ended.