Zora is pushing beyond NFTs and creator tooling with a bold new experiment: “attention markets” on Solana, a product that lets people trade tokens tied to internet trends, memes and cultural moments. Launched Feb. 17, the feature lets anyone spin up a market for 1 SOL. Once a market goes live, traders can take positions on whether a topic — anything from a hashtag or viral narrative to broad themes like “AI girlfriend” or “bitcoin” — will gain or lose social-media traction. Rather than betting on elections or macroeconomic data, users are speculating on buzz itself, turning ephemeral online attention into tradable instruments. Solana’s speed and low fees are central to the design. Fast block times and inexpensive transactions make it feasible to support rapid price updates and frequent trades, which are essential when market value is tied to fleeting momentum. Early activity, however, was modest. The flagship “attentionmarkets” token briefly reached roughly $70,000 in market capitalization and saw about $200,000 in trading volume, while most individual trend markets struggled to attract meaningful liquidity — few surpassed $10,000 on day one. Price swings were often dramatic, but largely the result of thin order books rather than broad, sustained demand. The move marks a notable pivot for Zora, which made a name for itself on Coinbase’s Base Layer 2. Zora launched its ZORA token on Base in April and rolled out Creator Coins tied to Base profiles in July — a push that briefly helped Base outpace Solana in daily token creation. Creator coins function like tradable “shares” in a creator’s online presence: they can be auto-generated from profiles, bought by fans to signal support or speculate on future popularity, and rise or fall as interest changes. That history has shaped community reaction to the Solana launch. Jacek Trociński, the developer behind the Base memecoin Degen, called Zora’s move “really disappointing.” Veil Cash builder Apex777.eth accused Zora of “extracting” value from Base before migrating to a different network. Others, like Base creator Jesse Pollak, say Zora’s creator tools remain “fully operational” on Base. With attention markets, Zora is testing a bigger question for crypto: can attention itself become a tradable, memetic asset tightly linked to the internet’s real-time financial pulse? Early results are tentative — the idea is compelling, but liquidity and user engagement will determine whether trading buzz can mature into a sustainable market. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news