One morning the login stops working. The appeal form routes to nobody. Ten years of posts, the audience that took a decade to build, the archive other people still link to, all of it sits behind a door someone else just locked. Most creators know somebody this has happened to. Some are the somebody.
Three things keep happening to people who publish on rented platforms and 2026 has made all three worse.
Accounts get removed with no real appeal. Moderation at scale is automated, mistakes are routine and the terms of service make clear the platform owes you nothing. A ban does not just silence you going forward. It deletes your past.
Links die. Platforms pivot, get acquired, or shut down and every URL that pointed at your work starts returning nothing. The work you did to earn those links, the readers who bookmarked them, the search results that took years to build, gone with someone else's business decision.
AI systems ingest your work without asking. The license you granted by clicking "I agree" years ago is now being exercised in ways nobody imagined. Your writing trains models and feeds answers, usually with no attribution and no compensation and you were never offered a choice.
The common thread is simple. On those platforms, you were never the owner. You were the supply.
On the Hive blockchain, the model is inverted. Your account is secured by cryptographic keys that you hold. No company can suspend the account, because no company controls it. Your posts are written to a public blockchain, not to one vendor's database. They stay retrievable whether any particular app survives or not.
Ecency is one window into that content and by design not the only one. If Ecency disappeared tomorrow, everything you published through it would still exist, still under your account, still readable through other Hive apps. That is not a marketing promise. It is a property of the system.
There is a rewards layer too. Posts and comments on Hive earn crypto rewards from the network's reward pool, decided by the votes of other users. You are not waiting to hit a follower threshold before a monetization program admits you. The economics are on from day one.
Ecency is free and open source and it has been part of the Hive ecosystem for ten years, starting life as Esteem in 2016. It runs on Web, iOS, Android and desktop, and it covers the workflow you already have: long-form blogging, communities, short-form posting on Waves, drafts, scheduled posts, bookmarks, image hosting, video uploads, night mode, and an interface translated into more than twenty languages. There are no ads sold against your content.
The difference is not that it does something exotic. The difference is what sits underneath: every post you publish lands on-chain, under your keys.
Content on a public blockchain is public and Ecency leans into that honestly instead of pretending otherwise. Any post is available as clean markdown or structured data by adding .md or .json to its URL and the site publishes an llms.txt so machine readers know how to behave.
That sounds like the scraping problem, but it is the opposite of it. Authorship on Hive is recorded on a public ledger, so your name cannot be quietly stripped from your work. The account that earns from the content is yours. When an AI assistant reads and cites a post, the attribution and the ownership travel with it. Openness you chose, with your name attached, is a very different thing from a license buried in someone else's terms.
A Hive account is the only prerequisite. If you want the fast path, a $2.99 premium signup gets you a ready-made account with your keys emailed to you, bonus Points, and enough resource credits to start posting right away. Write your first post and it is yours in a sense that no mainstream platform can match.
Platforms are temporary. Your writing does not have to be.
Start at ecency.com. Your blog, your keys.