I think Emily's article has some mistakes about Pi Network:

Challenge 1: "Lack of market value and tradability"

Wrong:"Pi isn’t ‘worthless’—it’s a community in the making." The same doubt surrounded Bitcoin before it hit the mainstream. Pi's early value is about growth and use, not speculation. As more users join and businesses accept Pi, value grows naturally. Think of Pi as a small sapling: today it’s small, but with time, it can bear fruit.

Challenge 2: "Regulatory uncertainty"

Wrong:

"Crypto isn’t a rogue player—it’s just new to the game." Governments are still figuring out how to regulate it, like they did for the internet. Pi Network is all about compliance and a KYC process, designed to meet global standards. Pi’s working to stay on the right side of the law, making it safer in the long run.

Challenge 3: "Expert skepticism about mobile mining"

Wrong:

"Mobile mining is the evolution, not the shortcut." Traditional mining uses massive power, which wastes energy and excludes the average person. Pi Network’s mobile mining is light and inclusive—anyone can participate without the hefty electric bill. It’s mining for the people, not the elite.

Challenge 4: "Scams and frauds targeting users"

Wrong:

"True Pi isn’t a scam, but scammers try to ride its wave." Scammers are a risk in any growing technology, but Pi has strict rules against trading Pi for cash or through fake ‘exchange’ sites. The Pi team is actively combating fraud and educating its users to avoid these traps. Stick to the official Pi app, and you’re in the clear.

Guy, always do your own research and double check everything and everyone, even me!

#PiNetworkMainnet #PiNetworkkyc #PiNetwork. $BTC $ETH $SOL

"Bitcoin finds you, you don't find Bitcoin"