This piece draws from insights I recently shared with BeInCrypto: for crypto projects, that shift is existential. Media traffic is tanking, and hype-driven channels like X and Discord are losing their authority in the eyes of algorithms. In this new reality, visibility starts with how AI perceives you – and whether it recognizes you at all.
Crypto adoption keeps climbing, but media visibility isn’t following. In Latin America, for example, adoption jumped 18% in Q2 2025, yet our analysis showed a 54% drop in traffic during the same period. The users didn’t vanish. They just started arriving through different doors.
The market’s booming, but attention is being rerouted. What used to flow through search and social now passes through AI intermediaries. In Latin America, they already drive measurable traffic% around 15% of referrals across crypto-native outlets, and up to 60% for some publishers.
This means your brand’s visibility no longer follows adoption – it follows algorithms.
AI platforms don’t “read” the web like humans do. They curate, summarize, and synthesize – pulling from structured, high-authority sources they already trust. In other words, your reputation starts long before anyone searches your name.
Projects that consistently appear in credible outlets — in listicles, thought leadership pieces, explainers — are the ones algorithms can confidently surface in AI-generated answers.
PR now helps make sure the machine understands who you are, what you stand for, and why you’re relevant.
AI isn’t just deciding what’s visible – it’s defining what’s credible. Models already influence which projects show up first in discovery, which make it into summaries, and which quietly disappear from the narrative.
That hierarchy of visibility translates directly into reputation. If AI doesn’t mention your project, it might as well not exist – no matter how strong the tech or tokenomics. Visibility equals trust, and trust drives capital.
That equation has always been true in crypto. The only difference now is that AI sits in the middle of it.
If you want to see how this shift is playing out – and what projects can do to stay discoverable – read my full op-ed.