With the main (only?) revenue source of Wasabi wallet gone, as well as its main feature, what will be the incentives moving forward?
Seems too unclear, maybe the team hasn't figured it out either. From what I understand from the post though, the wallet will also remove the ability to run coinjoin features on other coordinators from upcoming updates?
There's no plans to remove the coinjoin feature. It wouldn't matter if it was because the code has been open source since the very beginning, anyone can fork it.
When I read:
Wasabi Wallet will continue to function as a regular bitcoin wallet, users can generate private keys to receive and send bitcoin. Even without coinjoins, Wasabi’s client-side filtering architecture, Tor integration and custom coin selection make it the most private light wallet available. However, the nature of the bitcoin blockchain prevents users from obtaining complete privacy without coinjoins.
viaWhat I understand is that there won't be a continued support for coinjoin features on mainstream Wasabi. Yeah maybe someone could run an old release or fork it though but I was wondering about Wasabi as we know it, same team etc.