RealAlHazred
Frumious Flumph (Your Grace/Your Eminence)
So far, this is my favorite comment on the whole debacle.
Who are they requiring to become validators? the backers?The Kickstarter FAQ says they will use "proof of stake" and when you click on the link it goes to a non-kickstarter website that says the following:
"All participating validators receive a reward in the native cryptocurrency, which is generally distributed by the network in proportion to each validator’s stake.
Becoming a validator is a major responsibility and requires a fairly high level of technical knowledge. The minimum amount of crypto that validators are required to stake is often relatively high (for ETH2, for example, it’s 32 ETH) and validators can lose some of their stake via a process called slashing if their node goes offline or if they validate a “bad” block of transactions."
That was two days before the COO of the company beclowned himself in an interview with Comics Beat. Still pushing the idea that Blockchain would be useful for Kickstarter with zero idea of how it works or how it could possibly apply to their model:I went looking to check the status of Kickstarter's use of blockchain and found this:
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Kickstarter is pumping the brakes on blockchain tech, but the car is still moving
The crowdfunding company is creating an advisory council that will include creatorswww.polygon.com
Unfortunately, I agree. I was hoping for a solid, in-writing, "we are not now, nor ever will be, moving to blockchain" announcement from Kickstarter.(In all honesty I'm positive that they announced Blockchain! to satisfy the investors who love to hear those meaningless buzzwords, and didn't have an actual idea of how they were going to use it. And also didn't consider that the folks who make their company worth investing in might have something to say about that idea.)
Augh... don't normalize that naughty word like that. it's all hype. The early adopters need more sheep to join so they have someone to buy their meaningless baubles. If no one comes in, they can't cash out. That's what all the marketing for NFT is about. All the big sales? most of the time it's between accounts that belong to the same person, meaning that no actual money is being earned but it looks good on records.But, I don't know, lots of geek stuff seems tied up with blockchain now.
That's not entirely true. The marketplace makes a tiny percentage on every exchange. It's like a tax on grifting.That's what all the marketing for NFT is about. All the big sales? most of the time it's between accounts that belong to the same person, meaning that no actual money is being earned but it looks good on records.
Point is, they're doing all they can to make it seem like it's this HUGE thing and big community and you can make a buck quickly... when it's literally something like 400 000 wallets trading that stuff (not people, wallets!) and most people are basically investing in digital beany babies.That's not entirely true. The marketplace makes a tiny percentage on every exchange. It's like a tax on grifting.
I wonder how long before government realizes that it's just a huge Pyramid/Ponzi Scheme and gets to cracking figurative heads?Point is, they're doing all they can to make it seem like it's this HUGE thing and big community and you can make a buck quickly... when it's literally something like 400 000 wallets trading that stuff (not people, wallets!) and most people are basically investing in digital beany babies.
You have far more faith in governments than I have in any government. I'm totally expecting them to have that realization and then try to figure out how to get in on the action (see all the recent news about CBDC discussions).I wonder how long before government realizes that it's just a huge Pyramid/Ponzi Scheme and gets to cracking figurative heads?