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RE: An Objective look at Dlive's exit
You're correct. The context under discuss here is about improving Stinc's delegation policy.
You're correct. The context under discuss here is about improving Stinc's delegation policy.
Which is just not going to happen. They have a vested, very direct interest in getting as many digital applications using the steem blockchain as possible. To that end, they have an aggressive pressure not to care whether or not the project is open source or not but rather whether or not people will actually use it – which is entirely orthogonal
And if we're being cynical, often the closed source solutions end up being better developed. The developers end up having I'm much stronger vested interest in doing a good job because no one else can take their work and run.
That doesn't apply to all things, of course. Anything that depends on a level of trust of the user in order to get the product they desire is going to have a certain extra level of cachet if it's open source. Anything that makes claims about how things work is going to have an extra level of assurance if it's open source.
But streaming applications? That's not a big deal.
Steemit Inc. has made a lot less reasonable, less explainable delegation policy decisions than the one that went to DLive. And notably, even if DLive were an open source project, everything that is happened could easily have happened just the same way because that has nothing to do with whether they decide to take their work to another blockchain.
Policy that would make no difference makes no difference, no matter what.
I think they are significantly annoyed by the DLive exit for the motivation to make a few changes.
Do you have any suggestions for policy changes that might be effective?