RE: HF21 - What the Fork?
Sorry for this long comment. It's hard for me to be brief. And we agree mostly on what we think of this platform, I guess :)
Don't worry, I studied philosophy :D
I don't know if I interpret the beginnings of Steemit correctly, but after the mining was done, it seems that the developers together with the early adopters (friends, acquaintances?) [...]
I'm also not sure about how it was in the early days, since I joined Steem in November 2017 and had the feeling, that I was already a bit late for the party. I assume that Steemit INC launched the blockchain and gave big upvotes to all the early adopters, hoping it will attract a lot of other people to sign up. It was for sure a phase where a lot of experimenting took place, since Steem launched in March 2016 and this was already the 21st time a hard fork took place.
Steemit has a hard time defining itself. It's not a classic open source project, it's not an application that already has a product or has one in mind, [...]
Since Steemit INC is by far the largest stakeholder in terms of SP, I think its business model relies on the price of STEEM (meaning selling STEEM to keep the company liquid). We saw this last year, when the company had to do some restructuring because of STEEM's price being so low. The idea is that as the STEEM blockchain gets more and more used, the price of STEEM will rise and Steemit INC will thrive. So far blogging is the number one use-case for this blockchain, but also other projects like @steemmonsters are based on it and we will might see more and more projects utilising Steem as their underlying technology, further increasing the value of STEEM (at least in theory).
[...] and there's no "Subscribe" button at all that would personally improve my time here on Steemit [...]
Do you mean like subscribing to a topic? E.g. getting notified when there is a new post tagged with #gaming. That would be indeed a huge benefit in terms of usability and ever since I signed up for Steem, I'm wondering, why there is no front-end doing it like this.
I don't know how you can change the design in such a way that content generated by bots, for example, cannot be published in the first place, e.g. by adding a security query to the Publish button. [...]
Short answer: you can't. As an open source project all the APIs are open and can be used by anyone (like it should be), so adding a CAPTCHA to a front-end wouldn't change anything and adding a CAPTCHA on a protocol level would call for a major re-design of how the system works (I'm not even sure, if this is possible at all, I personally don't think so).
So you might ask: What makes Steemit interesting for ordinary people anyway? The prospect of making contacts and making new friends? You can do just as well elsewhere. The prospect of being found much faster by an audience in this still niche market? Not quite impossible in comparison to the vastness of the Internet, but also not particularly competitive in comparison to what there is. So what?
I fully agree with your view. Getting paid for creating content on social media is Steem's major selling point. The value from pretty much all social networks comes from the content people put on it (which is actually a brilliant business strategy: you provide the infrastructure, your users provide the content and then you monetise their content), but only very few make some money of their content and most of the money is made by the middle man, who provides the platform. Steem cuts out the middle men and allows for users to directly monetise their content, which is a paradigm shift.
I agree that for there also has to be a way that the masses are somehow able to make some money of their content, but if the threshold for monteising content is low, then it attracts a lot of low-quality content, trying to milk the system. Fixing this is indeed very difficult, but I'm not sure that the current direction Steem is moving (what I called F2P or more specifically pay-to-win model) is the right way. To be honest, personally I'd prefer a model where you have to pay before publishing something, but I'm also aware that this would be too much of a barrier for most potential users.
Thank you for responding. It's a pleasure talking to you (a philosopher, I like that!) :D
I believe that I have always understood "decentralisation" in a slightly different way from how it was and is predominantly communicated here. What I see is that the influencers are basically emulating the role models in society outside of Steemit (often without being aware of it). The reign and divide principle seems to be really strongly established and recognized by many civilizations. Much is said about the "community" that must be led in this or that direction for the whole to be "successful". I think that every individual has the resources and the sense to make reasonable decisions when he realizes that he is trusted. But as soon as people feel compelled to make decisions in favor of others' likes or dislikes, they become stubborn or unpleasant. What I can understand, but to take the step of distancing myself from it and trying something completely different, I had suspected, would be possible here in this system and would generate curiosity. I think I was wrong. I'm sure there are people who are interested in a concept that would be fun just by making simple changes to the technical framework: As an experiment.
But I probably only wanted to hear or read what I would have liked to see put into practice. Basically, I was rebuffed both online and offline with my proposal of a systemic consensus; nobody catches the idea - maybe it's just to unknown. It is discouraging. Not the right place here?
Does it matter how the price of STEEM rises again? Are all means justified?
Yes, I think Steemit doesn't even offer the standard you are used to from other platforms. That's quite strange, considering. All the focus is on profit, and a product suffers a lot from that.
Thinking about quality: I asked myself if my blog can be considered to offer quality content. I am not quite certain. I too, could be tempted to think of my writing as quality. But then, it's hard to tell. I do my blogs with care and thought. But maybe that's just nothing really special. Others do that, too. And when I compare my contents with what you can find elsewhere I must admit, that what I do is quite average. Which doesn't have to be bad. Being paid for it? I still don't know.
To write without a commission, without occupying a niche or dealing with a real special topic seems to be quite pointless. To publish for the common good: That can also be a reason. Paying for it is a thought that is quite unusual, especially in times when you first get free access. But maybe you're right. Before the Internet existed, you had to deal with publishers, prepare and invest a lot, before even someone considered printing something from an unnamed author.
Probably, if you're not an eccentric or an excellent artist/technician/engineer/philosopher, you should hold back with publications. HaHa! Check out my blog, I have over 4000 postings. LOL.
I digressed from what you have answered me but as I am agreeing, I offer you some more thoughts instead. Have a good weekend!
Thanks! I wanted to reply to you earlier, but the weekend and some technical difficulties didn't let that happen.
I think that decentralisation has slightly different meanings for everybody. To me it basically means that there is not central authority, who controls everything and who can change the rules for participating in a network by the blink of an eye.
When you are talking about systemic consensus, are you talking about this, because I see some of those ideas realised here on Steem (some, not all though).
After taking a quick look at your blog, I have to say, that I think it qualifies as "quality content", because one can clearly tell that you put a lot of thought into it.
Having a special topic in mind, to blog about, certainly helps when trying to get an audience. Here on Steem an anywhere else. Even though I'm aware of this, it didn't stop me using this as my personal blog and publishing very random stuff. I've been thinking of focusing on one topic for a while now, but so far I couldn't motivate myself to do that. Maybe at one point in the future.
About paying for publishing: I'm not suggesting, that we need high fees here on Steem, but rather a symbolic one, maybe just 0.001 STEEM would prevent spam and all authors would have to put some "Skin in the Game"
Thank you so much!
The two links are gold. Yes, systemic consensus is well described there.
I find your skin in the game link especially inspiring.
For me personally this means: I haven't invested a single cent from Fiat currency here. I put two years of work as a blogger into it. I don't know if this counts as skin in the game. At the time I existed here with 10,000 monetary units in my wallet, I didn't power down. I simply didn't want this money, probably because I didn't consider it "honestly earned", just without skin in the game. I'm not even sure if I would find it wise to start with Fiat money when I don't have it to spare. To have invested with all my financial reserves, which I consider unwise.
Interesting that further down in the Wiki article Jesus is mentioned as the archetype of a risk taker. In fact, one could say that although Jesus risked and lost all his skin with his full conviction and existence, he did not lose because he knew that he would be in good hands in heaven. He was a free man without money, without wife and children, without permanent residence, always on mission. Basically he had nothing to lose except his life. This may sound strange, but none of us is like Jesus, because we all have something to lose, everything except our lives. Nobody puts his life at risk by investing in Steemit. Whoever has done this may judge for himself whether it was wise or not.
I see it this way: The diversity of those who live in such a system as Steemit is what makes it attractive. There are risky types, as well as cautious ones, spontaneous ones as well as deliberate ones, enthusiastic ones as well as quiet ones, sluggish ones as well as fast ones. It is irrelevant who of them risks their skin from my point of view, because there are always those who do and those who do not. Those who make up a minority or majority are also of no concern to me, because I am always interested in a good encounter and in the potential of people. Those who take risks are no more valuable than those who take little or no risk.
Outside the Steemit world, this is reflected in their social environment, it has effects. Those who like to risk high stakes should not complain about those who prefer to be cautious. The fact is that you are never one or the other, not for all time. What is a piece of cake for one person is a great achievement for another.
As charming and logical as the skin in the game argument is, it must not be transferred - by means of coercion - as a valid behaviour to everyone, because it would basically define a code of conduct that everyone would never want to live up to, because it would not be voluntary. So Steemit reflects just like the offline world - the voluntariness of those who risk their skin just like those who don't (both for probably good reasons). The roles may be divided from time to time, who knows anyway?
Spam, abuse, differentials are a normal part of humanity. A system can take care of those needy or greedy ones by it's mass. If the mass is not big enough it will not carry them. But people have to realize themselves when they should switch from need or greed to gratitude and grace. They usually do when they feel trusted and encouraged. It requires to be felt a voluntary act, not an ordered or demanded one.
Here is too much fuzz about control and demand.
What topic do you have in mind? Maybe I can encourage you? :-)
I have to read Skin in the Game at one point, just like all the other books by N.N. Taleb.
What I meant with putting "skin in the game" in this context is rather simply psychology: when people have to give something in order to get a good or service, their personal valuation of it drastically changes. Therefore I think that people will think twice before posting something (thus increasing the quality of the content) and spam wouldn't be as lucrative anymore, since you have to pay (e.g. 100000 * 0.001 STEEM = 100 STEEM, which is quite something).
I also made all of my rewards here just by blogging, therefore one can argue, that I don't put skin into the game, but instead of money I invested time to write posts, which is in my opinion also quite valuable.
Privacy preserving machine learning :D
I started a PhD a couple of months ago and as it looks now, this will be my specialisation. Right now, I'm in the process of learning about all these techonlogies and I was thinking that it would be good the share the progress of my learning with the world, because the best way to understand something is by explaining it to others.
Excellent. What a wise insight. In deed, learning is such a process as you describe it. Blogging certainly helps.
Oh, now I also know what you meant by skin in the game. I was taken in by the wiki article that used the word "idiots" too often.
That's right. People act strange when they get something for free. They seem to value it less or even treat it badly. Sometimes people come to my free social services that act as if I have to cover all areas of knowledge and are very impertinent. If they had to pay directly for my service, their behaviour might be more appropriate. But that is not a good comparison. The health insurance comparison is better. Statutorily insured people don't realize how expensive their treatments are because they never get a bill presented. They have no skin in the game. Only indirectly via the contributions on their pay slips. But the connection is no longer immediate. I got it.
But there are also people who do this well and behave as if they have skin in the game, because they know exactly that someone always pays something that they get for free.
Your thesis sounds very interesting. Do something on your blog in any case. I hope I will understand your content and answer you appropriately.
Continuing in English here, since we started it in English 😁
Taleb is someone who well, "er nimmt sich kein Blatt vor den Mund" (ok, it's best explained using a German idiom), just see what he writes on Twitter, to get an idea of what I mean: https://twitter.com/nntaleb
But at the same time, I have to say that I consider him to be a wise and honest man, probably also because he is confronting and therefore causing controversy.
I think (hope) that it is a topic, we are going to hear a lot more of, because it not only has potential to progress AI in sensitive, but important areas like medicine, it also has the potential to break the data monopolies of the big tech companies.
But for now, I have to make sense of it for myself first.
I am totally confused by that twitter thing. Never used it. Unfamiliar space. I left facebook quite a while ago. Here, the speed of back and forth communicating is much slower. I like that.
Controversy ... hm ... not sure if that is something to be pushed. It's a word used a lot.
Breaking the data monopolies sounds interesting. You think the forces will eventually even out a little more with the technology of AI? Let's hear more about that.
Right now we, the users, exchange all of our data for a "free" service. We get to use a platform and the company running that platform gets all of our data in exchange and uses this for analysing its users. Data is valuable and who controls it makes a lot of money. All those centralised platforms tend to acquire a lot of data, a lot of money and therefore a lot of power.
The domain I'm working on allows users to provide their data for training of machine-learning models, but while keeping their privacy. If you think this further along this line and add what blockchain technology can bring to the table, we could imagine a future where the people can not only chose which kind of personal data they are contributing (ideally while still maintaining their privacy), but also get financially compensated for contributing data. This would be a paradigm shift, since the big tech companies have to share the profits, they make from their users' data.