Everyone is calling HF20 pay to play, and nothing could be farther from the truth.
It is the truth, even if I could justify it myself.
Granted, most of the outrage and apocalyptic gloom and doom has settled now that the cost of comments has been brought to a reasonable level, but wasn't that obviously going to be the case?
Too low a cost to eliminate automated bot comments.
Too high to allow genuine posters with less than 60 SP to interact the way other social media allows them and not even the way STEEM allowed them prior to HF20.
A mere edition of a post takes most users out of usability mode and into other occupations.
The concept of pay to play is simple. You are paying someone to use their service. Even if the service is technically free many users who want more are forced to pay.
To want post HF20 STEEM to function the way other social media does, or even just the way it did prior to HF 20 is to want more.
What does it imply about STEEM Hard Fork 20?
This tactic is known as Pay To Win, and it's not hard to see why Steemians would make the mistake of assuming that HF20 is a big step forward in the Pay To Win direction.
Payments help to win, but the restrictions of Hard Fork 20 are pay to play even for people whom do not care about winning.
They can not play it the same way that they play other social media in which a win is different from what it is on STEEM.
How much are we willing to spend on a video game anyway? Like $60. Anyone who spends that much on Steem right now will have more than enough RCs to interact. More importantly, those coins belong to them for as long as they choose.
How come neither Facebook, Google or Twitter hired you as a project manager or a senior adviser?
They could have been so much more successful if they adopted this pay to play philosophy.
Google employs pay to play for power users.
I am quite content with its free abilities.
Cost of decentralization.
Some aspects of STEEM are supposedly decentralized, but it is centralized.
A few people elect the witnesses due to the centralization of the ability to do so (STEEM)
A few people call the shots which spam will be generously rewarded, and which content will be denied rewards.
Now these people decided to charge for any humane use.
Those playing to win already have enough to play.
Those whom will be tempted to try to play to win and acquire the needed amount of STEEM, will find that they were too late to join, if they would not be told prior to it.
Most future joiners will consist of victims of aggressive pushers, minions of the pyramid scheme.
Had it not been for its centralization, it would not have been a pyramid scheme, at least not so obvious.
Resource Pools
...
....
In this chapter you assumed a hypothetical desire, and based upon it, you present it as a conclusion that the current state is not pay to play,
while mentioning a separate delegation market for RCs.
And this is not pay to play, according to you.
Instead, everyone with stake gets to pick and choose who they think will bring the platform the most value, and act accordingly. If someone is abusing your pool you can limit their access or completely remove them altogether.
This is a proof-of brain mechanic that will reduce spam, allow us to scale, and prevent waste. We clearly have the resources to onboard millions of users for free. Once those users acquire some stake we can onboard millions more all over again.
And how is it different from STEEM delegations?
Conclusion
Based upon what?
P.S.
I know I am dealing with a minion whenever I see a cheap Simpsons/Southpark/Cat/"cute" animal meme.
Hmm I wonder who you are on another account. You seem to know a lot but your existence here is very short. You’ve obviously spent some money to get the resources you have. The negativity you have doesn’t help your position much. We need realistic expectations for sure but you are just downright pessimistic.
That's fine if you want to lash out and call me a blind follower minion in a pyramid scheme. Just three days ago I wrote a post on the incompetence of Steemit Inc. I got a comment from ned and talked shit AGAIN. Do you have any opinion on that interaction?
Steem is not social media. Steem is a blockchain that stores text. That is all. But it is also everything.
You folks need to stop comparing Steem to social media, because that is a comparison made in ignorance. Steem is closer to being it's own autonomous country than it is to being a social media. We have our own currency for god's sake.
I am personally going to create a LEGAL lottery here. Does that sound like something a social media would be allowed to do? No, that is something a government does. Decentralization practically puts us above the law. We make our own law. HF20 is an important part of that law now, and I don't see anyone scrambling to fork the blockchain because of it.
Literally every programmer I've seen on Steem thinks HF20 is amazing, but for some reason you people, who know nothing about development, think you know better. You are wrong. Plain and simple. HF20 is one of the best things Steemit Inc has created and I'm a lot more excited for SMTs now that we have resource credits.
And this is why I read this post of yours.
I have seen a data security engineer and another expert whom do not follow the trend that you saw.
These people also know how to program.
It could help if you expanded your horizons.
Those are the words of a manipulator. You don't care about people expanding their horizons. You insult me under the guise of pretending to care about being objective? Nice try.
You might of well have said,
You live in a fantasy land echo chamber where millions of people are allowed to post to the blockchain as much as they want for free with zero regard to scalability.
Welcome to the real world, where the trust brought about by decentralization comes at the cost of massive efficiency losses.
Here's an idea. Try to pull that same attitude over at the Bitcoin forums. Tell them transactions should be free and they should lower the block time to 3 seconds and not worry about scaling issues. Are you ready to get laughed off the stage?
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