The problem is there are zero incentives for projects to use it in the first place. We have chat rooms, we have wikis, we have contact pages, it all hasn't changed anything since the projects can just choose to not engage with one another. The solution is the community as a whole needs to proactively enforce a set of requirements on projects by collectively putting pressure against those who do not follow such requirements. Hive has the most powerful form of governance: community. However, just like democratic governments, communities need to actively pushback against bad actions
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Hi Vaultec, hope you are well.
The core problem is a decentralised system can't function when it has such deep problems as a dominant minority and a lack of any centralised planning or goal setting.
My long comment above provided a lot of steps we could introduce to address those issues and got shot down by negativity, so the prospects of improving things seem as remote as ever...
'Build it and they will come' There are reasons most all projects rely on Discord for communications because hive blogs do not encourage community building because they do not allow multiple threads within a community. There simply is no way to collaborate here on hive as posts are not able to be seen and replied to in the way a discussion forum allows.