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Why?? The goal is not to have a currency that ranks posts correctly. The goal is to have a currency that is used everywhere on the internet.

Each website is free to do whatever he wants with it. For example, Dtube might not want to rank post according to rewards, but according to views. They can do that! It’s their website. (This is just an example, they don’t want this).

This is why STEEM is powerful. It’s easy to integrate in any web app.

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What I see is that if a front end wants to be "a Reddit" on a blockchain it can.

Steemit.com has proven this.

What I also see is that once SMTs are released, which is next on the "To Do" list, that there is no limit to what all can be done + be powered by Steem.
No limits as outlined by you "They can do that! It’s their website".

So there really is no need for Steemit Inc. to "hack" their own UI, in fact it would probably be counter productive (as outlined by @sorin.critescu ).

Love it, see some awesome potential out there for Steem.

I don’t get your point. How would SMTs bring functionalities that are not already in STEEM? They are just copycats, they can’t have different reward mecanisms.

They might have different inflation, supply, etc but rewards will be payed out every 7 days.

Even if you can change the amount of days, you still can’t have an infinite amount otherwise the author never gets payed. So you need a finite amount of days but different posts behind a single one anyway.

The value of steem, just as any other currency, is based on an implicit social consensus - a group of people agree to coordinate their actions based on signals transmitted through a "unit of account": without talking to me, if you write something of quality, you expect me to "upvote" your content - that is the implicit "social contract", the unwritten "rules of the game.

This "game" generate more value as more people engage in it and bringing more people in requires predictability. Which pretty much means stability and precludes "quick hacks". These tend to generate mistrust: "today they did this, who knows what they'll do tomorrow?"

Stability does bring value, but your thinking is too theoretical. Steemit, Inc holds 25% of the steem supply, they will never do something crazy. And most people don’t even care or know how something is done in the code (especially when we reach mass adoption).

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Fair remark about my thinking being theoretical- I'm indeed a highly theoretical guy. :-)
I don't know about the "too" though..
:-)