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RE: Opposing Perceptions, mismatched definitions, parity mismatch, voting, down voting, and "fairness"

in #philosophy8 years ago

Yes, I can see that as being an issue. I expect the rewards to decrease rather dramatically as the population increases. If I am willing to pay X amount for something it really shouldn't matter whether someone NOT purchasing the object agrees with that price or not.

Yet, there is a difference here that is kind of new and unique. I am NOT actually paying anyone for this as it does not deduct from my own funds. It still has the perception issue of SEEMING like paying to people.

I also know some people down vote because all of the funds are pulled from new steem entering the platform and if large payouts happen somewhere it impacts the trickle down payouts that every other steem power holder gets for simply doing nothing.

This is a VERY new thing. It is definitely a paradigm shift, and we are experiencing pains as should be expected in a beta. I do not post out of malice. I truly want this to succeed and philosophy aside perception does matter. How do you think the majority of people coming on here and posting and seeing they are going to get even $10, and then someone down votes and now they get $1. I believe most people will view it as a hostile act.

Whether they are correct or not, is not what I am getting at. I am only pointing this out as a matter of perception. How then will they react?

This is indeed a tough problem and I know Dan and Ned are in a tricky situation. They have already potentially changed the world. How far can we take it?

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I'll be a bit blunt (and maybe a bit unfair to the founders): What we see on Steemit are the results of runaway non-linear effects. In this case, they were deliberately built as the n^2 rule into the platform but I am not sure the implications were properly understood.
It is human nature to lack a reliable gut feeling for non-linearity. The classic example is the water lily on a pond that doubles in size every day until the whole pond is covered after 30 days. Very few people correctly answer the question "when was half the pond covered"? They might guess day 15, when, in reality, it is day 29.