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RE: What needs to happen to reach $10 STEEM in 2018? (Discussion)

in #steem6 years ago

If they create their own bid bot that undercuts the competition and which returns the money taken in for the bots into the reward pool, it solves a variety of problems in one go:

  • bid bot owners don't artificially inflate their reps and get fat from the poor post discovery here
  • users can promote their posts without draining the rewards pool
  • the ninja mined tokens get good PR
  • the wider world sees (possibly smart) steps being made to clean up the problems here

It would not be Steemit Inc's choice as to which content gets voted for or against - so I don't really know where the complaints would come from - except from owners of bidbots.

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the ninja mined tokens get good PR

That is quite debatable. Most would spin it as Steemit is using their stake to counteract the wishes of the stakeholders.

It is a complex issue, yes - certainly open to debate.
If the market of steem users buys the votes from Steemit, then it can be said that 'the market has spoken' and the userbase has no problem with it. I'm not sure who exactly you are referring to, but I don't see the big SP holders flagging bot users very often (ever) and I am pretty sure they are not beyond using bots themselves. The key issue though, here, for me - is that the bot owners will be continually growing their SP forever - meaning that if they aren't already, it won't take long before they ARE the major stakeholders and obviously they are going to be against Steemit Inc. doing anything to put them out of business. So it is that there is a kind of face-off .. The community and Steemit must decide if they think that potentially being held to ransom by bot owners and their friends is better than having them leave in a huff and having to then bring in more investors with a cleaner, more balanced platform.

Something in me suggests thinking of women breaking free from pimps! ;)

A large number of the large stakeholders are against Steemit using their stake for voting - regardless of how 'good' or 'bad' the intent. Even though it is a good idea, it is pretty much a no-go.

I just made a new post that expands on this idea and adds in the element that the money used to buy the votes goes straight back into the rewards pool. I think this should negate any complaint about rewards pool dilution, leaving any complaint form stakeholders lacking substance.. Unless I am missing something (which is certainly possible!).

https://steemit.com/steem/@ura-soul/a-way-to-neutralise-bid-bots-on-steemit-steem-while-still-allowing-votes-to-be-bought

Again, good idea, but a no-go. Stakeholders are against it.