All of the profiteering and wrecking of perception has happened big time year over year @valued-customer, but I am not here to whine about that, it's done and over with. We can learn from it or keep sticking the fork in the light socket and see what happens next or find some very truly revolutionary ideas that bring competitive advantage to a highly dynamic platform in comparison to so much else you see on the coinmarketcap top 100. I would go as far as re-vesting voting shares (somewhat/somehow) to allow for fresher voices to intermingle with those that have heavy stakes and encourage those that may not even be here yet and those that have been ignored during the wholesale departure due to prior failed planning.
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
While we can't go back in time and not do things that were done, none of the things done are cast in stone. As we gain better grasp of the issues and dynamics of Steem, we can do things that best grow it's value, including changing or undoing things that were done in the past.
I do advocate changing some things, but the changes I advocate are not supported by the folks whose profiteering drain on growth those changes would reduce. Odd that. Anyway, there is tension between investors, who seek to grow the value of the investment vehicle, Steem, and produce capital gains, and profiteers, who seek to extract value from the investment vehicle, Steem, and hoard it in their own accounts.
Since Steem wasn't founded by seasoned investors, but cryptokiddies, the investment cadre isn't particularly robust. Either profiteers will learn by their mistakes, or they will keep making them, and Steem will not increase in value as a result of sound investment improvements if they remain dominant.
Time will tell.