A Possible Future with DPoS, etc.
-
Kevlar and I are still launching our coin irregardless of feathercoins actions. There’s certain things that we want to try that we could never do under Feathercoins economy or its brand.
-
Publishers are a dime a dozen. Obsolete.
Miners are a peculiarity of protecting the bridge everyone’s crossing over so as to preserve the value of the transferred item.
Mess with the bridge and you mess with the people who trusted you to do the job.
I’m interested in a new coin erryday, but I can’t even stomach ever getting into the mining game again.
-
You are not listening.
Calem is at least willing to discuss.
I explained him what sharedropp is and now he is talking with me about sharedropping 20% of new coin to BTS and FTC holders and keeping 80% for ICO.
Thats the way how not to fuck with current investors.
I will gladly continue disscussion with him.
Unlike you or Dave he is open to talk. Not repeating the same monologue over and over again.
But actually discussing in the manner where you think about what your oponent said.
Such discussion is beneficial for both sides.
Not only have I listened, I’ve explained in great detail the reasons why that would not benefit the economy, the market, the product, or the brand.
Have you listened to those reasons? Can you enumerate them in detail? Do you understand what the ramifications of doing that are? Would you like to have a discussion about it? Because I’ve been trying to, and you’ve been shouting lies as loud as you can. Perhaps you should just join the conversation, because then you would learn that I’ve been discussing THIS VERY SOLUTION AT LENGTH for some time now. It’s been an open discussion, and you’ve refused to participate.
I’m not the one who won’t think about what you’ve said, you’ve not listened to a word I’ve said or else you would know that I proposed this and have debated it’s merits at length with the group MONTHS AGO! And suddenly you come up with the idea, and now I’m not listening to you? What the hell?!?!
-
I’m interested in a new coin erryday, but I can’t even stomach ever getting into the mining game again.
DPoS essentially doesn’t use mining to secure the network
It uses a ton of known trusted nodes (delegates) to each take a turn to sign a block.
The network is still distributed, but the equipment to quickly and efficiently sign a block need not be more then an rPi.
-
Also, just to be clear. I’m considering sharedropping.
I’m not 100% sold on it. The best way for the holders to be rewarded is by them been delegates in the new system.
If theres a person who is holding still or not who made great contributions to ftc no matter how long ago comes along and they are known for their actions, they would most likely become a delegate.
Now, by bringing in major outside investors, you can’t really dilute to much of there investment to those who simply just hold the coin.
-
I’m with Ghostlander on the ICO being bad for the FTC “brand”. It’s not the right move, in my opinion.
Since you’re not providing anything more than opinion I’ll assume that this is based on a poor understanding of what the move being discussed is. What I did was provide the reasons why you would do something like an ICO. Perhaps you could elaborate on why ICO’s fail to do the things I specified, and what a better solution for accomplishing those things are?
I only really see three possibilities in this situation:
1. Community consensus is not reached, but the changes are implemented - although not adopted, essentially killing the new fork, causing FTC to split into new and old blockchain, with the old blockchain continuing as is.
2. Lots of discussion and arguments lead to nothing actually happening.
3. Community consensus is reached somewhere in the middle, the changes are rolled out and miraculously don’t kill the coin.
You left off 4: Community consensus has never been reached, the changes are implemented regardless, and adopted by the market regardless of what the whiners on some troll forum say because they provide value in ways that v1 blockchains don’t because they’re NOT tokens of account so they’re not competitive, they’re complimentary. The market responds favorably or unfavorably to a new breed of decentralized services, and everyone who said it was a bad idea has to face the reality of the situation which is that they don’t get to make these decisions for the market, or for the brand, and all of this talk is a bunch of wasted breath.
Coders are great, because they can make things become a reality.
But without miners, speculators and holders, they are essentially nothing.
Wrong, wrong, and wrong. Our model targets NONE of these markets with it’s primary service offering. Perhaps you should pay more attention to that fact?
Anyone can write a book. But without publishers, stores to sell them in and readers, they’re pointless.
I am not sure why you guys aren’t releasing this as a new coin? I don’t see any positives with utilizing the FTC brand.
That’s because you’ve not bothered to understand what it is that we’re talking about doing. It’s NOT a new coin. I keep trying to say that, but no one is interested in hearing it.
-
Publishers are a dime a dozen. Obsolete.
Miners are a peculiarity of protecting the bridge everyone’s crossing over so as to preserve the value of the transferred item.
Mess with the bridge and you mess with the people who trusted you to do the job.
I’m interested in a new coin erryday, but I can’t even stomach ever getting into the mining game again.
We’re not messing with it, we’re eliminating them from the model entirely and targeting people who contribute to the network with innovation, NOT with heat-waste, with the block reward instead. Your argument is irrelevant in a world where miners don’t get to decide and token holders do. That’s why the model is potent, and why FTC stands to gain so much from it: because it DOES turn token holders into decision makers… something they presently ARE NOT.
-
The otherway you can go about this is just make it a FTC PoB IPO.
That way everyone comes over to the new product and they’re automatically token holders eligible for candidacy
-
The otherway you can go about this is just make it a FTC PoB IPO.
That way everyone comes over to the new product and they’re automatically token holders eligible for candidacy
That would run the risk of FTC being pumped the crap out of so people can get tokens for the ICO. How would this effect the valuation? Sounds like a way to get more people burned, which I’m not in favour of.
-
The otherway you can go about this is just make it a FTC PoB IPO.
That way everyone comes over to the new product and they’re automatically token holders eligible for candidacy
Then just do that, and forget about the whole DPoS thing entirely. That’s always been an option, and one that I’ve discussed at length. It’s called Featherparty.
-
The otherway you can go about this is just make it a FTC PoB IPO.
That way everyone comes over to the new product and they’re automatically token holders eligible for candidacy
That would absolutely destroy any chance of a fair valuation because you’re using a hyper-inflated whale manipulated economy to value your new one. You’re just trading one problem for another while screwing over everyone who SHOULD be investing in you.
-
One of the goals was to provide value to investors long term, both to existing token holders, and to potential new shareholders.
When did that stop being a goal when discussing a complimentary product? When did the needs of the very few start to outweigh the needs of the masses?
-
Ultimately this up to Lizhi or who ever submits the code to see if the market likes the idea or not.
-
I’m done trying to make a case for these various idea’s. The rest is up to any coder who wishes to try help.
Kevlar and I have looked into a range of options. We’ve both had to learn so much in the last few months it’s insane. But we have both come to similar conclusions. I quit my full time job to be able to do this. In no way do I want to dictate the future of ftc, I never want to bare that responsibility. A lot of these things I talk about is going into the coin Kevlar and I are doing completely separate from ftc, its community, and everything about it. We are sharing some of our thoughts, discoveries and ideas and it’s up to you the reader to choose what you want to do with that information. Things are dire for all coins and I honest to god do not know how the future will unfold. Everything I believe now may be incorrect in 2 years from now but there’s one thing i know will never change.
Code doesn’t write itself. Not yet anyway.
-
omg now ICOs
i shouldn’t even need to say that, but not only will an ICO related to ftc ruin what little reputation ftc has, but also ICO are illegal, just most the crypto community hasn’t woken up to this fact.
-
omg now ICOs
i shouldn’t even need to say that, but not only will an ICO related to ftc ruin what little reputation ftc has, but also ICO are illegal, just most the crypto community hasn’t woken up to this fact.
I don’t know where to begin…
Oh thats right.
I’m done trying to make a case for these various idea’s. The rest is up to any coder who wishes to try help.
…Code doesn’t write itself. Not yet anyway.
-
I don’t know where to begin…
Oh thats right.
I don’t know either. I mean try telling Kickstart it’s business model is illegal and a massive failure that leads to nothing but ruined reputation.
[personal attack removed]
-
Hey hey… lets keep the insults as true as they may or may not be, to oneself ahy?
-
@mrwyrm: and @kevlar , how about we just sit back and let them play with the information and do what they want. its all there. we have nothing left to contribute untill people have constructive questions to ask. We need to see how @lizhi feels because he is probably the only person who might code it, and is the most valued person in the community regardless of which side of the debate one may stand.
-
@mrwyrm: and @kevlar , how about we just sit back and let them play with the information and do what they want. its all there. we have nothing left to contribute untill people have constructive questions to ask. We need to see how @lizhi feels because he is probably the only person who might code it, and is the most valued person in the community regardless of which side of the debate one may stand.
Now you have great exposure and see slightly different opinions then yours.
Do not be scared.
Unroll the discussion in polite and constructive manner.
Please do so.
Or crawl back to Slack and do your personal plans?