STEEMIT Pay-for-Vote Services Post HF19... "EPIC YAY" or "MEGA NAY"?

in #beyondbitcoin7 years ago (edited)

Earlier today, I found myself writing a collection of comment/replies that really deserved to be combined into a full post of their own, as I believe the insights they hold are beneficial to all fellow steemians as well. The first set of comments began as a response to @ura-soul's post: ALERT! Steemians Are LOSING $1000USD Per Week To Randowhale When The Vote Isn't Completed Fast Enough!

In itself, this is great advice for anyone using services such as Whaleshares, randowhale, booster, or MinnowBooster. However, the part where I "took objection" was this:

At the time of me writing here, Randowhale has earned its operators 522.775 STEEM POWER In the previous week alone just in curation payments, which is nearly $1000USD per week that could have gone to Steemit users that all went to Randowhale's operators instead!

What do you think? Is this a fair situation? Ultimately it all depends on how much profit/reward is in it for you the 'customer' of the service, but when some of that profit is syphoned away without your knowledge, you are not in a good position to make the best decision.

This led to a series of responses on my part that I believe could help others better understand the system.

Here was my first response:

@alexpmorris: It's not that it's fair or unfair, it's just part of understanding the "game" that is STEEMIT! To say it's "unfair" would also be saying that it's unfair to incentivize people with curation rewards to vote. Ironically, the 30 minute algorithm was implemented as a way to give manual curators a chance to vote over bots that would immediately vote the second a post went up. You may also be interested in this post around the time the change took place: "Latest Curation Reward Solution".

Regardless, it's great that you wrote an article that helps more people understand this dynamic! :)

At this point, @financialcritic chimed in with this response:

@financialcritic: I kind of agree with @ura-soul... and this is coming from someone that uses @randowhale a lot. The part that does seem unfair is that randowhale is marketed as a service to help minnows. If it was really there to help minnows in full transparency, then this info should be made available by randowhale...and maybe it should be a non-profit bot, as opposed to making so much money.

To which I responded with the following:

@alexpmorris: a slippery slope, if ever I heard one. perhaps the blockchain should also limit the price of STEEM as well to make sure no one overpays, in case they don't know any better? Just like putting "smoking kills you" warnings on cigarette boxes, still won't stop people from smoking anyway...

And who judges what's "too much money"? Maybe the blockchain should take that $2500 post payout and "redistribute the wealth" to everyone else? That person will never post again, and we'll now each be 0.01 STEEM richer, yay! lol Abusive behavior is another story, and that's a "cat and mouse" game that the community continually seeks to address in various ways (including how the 30 minute rule came to be).

And along those lines, some steemians think it's in "bad taste" to use any of these services. If they had their way, they'd be banned altogether. Hmmm... "censorship" sounds like perhaps the perfect solution! See what I mean about those "slippery slopes"?

For a while people were making a case for why BOTs shouldn't be allowed on STEEMIT either. Of course, they didn't understand that by banning BOTs, you'd also be blocking STEEMIT.com from functioning at all, since they basically all access the blockchain in the same way!

And just for the record, since we do seem to be picking a bit on @randowhale here, I'll kick it up a notch for ya. This "dynamic" also will affect @booster, @minnowbooster, Whaleshares, and Beyondbits as well.

One more point worth mentioning is that this dynamic has been accentuated post HF19. Before that, even though you may have been giving up more in curation rewards, the N^2 algorithm meant you could earn 10x your money due to the additional "vote gravity". I can definitely say using rando and others pre-HF19 provided a much greater "bang for your buck". I've written about this in a few recent articles.

Since HF19, however, it does seem more advantageous to use these services early on, as you may also have a greater chance of hitting the leader boards as well (not to mention the additional curation rewards you'll receive as well).

Better stop here, cuz at the rate I'm going, I'll soon be "reinvented" the "Wallstreet Disclosure Prospectus"! lol

As always, buyer beware, do your own due diligence, and if you do discover anything helpful to the community, please feel free to post and share about it! :)

After this, @financialcritic presented this reply:

@financialcritic: I'm all for bots and capitalism. My perception is that randowhale is being promoted as a minnow helper, when it is not that.

To which I responded:

@alexpmorris: Actually (and I could be wrong on this), I believe other users are promoting it more as a "minnow helper" than @randowhale is! If anything, you can say it's more for "degenerate gamblers" hoping to get that big 'ole 5% vote! (joke!)

I just searched through a bunch of rando's posts, and none of them really mention anything about randowhale being a "minnow helper". But please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong on that! :)

To which @financialcritic realized I may be correct on that point and replied:

@financialcritic: I looked back at the previous posts and you are right! My perception was incorrect.

I so use randowhale a lot (maybe even on every post)...but there was definitely a learning curve trying to figure out when to best use it. And I don't see it as a way to make money...it's more for the tip jar effect. You don't want to have an empty tip jar.

Lessons from this Interaction

Needless to say, @financialcritic is correct in saying there's definitely a learning curve, and I hope others can better understand some of STEEMIT's "inner dynamics" as a result of this discourse. One can't even necessarily say that any of these services are "bad" or "good", or that one is better than the other, because even a service's "viability" and potential "ROI" is cyclical, based on the timing of when it's used, as well as the price of all various crypto-currencies and tokens involved, etc. Top that off with the rapidly-changing STEEMIT landscape, and it becomes even trickier to navigate (ie. are you reading advice pre-HF19 or post-HF19)? Which leads to a comment that @ura-soul added:

@ura-soul: It would be fair if the operators of the Voting 'Services' informed people that this is the situation - since the 'profit margin' is sometimes slim with these services anyway. I have just stopped using the 'booster' service after a couple of days of testing, since I found that once the curation payouts are removed, I was probably losing money - not gaining anything.

To which I later replied:

@alexpmorris: That's what tends to happen to all these services, especially post HF19. To some degree they become outright arbitrage for those who feel it's worth it to pay X for the chance at approximately Y. Pre HF19, the more "vote power" you received, the more "valuable" those votes became, which was a unique value proposition in itself. Sadly, that aspect has mostly, if not entirely, diminished at this point. As always, buyer beware, and do your due diligence.

For example, I noticed very quickly with booster that a few of the first people early on got HUGE payouts. Within a day, the arbitrage was also mostly gone, with 1 SBD returning approximately 1.5 SBD give or take. Still not bad, but that's perhaps an average, and with all the various price fluctuations, still tricky to quantify with all the complexity and "moving parts" involved.

However, if you get lucky some morning at 3am when people have "given up" on booster, who knows, you may get lucky with a near empty pot, just like catching a great low bid in a wide spread market! Just gotta keep on top of it, easier said than done of course! :)

I've written so much here now, I think I owe it to myself to turn this all into its own post! lol

You see, so it's not to say that @booster is "bad", but that too many people have learned about it and have now mostly "arbed" away the "opportunity"! Perhaps if people start giving up on it, there may once again be an opportunity to "catch a deal" with it. It's really no different in the stock market. People run things up to the moon, then cry when it comes down to earth. As they all get bored and "rinse & repeat & cry" on another stock, the original stock finally comes back to life and suddenly, seemingly "out of the blue" a secondary wave of buying unfolds! And ironically enough, here's what unfolded earlier today on the STEEMIT internal market for STM/SBD:


stmsbd-20170706-25pct-tank-5m-rebound-funny.jpg
(short "preview" of my next post on my other "comment spree"!)

In fact, I can also tell you that I recently discovered just such an "opportunity" with Whaleshares! Given current prices of STEEM, SBD, etc, with each WHALESHARE equivalent to a 1% @officialfuzzy vote worth about $1.12 (a bit more given the SBD exchange rate), someone came in on the bitshares DEX and sold a bunch of WHALESHARE at 2 bts each (approximately 44 cents). Now, of course, there's always the chance that "if you don't know who the sucker is at the table, it's probably you"! However, so far it does seem that I'm probably more or less correct on this one.


bts-ws-arb1.jpg
(a bunch of those WHALESHARE tokens that traded at 2bts were purchased by yours truly, market is now 2.20 bid / 5 bts offer)

Between the added benefit of potentially boosting a post to the "hot" lists, combined with acquiring tokens at such an advantageous price, it's kind of a "gimme" to grab 'em all up at those prices! Luckily I was there to notice it, lest someone else scoop them up ahead of me! I just bought a few more at 4 bts the past few days, which still seemed like a decent discount at the time, so they really seemed more like a "gift" at these prices.

Finally...

Of course, an even better way to maximize your ROI on a token such as "WHALESHARE", is to acquire some for FREE! Keep an eye out for posts by @jphenderson and @officialfuzzy on potential upcoming competitions that you can participate in. Also, if you hang out in the Whaleshares Discord Chat, and catch Walrus' Secret "Phrase of the Week", you can also win some FREE WHALESHARE tokens!

Once again, I hope you all find that this post helps give you a better understanding and perspective on how to best take advantage of STEEMIT "voting services". If you have any other thoughts, experiences, or even corrections, please feel free to share them in the comments below.

As always, I appreciate your upvote, your follow and all your comments!

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Well if whaleshares is trying to help out the platform I think they are helping...It is hard for someone to play STEEMIT GOD.
Everyone should as team collective try to bring more steemians to the platform.

the more people try to "play God", the more they often tend to become the exact opposite. hopefully no one lets all this "fun" go to their heads! :)

I am thinking the same thing mate.

I Don't Know What to Comment ??? But To Comment is to Say that, I am also with YOU in such similar Opinions. So, Commented !!!

Thanks - @cWorldV99

Do many other people actually just 'use' Steem? Voting on things they like, as they see fit rather than treating it like a game that needs to be min maxed.

Rather than trying to maximise the possible rewards I try to focus on creating good content and constant improvement.

I barely know how Steemit works, how rewards are allocated and what the difference between STEEM and SBD are. I just like the platform for its surface level features

I use Steemit for information and just having random conversations with people.

I don't have the literary knowledge or desire to write engaging posts.

If I come across information not many people have I will share or if it's old news I won't bother.

Alot of people here are like that which is great!

yes, that's very true. "Come for the rewards, stay for the community" as some of us like to say! And truth be told (not even thinking about monetary gain), I believe I've gained more followers from leaving thoughtful comments on other people's posts than I've obtained from my own blog posts!

Even better, just leaving thoughtful comments can attract some significant payouts. I've written at least a few comments that have received bigger payouts than some of my blog posts, especially the earlier ones!

If I come across information not many people have I will share or I won't bother. A lot of people here are like that which is great!

Absolutely! So, keep on being awesome, keep on doing what your doing, and you still may just find yourself pleasantly surprised by a few nice rewards in your "payout box"! :)

Haha I swear I have got all my followers just from chatting to them like this.

I have had quite long ridiculous conversations.

Ya iv actually gotten like $7 etc for comments which is insane!!!

Steemit can be nice.

I plan to power up every $

Steemit has a very bright future.

that's a good point that I've addressed in other posts, but perhaps not so much in this one. If you are going to use any of these services, it would truly be a waste of money to try using it on anything but your best quality posts. I'd even posit to say every post you make should be terrific and well thought out in it's own way.

This is your true calling card, and any attempts to attract more attention to yourself for mediocre content will likely attract little more than cold disdain and few (if any) new followers (and possibly even some a bunch of unfollows)!

It's also why I recently created and released a "Hide ReSteems" toggle button script for STEEMIT, so I can more quickly and easily focus in on a user's posts and see if the "quality" and "substance" of their posts are of interest to me. If I see 3, 4, 5 just great posts from a user, especially one right after another, doesn't matter if they've got 25 followers or 500+, that user will most likely get my follow, and my vote! :)

These services are also often used by other steemians to add additional rewards to a great post and/or just as a "thank you" for something else. For example, I've had a few fellow steemians such as @world5list tack on at least a few randowhale votes to my posts as a "thank you" for helping him "get up to speed" a bit faster with the STEEMIT ecosystem. Much appreciate @world5list, thank you again! :) He's also commented on the quality of my posts as well, so it's not as if such votes are appearing on sub-par content either.

"Yay" for voting services. It may not be perfect but in essence it's promotional marketing services...

very true @michellectv, and I must say I do believe they're all probably a better used of SBD than the post promotion "burn to null" model!

I believe that this is the fork that steemi-t poses. This can either make the product or ruin it. It's natural for man kind to combine forces. Rather it's fair or not- would not be an ethical question because cryptos such as steem it are in their infancy. The only thing I will say is that users that create such voting services should not have unfair leverage over overall steem users. Equal footing and opportunity should apply. Especially to steemers that would like to add meaningful content on here everyday.

well, that's the good thing - and it's exactly what's been happening. anyone can offer their own service, and each has tried to do it using their own unique twist and "spin" on it. rather fascinating, actually, watching the "free market" play out before our eyes! bring on the innovation, and let's see where it can take us! :)

Let freedom reign! I am not happy with the results of HF 19. It feels like we went backwards but who am I? I just keep posting no matter what happens.

one of the biggest issues so far seems to be the draining of the reward pool, though hopefully that will balance out a bit over time. There's maybe been a bit more "blatant" self-voting too, though that's always been problematic to some degree, hence the "whale pact" a few months back.

For myself, I still believe I get back much more than I give away by upvoting other people's posts and thoughtful comments, and I can only hope that over time others will realize this as well. Perhaps the greatest proof of this is how I've gone from 250 follows just two months ago, to over 1350 today!

Also sounds like it's time for an update of this post of yours, as I'd be interested in hearing your revised post-HF19 thoughts as well! :)

Link: Steemit is on a Tear, Get Ready for Some Massive Growth!

Very thorough post alex. thanks. it seems the moral of the story is there are no guarantees and do your own research. I was wondering if the whale services were a slam dunk. It seems not so much. Worth learning more at least.

Thank you @bigfatmyths! And yes, that's really it. People who blindly buy without doing the appropriate research sort of deserve what they get. We all make mistakes, and there really are no guarantees. Even people who do the research can still get it wrong, so why place the odds even further against yourself by not learning all you can! :)

Hey, thank you for the mention!

thank you for offering your contest @gmuxx! :)

Congratulations! This post has been upvoted from the communal account, @minnowsupport, by alexpmorris from the Minnow Support Project. It's a witness project run by aggroed, ausbitbank, teamsteem, theprophet0, and someguy123. The goal is to help Steemit grow by supporting Minnows and creating a social network. Please find us in the Peace, Abundance, and Liberty Network (PALnet) Discord Channel. It's a completely public and open space to all members of the Steemit community who voluntarily choose to be there.

If you like what we're doing please upvote this comment so we can continue to build the community account that's supporting all members.

Yay, whaleshares!