Is Steem really about Proof of Brain? - Thoughts on Steem's Future & Direction

in #steem6 years ago (edited)
I'm seriously trying to wrap my head around the idea. It seems to be that the interpretation I may have had the first time I read such a concept is pretty far from the platform's consensus. I would like to however invite anyone that would stumble upon this post to share with me and effectively with everyone else, what you think @dan and his development team meant by such concept.


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The Good

In theory the idea to me is exciting and groundbreaking. Most of us on this platform believe in one way or another in merit, the simple yet powerful idea that the effort we put forth, the content we create and the relationships we make will with time give fruits of wealth. Defining wealth is subjective, but with the intent of keeping this conversation somewhat flowing I will simply use the word in place of success.

The one thing that attracted me to this platform was the idea that I had found a place that gave me the opportunity to start with the same advantages and disadvantages as everyone else. In other words, it did not seem in any way to go against my personal beliefs of merit and effort. I've never been one to argue for equality of outcome since I'm acquainted enough with history to know how communism and its branching ideas have worked against humanity's best interests over and over.

Allow me to drive the point home with the image that greeted my arrival to this platform


It becomes easy to imagine how this image along with the concept of proof of brain presents and somewhat appealing notion that anyone and I do mean anyone, regardless of cultural background and opinion can find their worth, their value on this platform.

The Bad

Aside from the many shortcomings of the user experience that the steemit website (mirrors included) still present, the users find themselves having a hard time achieving consensus on the direction and vision for the platform. I think the best analogy I can come up with is that when the blockchain was created, it was as if bucket of legos was spilled all over the floor and little to no directions was ever given to the players.

Go... build something

This lack of direction would be followed by the creation of communities, alliances and other initiatives that attempted with a limited level of success to overcome some of the inherent problems with the blockchain's code itself.

To this conversation we can add the challenge of user retention, the learning curve of cryptos, the inability for some people to use them freely in their countries and all the confusing never ending subjects that I'm sure failing to mention.

Attracting investors

Becomes a game of knowing what not to say more than a standard sales pitch, and In many situations some of the challenges are bad enough for cautious money to stay away. This is not to say that we should not try, that we should not be attempting to fix, adapt and develop for the platform or anything of that sort. My comment is made as an observation of the current reality.

To me the main problem boils down to the fact that we cannot come to a consensus of what this website should be about. I can say until I'm red in the face, that I find no value or merit in copy pasting articles, pictures or memes, but my experience is anecdotal and requires a bigger sample of the population. Are we a social media website? Are we a blogging website? Are we more like reddit? Who knows? Can we even reach to a point of a majority being in agreement?

No answers here, just questions and that without a doubt is pretty bad....

The ugly

We struggle to move forward because we can't be civil with each other. There is no rule in the book that says I can't disagree profoundly with someone without disrespecting that person. In all honestly when respect is lost, when civility has left the door, any argument we try to make is as effective as punching sand with bare hands.

This makes our trending page become the center stage for the feuds, vapid insults and distasteful images. All in the name of a vision for a greater good that none of us can agree to. Its apparent and obvious that all of us who are invested on this platform want Steem to evolve from social experiment to success story, how we get there is the road that we can't seem to agree on.

Regardless on what side you stand on the whole abuse debate, we can all clearly see that some of the tactics used to control it are not effective in the slightest. The idea that we need to abuse the system to safeguard our investment because we are protecting it, reminds me of the comical idea of "fornicating in the name of virginity".

Which takes me back to the main question this post is attempting to answer...

What is proof of Brain and is that what this blockchain is really about or did I get it wrong from the very beginning?


(signature by @bembelmaniac )


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It is totally proof of brain... not the brain concept I thought at first, but interesting nonetheless.
Why do you ask if you got it wrong from the beginning? Something important. I think it is not a fixed thing. It can evolve, as we see on each hard fork. It was not the same thing the first days, than the first month, than the first year... and it will be different next year... and the next... So... I would say... it is proof of adaptation. Now I like it more :D

oohh I like that...

Proof of Adaptability

That is something to ponder...

A lot of good questions, and this is a good thing. Only by asking questions can we conceive of answers.

I am not terminally discouraged with Steemit. Not so long ago I suggested to @berniesanders that he'd profit more himself and the platform if he and others with substantial holdings made moderate delegations for no more than the curation rewards such delegations might bring, because that would greatly improve the reach of his SP as curative, and encouragement to new users. Their gain of SP through the upvotes his delegations would enable would cause upwards pressure on the price of Steem, and if enough of that pressure were applied, he'd gain great ROI from capital gains alone. And, he didn't flag me!

I see today that he is maintaining course however, and neither does that discourage me, because whales flagging each other is GREAT for minnows, as that leaves more rewards on the floor beneath the whales' table for us to share.

I have long noted that despite such incivility as can be witnessed on Steemit, it is without a doubt the most civil social media platform I have ever visited, and even despite it retains the ability to be anonymous. This puts paid to the myriad claims that anonymity inevitably causes ordinary people to become the most vicious trolls.

The reason for the civility is the potential for rewards. Folks, even inveterate trolls, want to be rewarded more than they are willing to trash their account by being trash themselves. It's a powerful human trait that Steemit harnesses for the good of all concerned.

Note that it isn't stake-weighting that produces this effect, but merely rewards. I reckon stake-weighting is the cause of all worldly woes, ice cream melting, and why I don't have a Boxster to leave to my posterity, but no one really cares that I that I think that.

A look around, from time to time, on the web, assures me that Steemit remains the best game in town yet.

As for proof of brain, you have done it with this post, and I have with this comment. More than that isn't necessary IMHO to the platform. The financial manipulations aren't really proof of brain, but instead failures of it. Steemit is a damn fine experiment, and it has succeeded.

It may yet succeed far more, perhaps beyond the wildest dreams of any of us living today.

I hope so.

Thanks!

Well my friend... absolutely brilliant observations and a good reminder to for me to step back and look at other social media platforms.

A look around, from time to time, on the web, assures me that Steemit remains the best game in town yet.

Funny you say that right after I came from watching youtube videos and was reminded of the nastiness of their ever lurking trolls.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts brother.

Is that what dlive, dsound and dtube are for? The different facets of this platform? I kind of like the ambiguity of ‘is it a blogging site’, ‘is it like reddit’, ‘is it a social media platform’, really what is it? I like it because it leaves the freedom for me to post philosophically, followed by recipe posts and then maybe some sketches. I suppose that ambiguity and freedom also leaves a lot of room for people to post (what I consider to be) junk.… i.e. Instagram poses, Facebook status updates, copy and pasted google and YouTube articles.
However, I’ve discovered a lot of talent here in music, art, creative writing and even just conversational blogs about a certain notion. For the most part, I ignore the crap, avoid the trolls and go about my merry way. Perhaps if everyone did that, the junk would just fade away. Thanks for sharing @meno ✌️

Your outlook is quite positive and not only do I appreciate it a lot I think we need more of it... I'm also hoping that the integration of Hive/Communities adds a little more shape to the landscape.

If you are curious as to why I felt compelled to write this, click on here... but before you do, let me apologize... its not pretty.

Thank you, I appreciate your support. I’ve never needed to flag anyone yet, maybe because I’m such a small timer on this platform. But it seems to me that wherever there is autonomy, there is room for exploitation.
I’ll explain:

When there isn’t governance, there is room for accounts to exploit the loopholes of the landscape. Some spammy accounts may have made money posting their spam and therefore have a little more weight to throw around with all of their attained influence but I’m seeing most of the people I follow call these accounts out before they ever get started. If everyone did that, wouldn’t they disappear? Idk.

I prefer the non-governance of this platform and if that’s the trade off maybe it’s not that bad.

Please take my opinions with a grain of salt for I’m still very new and have a lot to learn about how this platform works.

I think your observations are not off or at least they are accurate most of the time. The truth is that if you have enough SP you can pretty much do as you please free from consequence... granted, in order to be a complete disruptor of peace and get away with with it your account must valuate in the millions.

I both like this and dislike it, the reason behind my bipolar answer has to do with the fact that the distribution of Steem resembles in many ways how the economy we are supposed to be escaping from has managed to secure the people in power with questionable tactics.

I'm also not making an argument for redistribution of wealth in a way that would hint ideas of socialism. My point or I guess my concern is to bring up the possibility that the way the system is currently design may not allow for people to move up the ranks while participating on said race with whatever we might define as ethical and moral.

If its better/easier to scam

If that is what we are more likely to be rewarding then the blockchain can become a playground for the people who thrive at recognizing loopholes and not the platform that is supposed to reward positive behaviors.

I'm painting a grim picture, I fully realize it, but its not my intention to disillusion anyone... I'm simply asking questions.

Man, that is a great point. The parallels drawn between society today and the class system of Steemit are spot on! Thanks for sharing that 👍.

Sure, The higher the SP the more the clout is that they have but does anyone with such SP actually abuse that power? This is a real question; I don’t actually know anyone with millions in their wallets.

I don’t think you’re painting a grim picture @meno for mere questions are neither negative nor positive, they just simply are questions. In fact, it wouldnt be a bad idea for every Steemit member to be confronted with these questions so there can be a healthy and inclusive dialogue about ideas.

The user retention is a problem that shoukd be tackled, most come to steemit with the notion that they are paid for writing quality articles. After the introduction post that garnered a few votes, most are left with nothing and leave the blockchain. You have to join a strong community or slaving for a top user to get quality upvotes. The power is kind of centralised with the early adopters and few that have the money to purchase some Steem.


A community where there is no direction, her progress will be slow. Direction also involves co-operation between the top users of the community. I pray a consensus shoukd be met so the blockchain can move to the next level.


I believe @dan proof of concept is a nice concept, but some users are threatening the existence of that concept, we must however come together to prevent that from happening. This is a big community and we all belong and have a say in it.


I take steemit as a site that helps me air my view to individuals from different cultural backgrounds, and also learn other people views.

do you hold any hopes on the upcoming upgrades, like SMT and Hive communities?

I must confess, I don't have any high hopes aside the fact that Steem price might increase. The basic problem won't be solved. It will still persist.

In my tribe, there is a saying that a place where there are no laws, it is a lawless place.

Certain Laws/Rules should be made to curtail abusive user activities. If not some users are hellbent on spoiling the system as long as they make their own profit.

can't argue with the logic... that being said I'm trying to keep my chin up, move forward...

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