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andrewxhill | 4 years ago
If you are genuinely interested, let's narrow it down. Which of his claims are the strongest/most distressing to you? Maybe some of those folks will stop ghosting and get into real conversation.
andrewxhill | 4 years ago
If you are genuinely interested, let's narrow it down. Which of his claims are the strongest/most distressing to you? Maybe some of those folks will stop ghosting and get into real conversation.
muglug|4 years ago
Instead NFTs are seen as an investment vehicle — they will appreciate in price over time, just look at BAYC.
One of the other claims is that cryptocurrency largely favours existing pools of wealth and capital. Anecdotally this matches my experience — the people I know who have done really well from crypto investments are those who were already incredibly well-off in the early 2010s, and were looking for interesting places to invest.
The last claim (that I've also heard first-hand) is it's really easy to raise VC money if your startup centres around "decentralisation", which means a ton of entrepreneurs have a strong vested interest in believing that all this stuff is the future. The big irony there is a lot of the companies in this space (e.g. Coinbase) are de facto advertising themselves as the centralised hub for decentralised systems, creating big points of failure that contradict the entire ethos of the blockchain.
andrewxhill|4 years ago
Again, it's definitely true... across the entire economy. In most of the economy, there are pretty much two parties that own the organizations. Those who create the organizations (e.g., founders and some employees) and those who invest in the organizations (wealthy entities). What's different in web3 is that many great projects are working to introduce a 3rd (or more) slice of the pie: the community. Some places to look for this are DAOs working on grants to underrepresented people, Gitcoin Grants & quadratic funding for funding public goods etc, any good token distributions for new tokens, or community-driven networks like Audius or Helium.
It's pretty early days, but I think lots of people _inside_ of web3 are working really hard on this problem.
Two really great Sunday evening links: This one is a fascinating argument to more precisely frame how speculation leads to innovation, so why the belief of investors is a good thing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_GNLPniic4. And this one, connecting crypto to a long thread of history (and economic access) https://overcast.fm/+kmaHgw-3s
andrewxhill|4 years ago
Again, probably true... but to an extent. Take a look at that Chris Burniske talk I posted in the other comment. There are many things that look new in crypto, but in fact, they are just more efficient in crypto. One of them is the speed through which the value that accrues in crypto is redeployed to fund new innovations. So when we see these huge market caps of tokens, it means huge treasuries are also being deployed to fund good (and bad) ideas. This means many founders in the space can find good homes quickly, making it more competitive for external investors to access the founder pipeline. So the strong vested interest you point out is partially just the result of this wild fast loop.
I really don't see coinbase as a contradiction. It solved some pretty big pain points that web3 alone couldn't solve in the early days. Some of that will be replaced, other parts of it probably will not be replaced. It's just one piece of a puzzle.
I guess final thought related to that last point. There is a really easy mistake that founders make all the time. They look at the market or the competitors and they assess the current state, a snapshot. It's really hard to break out of that and assess that outside of us with velocity taken into account. Where will they be in x amount of time? People will sit there and point at centralized opensea as proof of web3 failure, until opensea isn't the dominant player anymore, and they will point to the next thing. But where is it all going? Where is it already that we just cannot see from the outside?
andrewxhill|4 years ago
Your first argument: NFTs are primarily successful because crypto-holding individuals see them as a place to invest without cashing out.
On trend with all my answers, I think this is true to an extent too. But what it misses is a vibrant ecosystem of experimentation that is happening with NFTs below the easily visible surface. The ecosystem is driven by creative people and consumed by people that truly believe these are worthwhile experiments to undertake.
Just a few diverse examples:
- Loot provided NFTs that is simply your inventory in a yet-to-be-made game. The creator essentially said, here, this is an open, ownable, and composable building block. Now, the owners are stakeholders in the development and success of those games. Of course the people that bought these were already holding ETH, but many of those people think something cool is happening here. Otherwise, nothing will get built. https://hackmd.io/@XR/lootwars
- Sam Harris's plans to use the membership/association behind the rise of Pfps to create a community that gives away its wealth and then virtue signals that in ways to encourage others to do the same https://docs.google.com/document/d/1u_YeUyztgJhWgLZ9YJh6eVKZ...
- CryptoVoxels sell parcels of land as NFTs. Taken together, they generate a metaverse of spaces that the owners fill out with their imagination. https://www.cryptovoxels.com/ These people are passionate about something new and different, they are building.
I personally even find the memberships and DAOs driving many of the popular Pfps (e.g. Doodles, Creature World, Coolman's Universe) to be a bit contrary to your main argument. Many of them have highly active communities that you only get to be part of by owning the NFT. So for many, it's not really a place to park or spend their ETH. The economy of those closed communities is pretty fascinating. Recall, the NFT creators (core team) get a cut every time an NFT is sold. But it's not like the 5% is going to some artist's pocket, they are building teams of devs etc to world build. It's worth taking to pen and paper and figuring out the economic game being played between the core teams that build the community and the collectors/traders that want to be part of it. They are revenue generating creative organizations... let's see where they go.
dmitriid|4 years ago
If there were any such people, we would have any number of good articles and materials on crypto explaining how crypto is good actually, and that also:
- understand how the world works
- don't rely on circular references
- actually show the need for a blockchain in the proposed solutions
However, there are none.
> So it's mostly become void of any interesting discussions on the topic.
Of course it's void. And it's due to the countless crypto shills who invariably run away from this discussions with a combination of:
- there are honest people in crypto space
- there are good projects in crypto space, not just scams
- just follow crypto twitter/discord, do your research
andrewxhill|4 years ago
"Dooooes radio ring a bell?" and the crowd all laughs.