cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: Popcorn Time Is Back
cy_overlord's comments
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
The question then comes to whether we want to deal with unpredictable human "bug" or consistent computer bug. For the later, we can engineer our way to a minimum risk model, where it become punishing to exploit a bug.
We are doing the same thing with the current system, it's just that different banks and companies are responsible for different systems. There are bugs and exploits in systems of our finacial institution and we rely on human to mitigate the risk.
Will computer be better than human or can we build a hybrid system? That's the question we need to answer.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
Blockchain present us with a new way to coordinate online activities and transactions. It's the right path forward? We don't know, at least not until we exhaust all the possible options and therein lies a lot of opportunities for technical breakthroughs that could possible solve all the concerns we had, technically.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
Miners/Stakers who is incentivize to validate the network and maintain the collective consensus.
All your points are valid and universally known but the more important here is whether or not those vulnerabilities are inherently caused by the nature of blockchain or tehcnical problems that we can/need to solve.
A good blockchain is not owned by anyone, any changes made need to go through multiple layers of peer review.
We are still very rooted in our current ways of doing things hence we are seeing phenomenon where companies are trying to take control by either building their own blockchain or centralised service on top of a blockchain. But if I travel back to the 70's and told you that someday you can run an Internet company, would you believe it?
We are no where near endgame but if you dig deep enough, you will see many exciting technical breakthroughs. One of the fascinating one is zero-knowledge validation. Blockchain could be the solution or maybe not, I don't care, I'm excited about the innovative opportunities that it brought upon.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
The trust in put on the code itself which not one but all of us agreed upon. Today, we don't have the tools to allow people to actually understand it but it doesn't mean that we won't in the future. Abstraction layers will be built.
Of course this is an optimistic speculation. I'm personally not attached to crypto in anyways but I'm excited about innovative opportunities that it enabled.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
For e.g., you could literally send NFTs to any address (including a smart contract address) which make things stuck forever. Now there's a safe way to transfer things which check whether or not it is a valid address. And this became the de facto standard for almost any NFT smart contract.
All these didn't came out of nowhere.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
Which like the article argues, is not something that can be solved by any ledger, distributed or not. Even if banks reverses records, they don't change the data which is already on the database/record, instead they just issue a new transaction from the backend or withdrawing it from a legit reserve that they own. In any case, no reversing was done.
What if instead of taking the bank to the court, we have something in place for it that runs based on certain "if statements" or "switch case". Of course, is not as easy as it sounds, we need conditions that are robust enough and not vulnerable to abusers. It's a very complicated problem to solve.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
It's technically possible to replace any blockchain with a database but where are you going to host it and who is the trusted central authority?
Blockchain might not the solution but it shows us an alternative to trusting some middlemen that have too much power, instead we trust code that is emotionless, non-judgemental and consistent.
A distributed ledger is more than just a database, it's a technology that can orchestrated trust online without a central authority. That's a huge deal, compared to a sql database that is owned by someone, who is the singularity that administrates the whole thing.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: In defense of cryptocurrency
So instead of reversing, we could make all NFTs locked from trading for 3 days after transaction which anyone could appeal for a dispute and buyback the NFT for the same price anytime.
The challenge here is, can we actually come up a set of robust rules that is not too rigid yet not abusable. It's not easy, it won't be right off the bat and it certainly require a lot of critical, innovative thinking. And maybe the solution won't have to be complex at all.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: Toxic Productivity
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: Always Own Your Platform (2019)
And for people who needs to distribute stuff, they would just opt-in for every platform, self-owned or big tech.
Removing middlemen or the whole decentralization thing is a welcomed change, so we get more to be in control more. But this is a paradigm shift, like how we moved from offline to online, the ways and methods of doing things need to change. For instance, instead of self-hosting the entire thing, I imagine a way for people to actually host their own data, while big tech host the frontend and backend. When you want your data to be displayed on Facebook, you will need to provide a temporary access key that can be revoked anytime.
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: Optimizing for Feelings
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: I only care about the helpful notifications, not the promotional ones
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: GitHub user sends notification to 400k users
cy_overlord | 3 years ago | on: Keep the web free, say no to Web3 (2021)
But remember this, Internet itself is someone's utopia in very beginning but it morphed and transform from inspiration and motivation into a technology that we use almost every day. Having a vision is the necessary step for disruption to happen, the wilder and more resonating it is the bigger the disruption is going to be.
However, when someone tries to define the future (or un-define it like in this article), it is almost always cringey. The next web or the next big thing cannot be define, if it could be then it would already happened, the technology would already be accessible right from our pocket.
If one look closely underneath the web3 blanket, there are lots of innovation to was expedite as we are throwing in so much resources and talents.
Will all of them come together and form the next web? I doubt it but will one of them preserve, stood the test of time and finds its application? I remain very optimistic.
cy_overlord | 4 years ago | on: Web3 is centralized and inefficient
History is repeating itself, old thinking + new technology is never going to create innovation, it's just going to end like a blazing trail of a shooting star, a tale to tell. We are pretty much heading in the same direction with blockchain.
Decentralization is smexy but it comes with a price, it disrupts everything, starting from the way we build it.
I agreed entirely that VCs are building monopolies and that money are pouring into the space for no obvious practical reason but it is inevitable until we find a better model of building. And those who are trying to build a web2 version of something in web3 will most likely fail because web3 isn't a replacement or better alternative to web2. Hence it is pointless to compare what we are have, i.e. a decentralized email server.
Decentralization, in my humble opinion, is putting the decisions/ownership back to the users but it is never going to liberate the users from a centralized entity. The things we choose to use/consume will inevitably be owned by a centralized entity, the key difference is whether or not we can seamlessly migrate to another platform of choice. And instead of one big entity controlling everything, we get multiple smaller space that makes their own rule providing the same service.
NFTs marketplace is an example of this, you own the NFT, you can take it and move it to another platform and you can even access directly via your own node without any platform. The problem with NFT however, is the usefulness itself, not the nature of NFT.
Imagine having multiple social networks that you can join with a wallet address, each with their own rules and networks. Instead of a Metaverse, think Multiverse.
Imagine having multiple ads platform that you can choose to integrate with your daily browsing and earn tokens to use in a certain way while doing so. Think Brave but instead of just Brave, you get different ads agencies with different collection of ads.
The main problem here is that our old business model doesn't work here, we are most likely going to end up broke running something that is ideally "decentralized". The fallback plan? Sit and write about how centralized web3 is OR experiment by building on top of blockchain technology, fail miserably as a joke, make some noise and motivate someone to "think different".