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by rspeer
3422 days ago
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Now you're faced with exactly what the GP said: address spaces are hard to change later. What part of Urbit involves voting? Even if Urbit were a democracy, which sounds improbable, why would the people who have the scarce thing vote to open it up to more people? Look at Bitcoin right now: they can't increase the block size because large miners benefit from the small block size. |
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But there are two other misconceptions to clarify.
First, the defense against "What if the people who run urbit turn out to be jerks?" is not to have democratic voting. And it's not Bitcoin-style "51% of us agree" forks either, urbit is a top-down hierarchy. The defense is that Urbit is open source, and anyone could go out and start their own Urbit network and ask people to join it.
Second, planets have (theoretical) value, but they're not fungible, they're identities. A good analogy is: imagine if Reddit were designed to only have 2^32 handles, and they each cost a dollar. In that scenario, if Reddit said, "Hey, we've sold all our handles, hooray! Now we're going to issue an update that makes some more available", would existing Redditors lose anything?