| I am an early adopter and I've been following the development of MaidSafe since 2014.
I think I do understand your frustration because in the very early years the development had very little documentation. Also it is doubly frustrating to read about this perception of being "buzzwordy" or "scammy" or to have "people paid" to promote this network... because this team is exactly the opposite to the point of frustration. The actual team is all about doing the grunt work with zero regards towards marketing or promoting it.
They didn't even properly capitalized for PR their participation as consultants of HBO's Silicon Valley, if Pied Piper Network sounded very similar to the goals of the SAFE Network it wasn't just coincidence.
Mike Judge confirmed it in the Decentralized Web Summit that they especially did research on MaidSafe. In any case, that image should be changing now, the risk profile has changed substantially.
The proof-of-concept was released two years ago, and now there are actual usable alpha you can download right now to test it out. The main risk in a project as ridiculously ambitious as this one is that they may never release anything. But they had, and they are still developing at neck breaking speed.
So if you really understand the scope of this project and you see actual code to play with, you should be orgasmically elated. If you are not, you don't really understand the implications of a network like this being released.
If you don't understand how they are designing the network, you should start by reading this: https://primer.safenetwork.org/
And watch this to understand how Xor Distance and Xor routing works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr9FJRDcNzk&list=PLiYqQVdgdw...
And learn about PARSEC:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JKagaPUrDsY I hope it helps you understand that this a serious project that isn't using buzzwords just for the sake of marketing, it is truly groundbreaking and in my opinion is the next paradigm shift after the invention of the blockchain.
And this is coming from a bitcoin early adopter (2010). Regards |