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by BoorishBears
1876 days ago
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I got lost by the end of this comment... but that tends to happen when I hear people talk about crypto's value (the value always seems to be a very niche application which doesn't help). I never see it framed in straight forward widely beneficial terms. (And I'm not saying that to be flippant mind you, just an observation) The first paragraph, I can kind of follow it, you're saying you can check someone's track record for providing information? But that's the least important part of reputation systems isn't it? Being able to vet the reputation hasn't been artificially inflated is really the meat of that. After all, what's stopping someone from making up a history? It requires the same central authority current systems do right? The second paragraph is where I totally get lost. I have a vague understanding of each term, but how they come together doesn't seem to add up for me |
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Say you want to buy crop futures on Ethereum using smart contracts. The contract is “trustless” it will execute according to the Ethereum rules. Once set in motion no one can interfere.
The problem is that the contract needs to know something about the outside world.
That’s where an oracle comes in: a provider of information to the smart contract.
The oracle could lie about the crop price as a scam to manipulate the market.
We must trust it so there are 2 things “who” runs it and also have they been providing reliable data in the past.
With this in place anyone can now write up futures contract or options contract or weirder stuff based on the price of the crop.
And other people can participate independently of both the oracle and the contract writer.
This is like taking apart the commodities market and turning into Lego to build anything.
The advantage over normal finance is probably akin to the advantage of Linux over Windows. You can hack Linux. You can compile everything. It is yours.
It’s hard to say what this will lead to but I can see a lot of cool ideas coming from it.
NFTs as they are called, Which are tokens for things instead of money could add more. You could resell your games not at GameStop but on an automated marketplace on Ethereum. Just say “I want to resell this one for $40” and forget about it. One day $40 rolls into your account and the game stops loading up from steam. And that’s a simple example.
I could hack an IFTTT to say sell 3 games but only if I won’t make the rent. Of course this is in a future where you can pay your rent from crypto - but if they get the fees down you could have PayPal like transmitters between transferring money for small fee or even free.