| >>the market doesn't have enough liquidity for you to gain a meaningful stake This is unsupported. There are billions of dollars worth of ETH sold every day. If you intended to hold what you bought, the liquidity would gradually go down as you took what was bought off the market, but you could certainly acquire a significant share of the stake. >>Non-profit is just pre-mine beneficiary that people will fight for control over. That assumes zero altuistic oversight from ETH stakeholders at large deterring attempts to corrupt the grant issuing process, which is not a sensible assumption. >>And you conveniently ignored all the other problems with PoS Long-range attack is addressed with dependence on weak subjectivity: https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/11/25/proof-stake-learned-lov... The rest of your criticisms have similarly been addressed in state of the art Proof of Stake protocols, in particular for ETH 2.0 PoS. |
not nearly enough to purchase a meaningful stake that could protect you from premine scammers that launched the project. not to mention - you'd be giving up your money for their benefit. double rekt.
> zero altuistic oversight from ETH stakeholders at large deterring attempts to corrupt the grant issuing process, which is not a sensible assumption
ah, nice, a system that simply relies on altruistic motives of premine scammers that will be in control and largest beneficiaries of those staking grants. what could possibly go wrong.
> Long-range attack is addressed with dependence on weak subjectivity: ... The rest of your criticisms have similarly been addressed in state of the art Proof of Stake protocols
it's not addressed, it's just partly waved away and partly obfuscated in a non-solutions like slashing or checkpointing.
pos still doesn't work, pow is the only known decentralized and trustless consensus reaching protocol.