| Not an expert on blockchain or anything really, so I'm just spitballing here. It's an interesting idea in the sense that you'd have this enforced community-giving where the individual decisions about the giving are removed from the matter itself. I'm not sitting there looking at my bank account and wondering how much to give, and how. Instead I can look at it more abstractly. That's interesting. But I think there's many problems. The first real bulk of people to jump in will probably be those looking for a payday. However you'll be diverting coins from them, reducing their payday. You'd have to convince the self-interested that the coins they are giving up end up providing so much value to their other coins that it's worth it. This seems ripe to set up an even worse chicken-egg problem than usual. The voting process. The only thing I can come up with is to basically run it based on coins held, unless you want to get into the business of confirming identities and all that. Again you end up with those most financially invested in the system being the ones with the control. How do you get them on-board with the idea, lest they decide to give to no non-profits? About the only answer I've got here, which dovetails with the voting thing, is to just bake the addresses in and use hardforks to change em. This protects from attacks and also protects the community from, well, you. However the main problems I foresee are all things that significantly reduce the thing I find most interesting about the concept - that being having the ability to remove the whole donation thing to a more abstract sort of problem. But if all the people with the power are the ones with the most financial stake, it's no longer really that abstract. |