| > Hard disagree - actually the usefulness is numerous, it’s the protocol(s) I think that either doom it or fracture it’s use. Ok I'll bite: in your opinion what is the absolute best application you associate with the web3 keyword, and is a clear unquestionable selling point? > The big fundamental is it allows for platforms to share equity with their users. What leads you to believe that equity sharing is not possible right now without resorting to web3 buzzwords? I mean, the only reason that stops platforms from sharing equity with anyone at all is the fact that platform owners do not want that. That is a business model consequence, not a technology limitation. > The problem is it has no single protocol. I don't know if you even noticed that you haven't described a single problem at all, at least one that people care about. You only talked about crypto as a solution to a problem than no one has. And the reason why no one shares equity is quite simple: no one wants to, because the ones that do never felt blocked at all. |
Anything with user generated content. The takes on web3 are significantly smaller and you can argue why but the fact is people get to choose their platform based on public contracts. Trust is the feature, the platforms can do anything web 2 does just with better more solid terms.
> What leads you to believe that equity sharing is not possible right now without resorting to web3 buzzwords?
Because modifying the cap table is hard and controlled by a single entity, so even if they somehow jumped through all the regulatory hoops they wouldn’t have the trust.
You’re also arguing against reality. Name companies that do it without crypto, because every crypto company does.
> you haven't described a single problem at all
I guess you think Twitter, YouTube and Facebook don’t have trust problems.
> the reason why no one shares equity is quite simple
Crypto has proven this wrong already.