Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Rune

Pages: 1 ... 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 [66] 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 ... 75
976
General Discussion / Re: Gold 2.0 vs. Shares 2.0: Lets Talk Metaphors
« on: October 20, 2014, 09:46:32 pm »
Delegated capital allocation.

DCA delegates have the capability to allocate capital to fund projects that will be PROFITABLE for shareholders. It will never be possible for a delegate to simply inflate and steal like we see governments do, because of the total transparency of the system and the ability to instantly kick bad delegates out.

977
As long as the DAC is growing faster than the inflation, it will still be profitable. If a delegate uses inflated funds to bring more value into the DAC than he took via inflation, it will be profitable. If stakeholders determine a delegate to be unprofitable, he will get voted out immediately.

Agreed. There needs to be some consequences for board of directors who promise the world and don't deliver. We need ways to actually measure whether or not buying power is increasing, whether or not DAC profits are going up.

If you can increase the burn rate then you could literally save cash within the DAC itself and use that to pay for investment. So if you can increase the burn rate then you in theory could dilute by simply reversing the burn. This wouldn't affect the initial proportions of the DAC as the cap would still be in place.

If we do not allow ourselves the flexibility that share dilution gives, we will be eaten by a DAC that will, such as VOTE. It's just common sense that a business that can issue stock to kickstart the network effect will destroy one that can't.

I'm for flexibility I just don't think it's as easy as it's being presented. This is going to be difficult not just in building the capabilities to do it but also in educating the shareholders.

We need the ability to vote.
We need reputation.
We need dilution.

But I think we need the ability to vote and reputation prior to dilution. If you cannot vote on infrastructure, if you don't have reputation so that there is accountability, then we have the same kind of risk you see with government politicians. Shareholders must be in control and there must be  performance metrics to track from within Bitshares X itself.

We will get the stakeholder hard fork vote capability soon. Once we have that, stakeholders will vote on whether to implement the possibility for delegates to dilute. If that is accepted, then PTS/AGS will be bought out through some one time vested share system, and the name will be changed to BTS. Once BTS is stable, Adam from followmyvote will apply to be a diluting delegate for whatever salary he thinks is reasonable, and if he is elected by stakeholders, he will begin to implement VOTE functionality into BTS.

I don't imagine there being any other diluting delegates in the near future, unless the ability to work directly for a blockchain attracts some high profile developers from the crypto community, that are so universally supported by BTS stakeholders that they can also get in.

978
There is no chance we will not simply upgrade and change the name of BTSX. Switching to yet another blockchain would be irrational and no BTSX stakeholder would do that.

Honestly, BM already has this figured out.

979
As long as the DAC is growing faster than the inflation, it will still be profitable. If a delegate uses inflated funds to bring more value into the DAC than he took via inflation, it will be profitable. If stakeholders determine a delegate to be unprofitable, he will get voted out immediately.

Agreed. There needs to be some consequences for board of directors who promise the world and don't deliver. We need ways to actually measure whether or not buying power is increasing, whether or not DAC profits are going up.

If you can increase the burn rate then you could literally save cash within the DAC itself and use that to pay for investment. So if you can increase the burn rate then you in theory could dilute by simply reversing the burn. This wouldn't affect the initial proportions of the DAC as the cap would still be in place.

If we do not allow ourselves the flexibility that share dilution gives, we will be eaten by a DAC that will, such as VOTE. It's just common sense that a business that can issue stock to kickstart the network effect will destroy one that can't.

980
General Discussion / Re: Summary of recent events / merger proposal
« on: October 20, 2014, 08:05:28 pm »
Nice summary, sounds good to me!  How do we move forward with this?  Do BTSX holders need to vote for delegates who support this or is it all just being done via Bytemaster power somehow?

I am not sure.  I think we should have a very clearly defined proposal, based on general community consensus, that includes exact share numbers for each party, and then we should have a community vote. 


Based on the market action, it seems that most of those who would be opposed to this have simply dumped all their BTSX already, and that those who held are generally in favor.

Before the big merger, a system that allows stakeholders to vote on hard forks will be implemented. We will then vote to decide if it should be implemented or not.

981
As long as the DAC is growing faster than the inflation, it will still be profitable. If a delegate uses inflated funds to bring more value into the DAC than he took via inflation, it will be profitable. If stakeholders determine a delegate to be unprofitable, he will get voted out immediately.

982
General Discussion / Re: Gold 2.0 vs. Shares 2.0: Lets Talk Metaphors
« on: October 20, 2014, 07:40:29 pm »
Remember it must also be decentralized.

Also the same argument you're making for corporations to dilute is the exact argument governments make for why they must have inflation. Be aware that the DAC can substitute for a corporation or a country.

These delegates are also the board of directors. I'm not against having monetary policy flexibility to do whatever is necessary for the survival of the chain but I don't think it should happen just because 20 or so guys in a hangout decide it should happen.

There should be a process where a proposal is formally presented, it should be debated, and then only ratified it gets a super-majority of 75% of the vote.  It should be very hard to dilute the shares and so far Bytemaster and others haven't given good enough reasons.

So while it's a capability to have in the toolbox it doesn't seem like Invictus is out of money. If Invictus isn't out of money then why do they need to borrow money from shareholders? Dilution is a loan from the network to whoever receives the buying power.

It will only happen if a majority of stakeholders decide for it to happen. I3 has no authority to implement it, it will only be the voted delegates that hold the power to do it.

983
General Discussion / Re: bitshares...number
« on: October 20, 2014, 07:21:43 pm »
New shares will be issued by elected delegates to pay for things like development of extra features, or marketing of bitassets. The important thing is that it will really difficult to abuse, and if anyone tries to inflate just to run away with the money, they will be voted out immediately.

The ability to issue shares to infuse capital will be an incredible competitive advantage over all our competitors.

984
General Discussion / Re: Summary of recent events / merger proposal
« on: October 20, 2014, 07:13:40 pm »
Thank you for this post.

985
The ability to issue bitshares as a means of capital infusion will be an insane competitive advantage versus all our competitors. While they rely on altruistic programmers to donate their time, we simply pay for the best developers in the industry. While they have fund raisers for dogecar and other random things, we hire real marketing professionals with a proven track record to explode our mindshare and get our brand out there. We have to pay for these things, yes, but they will provide much higher value at a much faster rate than simply begging or praying for generous specialists to donate their time and skills to us.

Seems to be capital infusion to generate real growth... therefore capital infusion becomes the only way to grow... how is it different than fed pumping QE to try to drive growth/confidence?

Capital infusion to kickstart growth. Once a network effect has been achieved real growth and real profits will take over. Why do start ups take century capital? It means they have to dilute their share, but it is obviously profitable.

986
The ability to issue bitshares as a means of capital infusion will be an insane competitive advantage versus all our competitors. While they rely on altruistic programmers to donate their time, we simply pay for the best developers in the industry. While they have fund raisers for dogecar and other random things, we hire real marketing professionals with a proven track record to explode our mindshare and get our brand out there. We have to pay for these things, yes, but they will provide much higher value at a much faster rate than simply begging or praying for generous specialists to donate their time and skills to us.

987
General Discussion / Do we own bitshares.com?
« on: October 20, 2014, 04:51:43 pm »
Was just thinking about the bitcoin.com fiasco, and wondering if the same thing will happen to us.

988
General Discussion / Re: Let's do it!!!
« on: October 20, 2014, 04:00:13 pm »
All aboard the hype train for BTS!!!

989
General Discussion / Re: Proposal to Resolve a Million Issues at Once
« on: October 20, 2014, 03:04:39 pm »
Talking with them today

So stoked to get them on board!!!!!

This will be the beginning of an exponential increase in crypto development. Once our funding model ramps up we will have all the smartest people in the space working together to create the ultimate product. It will be absurdly powerful.

990
General Discussion / Re: Proposal to Resolve a Million Issues at Once
« on: October 20, 2014, 02:09:31 pm »

It seems that we are all happy with the proposal (as it makes lot of sense to make the developers and the market compete with each other). Now the main and complex issue is how to make everyone fairly happy.

Will it be 25% PTS 25% AGS 50% BTSX ? Or..............  It will be good to see the numbers in another thread and see the reaction.

Disclaimer: I have AGS (pre and post), BTSX and a small amount of PTS.

Only fair way is proportional to pts market cap vs btsx.

Not really. If you don't give PTS a set % to value. People would just spike the likely thin PTS sell wall before snapshot to maximise BTS equity. PTS could end up having a temporary CAP of $20 million and get 33% of BTS equity.

True. It should be a "stylized" market cap. Around 5 million usd makes sense.

Pages: 1 ... 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 [66] 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 ... 75