Author Topic: PeerTracks has competition  (Read 9149 times)

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TravelsAsia

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Offline donkeypong

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Is peertracks about to end like ltcgear.com?

MUSE and PeerTracks are about to explode the market, my friend.

Offline Marky0001

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Is peertracks about to end like ltcgear.com?

Offline kenCode

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Florincoin with Alexandria seems farther along then anyone at this point.

Alexandria uses florincoin blockchain (i guess) for storing the hash of the magnet uri.
The alexandria.media software itself (http://dloa.net) does look like it's very far along. Nice ui too.
It uses bittorrent to distribute the files.
I would like to compare the two platforms, or all of the competitors to Muse/Peertracks actually in a spreadsheet.
Has this been done yet? Thanx to anyone who has this kind of info..
 
edit: Florincoin (or do they use Filecoin now?) is also mined, POW, not good. BTS (and its memo field) could be used for that instead. IPFS ((https://ipfs.io) https://github.com/ipfs/js-ipfs-api) is also used, I have never looked into that tech.
http://alexandria.media/#/254d9bc6179aba78f2c1b15b3ef297ca33bdac93a1bf04148813f5382691bc96
« Last Edit: December 10, 2015, 02:45:17 pm by kenCode »
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Tuck Fheman

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I'll also toss this out there ... I would not be surprised to see Ian Knowles from CIYAM (help) create a decentralized music platform. ;)
Hmm why him? He's into turing complete algos

It's just a wild guess, but I'm not exactly pulling it from my arse. ;)

Aahh i c you mean this then? https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=822100.msg9414766#msg9414766
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 ;)

Offline jsidhu

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I'll also toss this out there ... I would not be surprised to see Ian Knowles from CIYAM (help) create a decentralized music platform. ;)
Hmm why him? He's into turing complete algos

It's just a wild guess, but I'm not exactly pulling it from my arse. ;)

Aahh i c you mean this then? https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=822100.msg9414766#msg9414766
Last year
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delegate: dev.sidhujag

Tuck Fheman

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I'll also toss this out there ... I would not be surprised to see Ian Knowles from CIYAM (help) create a decentralized music platform. ;)
Hmm why him? He's into turing complete algos

It's just a wild guess, but I'm not exactly pulling it from my arse. ;)

Offline jsidhu

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I'll also toss this out there ... I would not be surprised to see Ian Knowles from CIYAM (help) create a decentralized music platform. ;)
Hmm why him? He's into turing complete algos
Hired by blockchain | Developer
delegate: dev.sidhujag


Offline Erlich Bachman

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TLDR
blockchain disintermediating marketing first, delivery second.

When you say "platform" do you mean a platform for storing and delivering music files?  Or a platform to trade viral managerial/fan value as artist coins?

Or both? Because what Cob did was utilize a blockchain, not for the boring "music delivery mechanism", but as a "ball buster"

So, as an artist, I can now fire both my blood sucking manager and label simultaneously creating viral marketing ideas for my next gig featuring:

...drumroll please......


my MOST RABID FANS (the ones who hold the most ME-coins)

An artist can sell Artist coins without even uploading a single song to Peertracks, man.  Me and my fans can manage our own career, thank you very much.  Am I talking to The Man?

With Muse, artists get to "pay" their entourage of mega-fans with back stage passes and front row seats because we will be shooting live video tonite, so get right.

Nobody ever cares if the artist gets paid when they're partying like it's 1999 (you won't be around to spend it anyway, so don't spill the buzz)





Muse lets an artist know who all the cool kids are so that they get green room tickets ANONYMOUSLY.  They don't have to inhale if they're clinton.


Byzantine is not our competitor, they are building our back end (music storage).  When that tech is finally developed, we will fork it in place of the Peertracks website to finally fully automate the delivery system and share drop on Team Byzantine and NOTES, but until then, our showcase blockchain is as it always was, a manager/fan club organizer disintermediator, not a music encyclopedia.

Remember the rules man:

1. Party First
2. Pay Later

New tech always goes toward vice first.  Porn invented the movie camera.

Proof of Porn:



See....They're partying first..... Pretty fn hot considering the porn selection in the stone age, eh?


the most prolific painters of the time were painting whatever could net them the most cash, and what netted them the most?  Pics of parties.

So from the prospective of which blockchain will produce the most user artist sponsored Kush?

I'm going with Eddie.

Maybe later, we'll have to pay for this immense hangover.

The other main difference between our platforms is that you have to trust Ed-n-Cob to pay you for your songs, but at least the blockchain lets an artist know when they are getting the old corn-Cob (in the ass)

You guys have been born and bred to think that anything that feels this good should be illegal, but it's not wrong to have a good time.




And the number 1 reason why I believe that Peertracks will be bigger than Pandora is this:







It's a crypto that is backed by something.











In Peertracks, the Brownie Points are backed by real brownies



TLDR
blockchain disintermediating marketing first, delivery second.


we all ran to a cue of people waiting to get through the door, and slammed into each other because the line was moving slowly... Now we're all just sitting here waiting to get through the door praying for progress.
« Last Edit: August 02, 2015, 03:50:20 am by Erlich Bachman »
You own the network, but who pays for development?

Tuck Fheman

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I'll also toss this out there ... I would not be surprised to see Ian Knowles from CIYAM (help) create a decentralized music platform. ;)

Offline Erlich Bachman

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"In our next article, we will layout the future of content distribution and rights management. We’ll see how that can benefit content creators and consumers in ways never before possible. Stay tuned."

"stay tuned" until Eddie and Cob make public their revenue model.  Next thing you know, they will be advertising 116,000 TPS.  But it's about freakin time that the record industry started competing for content creators and consumers.  Nice find.

From their white paper:

"A DDRM (distributed digital right management) solution incentivizes legal content usage over illegal content usage by rewarding legitimate exchanges and transactions while discouraging illegitimate transactions.   If the exact same effort is required to interact with content legally versus illegally it is reasonable to assume that people will choose the legal means."


1.
Content provider seeds incentivized data.

2.
Transactions are recorded securely using a blockchain ledger.

3.
Nodes are used for distributing files and reporting distribution.

4.
Consumer helps confirm delivery reporting information.

This system enables the distribution of content that is measured by the demand for the content
and successful fulfillment of delivery requests. This creates an open market for the storage and
distribution of data based on the nature of the content it contains. Content with varying data
requirements can be served by appropriate storage providers who are incentivized
proportionately to demand. All transactions are automatically verified and distributed.

So, yeah Tuck, it looks to me like these guys want to use a blockchain for storing and distributing (music) data (like maidsafe).  Pretty advanced idea, though, I don't see how they are going to pull it all off exclusively (without a centralized website for flow) in either a light or heavy wallet or client software.  Cob realizes that he needs Peertracks as a centralized front end, but if the byzantine team can create a decentralized blockchain for music storage/delivery, then we could fork it and then we would have a blockchain not only for consumer fun coin trading, but for the artist's music as well.
« Last Edit: August 02, 2015, 01:06:27 am by Erlich Bachman »
You own the network, but who pays for development?


Offline URSAY

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Florincoin with Alexandria seems farther along then anyone at this point.