I think decentralization, scalability and long term sustainability are more important than trust, profits, and performance. Efficiency is important but not if you have to give up on the core principles.
Having a pyramid style deterministic hierarchy of trustees to me seems to be the ugliest design from an adherence to core principles perspective. If it's not more decentralized than Bitcoin then why get rid of mining only to lose an advantage somewhere else?
You can make it decentralized with the trustee method, so I'm not completely against that.
But the way Bytemaster described it doesn't sound very decentralized, and lacks the element of chance, of randomness which in my opinion is necessary for security.
Maybe it could be done like this but selling it to the decentralization community is going to be hard unless it can be shown that it's less centralized than Bitcoin, Litecoin, and others.
If there must be a sort of "CEO" or "President" of Bitshares as the trustee, it adheres to a set of principles which promote the thinking which backs government/corporate hierarchy. This is why I recommend treating it more like a pool of nodes where an individual node is randomly selected and attempt to grow the pool of nodes as large as possible. Utilize the organic emergent properties.
This way many nodes will get a chance to be a trustee and it's not just one chief node at the top. The last thing we need is a pyramid at the heart of the chain in my opinion.
Generating the next block should be as efficient as possible to maximize dividends.
Transaction validation should be as quick as possible.
What are we talking about here in terms of increased efficiency and faster transactions? If the advantage is it will be a significant amount more efficient and significant amount faster, which in terms makes it much more usable for actual users of the system and profitable for shareholders, I say go ahead and find someone.
Would it be possible for i3 to be the (initial) trustee, they probably have the most BTS so their stake in the success of the operation makes them a good candidate and they have the technology means to set up the backup systems to make sure there is no disconnect with the network.
This is the exact scenario I am concerned about. How exactly is Bytemaster going to explain that to the decentralization community? Don't go the route of Ripple unless you're able to form the industry ties with Google.
Peercoin has similar problems and SunnyKing had a difficult time explaining some of his design decisions. Maybe they were necessary for the security of Peercoin but those decisions still have to be explained.
The more centralized it is, the harder it is to explain. Sure the current shareholders are going to want maximum profit but people who are future shareholders are not going to like it if looks like this.