@cryptoworm
25Crypto altcoin trader & investor. All things cryptocurrency, bitcoin, trading, mining, btc, blockchain, decentralization, TA
steemit.com/@cryptowormVOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS0.00%
Net Worth
0.034USD
STEEM
0.000STEEM
SBD
0.000SBD
Effective Power
5.001SP
├── Own SP
0.635SP
└── Incoming DelegationsDeleg
+4.366SP
Detailed Balance
| STEEM | ||
| balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| market_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| reward_steem_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| STEEM POWER | ||
| Own SP | 0.635SP | SP |
| Delegated Out | 0.000SP | SP |
| Delegation In | 4.366SP | SP |
| Effective Power | 5.001SP | SP |
| Reward SP (pending) | 0.000SP | SP |
| SBD | ||
| sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| sbd_conversions | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| sbd_market_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| reward_sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
{
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "1033.986202 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "7109.673604 VESTS",
"sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"conversions": []
}Account Info
| name | cryptoworm |
| id | 248594 |
| rank | 634,078 |
| reputation | 164600272 |
| created | 2017-07-08T21:15:30 |
| recovery_account | steem |
| proxy | None |
| post_count | 5 |
| comment_count | 0 |
| lifetime_vote_count | 0 |
| witnesses_voted_for | 0 |
| last_post | 2018-02-26T19:48:48 |
| last_root_post | 2018-02-26T19:48:48 |
| last_vote_time | 2018-02-26T19:49:36 |
| proxied_vsf_votes | 0, 0, 0, 0 |
| can_vote | 1 |
| voting_power | 0 |
| delayed_votes | 0 |
| balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| sbd_balance | 0.000 SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000 SBD |
| vesting_shares | 1033.986202 VESTS |
| delegated_vesting_shares | 0.000000 VESTS |
| received_vesting_shares | 7109.673604 VESTS |
| reward_vesting_balance | 0.000000 VESTS |
| vesting_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting_withdraw_rate | 0.000000 VESTS |
| next_vesting_withdrawal | 1969-12-31T23:59:59 |
| withdrawn | 0 |
| to_withdraw | 0 |
| withdraw_routes | 0 |
| savings_withdraw_requests | 0 |
| last_account_recovery | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| reset_account | null |
| last_owner_update | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| last_account_update | 2018-02-26T19:50:51 |
| mined | No |
| sbd_seconds | 0 |
| sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| savings_sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
{
"id": 248594,
"name": "cryptoworm",
"owner": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM8iUKCR7GNz8mAKvuRQrn9UUiJDYbydrTYXyatptfjTd24fKUvZ",
1
]
]
},
"active": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM5T5RnwM9941EdtVHHLfUECGh3GAVYbMcwScbMrAtKtikTm8Zni",
1
]
]
},
"posting": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM568LssKe5QeQCsr7KYUSVEDPJcoJKW2ce2Ndtdu7EY47ZtsD1E",
1
]
]
},
"memo_key": "STM4wKhjeGpoVrruYgq5r2T5qwyLXG8csXZp58oLWbR2VmMXYjTGC",
"json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"https://cryptohustle.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/web-Main.jpg\",\"name\":\"CryptoWorm Official\",\"about\":\"Crypto altcoin trader & investor. All things cryptocurrency, bitcoin, trading, mining, btc, blockchain, decentralization, TA\",\"location\":\"United Kingdom\"}}",
"posting_json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"https://cryptohustle.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/web-Main.jpg\",\"name\":\"CryptoWorm Official\",\"about\":\"Crypto altcoin trader & investor. All things cryptocurrency, bitcoin, trading, mining, btc, blockchain, decentralization, TA\",\"location\":\"United Kingdom\"}}",
"proxy": "",
"last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"last_account_update": "2018-02-26T19:50:51",
"created": "2017-07-08T21:15:30",
"mined": false,
"recovery_account": "steem",
"last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"reset_account": "null",
"comment_count": 0,
"lifetime_vote_count": 0,
"post_count": 5,
"can_vote": true,
"voting_manabar": {
"current_mana": "8143659806",
"last_update_time": 1779059019
},
"downvote_manabar": {
"current_mana": 2035914951,
"last_update_time": 1779059019
},
"voting_power": 0,
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"sbd_seconds": "0",
"sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"savings_sbd_seconds": "0",
"savings_sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_vesting_balance": "0.000000 VESTS",
"reward_vesting_steem": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "1033.986202 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "7109.673604 VESTS",
"vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
"next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
"withdrawn": 0,
"to_withdraw": 0,
"withdraw_routes": 0,
"curation_rewards": 0,
"posting_rewards": 0,
"proxied_vsf_votes": [
0,
0,
0,
0
],
"witnesses_voted_for": 0,
"last_post": "2018-02-26T19:48:48",
"last_root_post": "2018-02-26T19:48:48",
"last_vote_time": "2018-02-26T19:49:36",
"post_bandwidth": 0,
"pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
"vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reputation": 164600272,
"transfer_history": [],
"market_history": [],
"post_history": [],
"vote_history": [],
"other_history": [],
"witness_votes": [],
"tags_usage": [],
"guest_bloggers": [],
"rank": 634078
}Withdraw Routes
| Incoming | Outgoing |
|---|---|
Empty | Empty |
{
"incoming": [],
"outgoing": []
}From Date
To Date
steemdelegated 4.366 SP to @cryptoworm2026/05/17 23:03:39
steemdelegated 4.366 SP to @cryptoworm
2026/05/17 23:03:39
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 7109.673604 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #106142024/Trx 092d0d54ad32da19520d2ac592a45da4f4da8ca0 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "092d0d54ad32da19520d2ac592a45da4f4da8ca0",
"block": 106142024,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-05-17T23:03:39",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "7109.673604 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.700 SP to @cryptoworm2026/05/11 23:03:21
steemdelegated 2.700 SP to @cryptoworm
2026/05/11 23:03:21
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 4397.463199 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #105969982/Trx 5d2fa0354449bfbf48a4de120df002224cb77ac5 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "5d2fa0354449bfbf48a4de120df002224cb77ac5",
"block": 105969982,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-05-11T23:03:21",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "4397.463199 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.374 SP to @cryptoworm2026/04/25 22:26:33
steemdelegated 4.374 SP to @cryptoworm
2026/04/25 22:26:33
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 7122.189360 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #105509711/Trx 6e1c1926db5c2716e6bb19c96ec7d2929ae8d6af |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "6e1c1926db5c2716e6bb19c96ec7d2929ae8d6af",
"block": 105509711,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-04-25T22:26:33",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "7122.189360 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.726 SP to @cryptoworm2026/01/23 04:37:24
steemdelegated 2.726 SP to @cryptoworm
2026/01/23 04:37:24
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 4439.010018 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #102848004/Trx 784ec43135487a8510bf6a6670e0e9239b1a351b |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "784ec43135487a8510bf6a6670e0e9239b1a351b",
"block": 102848004,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-01-23T04:37:24",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "4439.010018 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.827 SP to @cryptoworm2024/12/16 23:56:42
steemdelegated 2.827 SP to @cryptoworm
2024/12/16 23:56:42
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 4603.229215 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #91294414/Trx b8b0f046fdd570592a13b077bb94414a82c80b45 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "b8b0f046fdd570592a13b077bb94414a82c80b45",
"block": 91294414,
"trx_in_block": 5,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2024-12-16T23:56:42",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "4603.229215 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.931 SP to @cryptoworm2023/11/13 15:41:00
steemdelegated 2.931 SP to @cryptoworm
2023/11/13 15:41:00
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 4772.362747 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #79848656/Trx 65eb3c0d6b2ee83be5233bbfdbc3852548e9c336 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "65eb3c0d6b2ee83be5233bbfdbc3852548e9c336",
"block": 79848656,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2023-11-13T15:41:00",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "4772.362747 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.734 SP to @cryptoworm2023/09/21 20:26:06
steemdelegated 4.734 SP to @cryptoworm
2023/09/21 20:26:06
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 7709.641533 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #78346162/Trx eba95ff75126ff7db1caaa3718c15edbc6dc7a69 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "eba95ff75126ff7db1caaa3718c15edbc6dc7a69",
"block": 78346162,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2023-09-21T20:26:06",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "7709.641533 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.871 SP to @cryptoworm2022/11/03 10:24:09
steemdelegated 4.871 SP to @cryptoworm
2022/11/03 10:24:09
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 7931.322971 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #69111708/Trx 99d63c5ce1fa78d333a63686e2f647f9a934818a |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "99d63c5ce1fa78d333a63686e2f647f9a934818a",
"block": 69111708,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2022-11-03T10:24:09",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "7931.322971 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.006 SP to @cryptoworm2022/01/17 09:46:33
steemdelegated 5.006 SP to @cryptoworm
2022/01/17 09:46:33
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8151.856202 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #60808005/Trx d5a607c94a5566e034bcb09c74416143a557b272 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "d5a607c94a5566e034bcb09c74416143a557b272",
"block": 60808005,
"trx_in_block": 12,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2022-01-17T09:46:33",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8151.856202 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.119 SP to @cryptoworm2021/06/13 23:44:30
steemdelegated 5.119 SP to @cryptoworm
2021/06/13 23:44:30
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8335.624860 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #54606451/Trx db461cf10c6d5fbbb00953231e86a95030731ebd |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "db461cf10c6d5fbbb00953231e86a95030731ebd",
"block": 54606451,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2021-06-13T23:44:30",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8335.624860 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.234 SP to @cryptoworm2020/12/11 10:05:09
steemdelegated 5.234 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/12/11 10:05:09
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8523.046834 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49353955/Trx bb0f2f2dc2917b34d4e37a6598e373a842b26054 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "bb0f2f2dc2917b34d4e37a6598e373a842b26054",
"block": 49353955,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-11T10:05:09",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8523.046834 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.174 SP to @cryptoworm2020/12/06 03:42:18
steemdelegated 1.174 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/12/06 03:42:18
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 1912.543513 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49205520/Trx 88042135747b328375807bb5bf53e4a607645056 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "88042135747b328375807bb5bf53e4a607645056",
"block": 49205520,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-06T03:42:18",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "1912.543513 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.238 SP to @cryptoworm2020/12/05 11:39:27
steemdelegated 5.238 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/12/05 11:39:27
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8529.413473 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49186625/Trx 2d6202eb1bfcadab33b7b14a45710e1352a92f5d |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "2d6202eb1bfcadab33b7b14a45710e1352a92f5d",
"block": 49186625,
"trx_in_block": 6,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-05T11:39:27",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8529.413473 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.179 SP to @cryptoworm2020/11/02 13:19:03
steemdelegated 1.179 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/11/02 13:19:03
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 1920.017158 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #48255072/Trx 37f9f63b4fd98f73873b484d08f656070a242df1 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "37f9f63b4fd98f73873b484d08f656070a242df1",
"block": 48255072,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-11-02T13:19:03",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "1920.017158 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.362 SP to @cryptoworm2020/05/09 04:38:33
steemdelegated 5.362 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/05/09 04:38:33
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8732.060047 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #43215752/Trx cb8ee55c3cabbd174f7c128157ac2a955d60e0d6 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "cb8ee55c3cabbd174f7c128157ac2a955d60e0d6",
"block": 43215752,
"trx_in_block": 9,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-05-09T04:38:33",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8732.060047 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.200 SP to @cryptoworm2020/05/08 08:04:57
steemdelegated 1.200 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/05/08 08:04:57
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 1953.311140 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #43191657/Trx ea3766cdb1673798e76963814cb6ad0996bf1bd4 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "ea3766cdb1673798e76963814cb6ad0996bf1bd4",
"block": 43191657,
"trx_in_block": 10,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-05-08T08:04:57",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "1953.311140 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.366 SP to @cryptoworm2020/04/27 01:11:48
steemdelegated 5.366 SP to @cryptoworm
2020/04/27 01:11:48
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | cryptoworm |
| vesting shares | 8738.930544 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #42874605/Trx 6a5683d6f1132863cd1156b63575b56501d0d647 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "6a5683d6f1132863cd1156b63575b56501d0d647",
"block": 42874605,
"trx_in_block": 30,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-04-27T01:11:48",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "cryptoworm",
"vesting_shares": "8738.930544 VESTS"
}
]
}2019/07/08 22:51:36
2019/07/08 22:51:36
| parent author | cryptoworm |
| parent permlink | amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-cryptoworm-20190708t225135000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @cryptoworm! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@cryptoworm/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@cryptoworm) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=cryptoworm)_</sub> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes! |
| json metadata | {"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]} |
| Transaction Info | Block #34494631/Trx 3937c497ea9e18bd106a1c7b2a57afddc836608d |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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"author": "steemitboard",
"permlink": "steemitboard-notify-cryptoworm-20190708t225135000z",
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"body": "Congratulations @cryptoworm! You received a personal award!\n\n<table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@cryptoworm/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table>\n\n<sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@cryptoworm) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=cryptoworm)_</sub>\n\n\n###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!",
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}steemdelegated 5.487 SP to @cryptoworm2019/05/23 04:12:21
steemdelegated 5.487 SP to @cryptoworm
2019/05/23 04:12:21
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}steemdelegated 5.609 SP to @cryptoworm2018/05/28 20:38:48
steemdelegated 5.609 SP to @cryptoworm
2018/05/28 20:38:48
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}steemdelegated 18.107 SP to @cryptoworm2018/05/18 19:05:24
steemdelegated 18.107 SP to @cryptoworm
2018/05/18 19:05:24
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}cryptowormupdated their account properties2018/02/26 19:50:51
cryptowormupdated their account properties
2018/02/26 19:50:51
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}cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world2018/02/26 19:49:36
cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world
2018/02/26 19:49:36
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}cryptowormpublished a new post: amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world2018/02/26 19:48:48
cryptowormpublished a new post: amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world
2018/02/26 19:48:48
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | bitcoin |
| author | cryptoworm |
| permlink | amazing-japan-has-become-the-bitcoin-capital-of-the-world |
| title | Amazing! Japan has become the Bitcoin capital of the world |
| body | According to the latest data, the exchange of JPY and Bitcoin has increased to 63%, therefore Japan has become the largest Bitcoin exchange market in the world. Next is USD (19.87%), the third is KRW(9.38%), and the fourth is EUR(3.98%). Japanese are so crazy about Bitcoin this time... |
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"body": "According to the latest data, the exchange of JPY and Bitcoin has increased to 63%, therefore Japan has become the largest Bitcoin exchange market in the world. Next is USD (19.87%), the third is KRW(9.38%), and the fourth is EUR(3.98%). Japanese are so crazy about Bitcoin this time...",
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}steemdelegated 18.233 SP to @cryptoworm2018/01/09 06:36:42
steemdelegated 18.233 SP to @cryptoworm
2018/01/09 06:36:42
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}steemdelegated 18.387 SP to @cryptoworm2017/08/04 05:15:21
steemdelegated 18.387 SP to @cryptoworm
2017/08/04 05:15:21
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}2017/07/09 00:39:51
2017/07/09 00:39:51
| voter | enzo46 |
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}sarmiroslavupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 22:45:06
sarmiroslavupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 22:45:06
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}my60gbupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile2017/07/08 22:44:06
my60gbupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile
2017/07/08 22:44:06
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}2017/07/08 22:39:06
2017/07/08 22:39:06
| parent author | cryptoworm |
| parent permlink | why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile |
| author | cheetah |
| permlink | cheetah-re-cryptowormwhy-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile |
| title | |
| body | Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in: https://venturebeat.com/2017/07/08/why-bitcoins-value-could-get-even-more-volatile/ |
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}cheetahupvoted (1.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile2017/07/08 22:39:00
cheetahupvoted (1.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile
2017/07/08 22:39:00
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}cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile2017/07/08 22:37:36
cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile
2017/07/08 22:37:36
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}cryptowormpublished a new post: why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile2017/07/08 22:37:36
cryptowormpublished a new post: why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile
2017/07/08 22:37:36
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | bitcoin |
| author | cryptoworm |
| permlink | why-bitcoin-s-value-could-get-even-more-volatile |
| title | Why Bitcoin’s value could get even more volatile |
| body | <html> <p> Bitcoin’s price could be in for a big drop, and that’s because the cryptocurrency is facing a potentially contentious upgrade to its core software in August. If you haven’t heard about the impending deadline for a “user-activated soft fork”, here’s the story:For close to six years, the Bitcoin community has struggled to arrive at a consensus on how to scale the 1MB block size to meet growing popularity and adoption. A proposed user-activated soft fork (UASF) is an attempt to nudge the Bitcoin network to embrace and activate segregated witness (SegWit) — which some believe to be one of the most promising scaling solutions — by August 1.In 2012, the network confirmed a daily average of 8,000 transactions. Today, that figure is around 350,000. Transaction overflow has resulted in high fees as users compete every 10 minutes for limited space in the Bitcoin block. The time it takes the network to confirm payments has also grown longer, at times going into hours.Choosing and implementing a scaling solution for a decentralized platform is difficult. Having no central decision-making body is a good thing, for the most part. It makes Bitcoin less susceptible to censorship or takeover.</p> <h2>SegWit</h2> <p>Several Bitcoin improvement proposals (BIPs) have been developed to fix the scaling problem. They all require a slow consensus-building process within the community.Bitcoin core developer Pieter Wuille first proposed SegWit in 2015 to solve issues unrelated to scaling. He wanted to fix transaction malleability, or the possibility of an attacker changing the identification details of a transaction before it confirmed.It turned out that SegWit could also create about 60 percent more room in the Bitcoin block to accommodate more transactions. It would achieve this by storing signatures separately from other transaction data.Developers, business leaders, and miners present at the December 6, 2015 Hong Kong Bitcoin Scaling Conference signed a statement declaring a pursuit of SegWit as the first layer of scaling.</p> <h2>Slow adoption</h2> <p>A team of developers selected at the Hong Kong meeting released the SegWit code in October 2016. To activate, the code requires at least 95 percent of nodes to signal their support. Miners and nodes owners, however, have not been enthusiastic about SegWit. So far only 33 percent of about 7,500 nodes in the network are signalling support for it.On February 25, an anonymous core developer who goes by the pseudonym Shaolinfry published the UASF as BIP148 on the Bitcoin-developer mailing list. He or she also released the corresponding code. The mission of the UASF was to nudge more miners and nodes to embrace SegWit and hasten its activation.Many who agree with Shaolinfry take the view that miners in particular lack the incentive to adopt SegWit. A full Bitcoin block guarantees them increased revenue in the form of the high fees users pay to speed transactions. It is therefore users who have the interest in pushing for a more efficient system.Indeed, some users are setting up new nodes specifically so they can use them to signal support for SegWit.</p> <h2>Soft or hard fork</h2> <p>Even though UASF carries the name “soft fork,” meaning a software upgrade that is compatible with the preceding version, it could turn into what is known as a hard fork. If half or more of the miners refuse to meet the demands of soft fork supporters, the upgrade could fail to recognize nodes that continue to run the older version. In the words of Cornell University computer science professor Emin Gün Sirer, “UASF is just the face saving name for a hard fork.”Indeed, any change to the core software is a hard fork if it alienates those in the network who don’t accept it, and it could therefore lead Bitcoin to split into two independent coins.Those who oppose a UASF believe SegWit provides only short-term relief. With fast-growing Bitcoin adoption, they believe the capacity created will soon fill up again and the problem will return.They also believe those pushing for UASF and SegWit prefer a smaller block size so they can implement their own second-layer solutions.</p> <h2>Preemptive step</h2> <p>To a majority of those who oppose UASF and SegWit, increasing or removing the cap on the block size is the only way to solve the scaling problem. Some also think UASF poses security risks to the network. Bitcoin core developer Gregory Maxwell, for example, has said, “I do not think it is a horrible proposal: it is better engineered than many things that many altcoins do, but just not up to our normal standards.”In the run-up to the potential fork in August, experts are advising users to protect their coins by making sure they use wallet services that support the UASF. A user could also set up a full node and signal for UASF as a way to protect their coins. Developer and blogger Jimmy Song:</p> <blockquote><em>“[Users] supporting BIP-148 means they can support both forks when the UASF happens. There are really only economic benefits, not really economic penalties for supporting a BIP-148 fork other than some fixed costs. [Users] do not have to choose which software they run, they can run both and really, they should if they want to maximize their value.”</em></blockquote> <p>On June 17, Chinese miners representing 80 percent of the Bitcoin hash power issued a statement declaring support for SegWit. They’ve also expressed their intent to have the upgrade implemented in July. If the Bitcoin community can agree to adopt SegWit before August 1, there will be no need for UASF.The Bitcoin price may drop because of possible contentious forks ahead, but if it does, it will likely recover once the deadline for the UASF passes and a resolution to the present uncertainty becomes more clear. And since investors will want to buy in prior to the recovery, it is also possible a drop won’t happen at all.<em>Rupert Hackett is general manager of</em> <a href="https://bitcoin.com.au/"><em>Bitcoin.com.au</em></a><em>,</em> <a href="https://bitcoin.co.uk/"><em>Bitcoin.co.uk</em></a> <em>(subsidiary of Bitcoin.com.au), and</em> <a href="https://buyabitcoin.com.au/"><em>BuyaBitcoin.com.au</em></a><em>. He specializes in the digital currency and digital payment space and holds the world’s first Master’s degree in digital currencies. He writes for multiple Bitcoin and tech websites and is an acting Board Director for the Australian Digital Currency Commerce Association (ADCCA).</em></p> <p><br></p> </html> |
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"body": "<html>\n<p> Bitcoin’s price could be in for a big drop, and that’s because the cryptocurrency is facing a potentially contentious upgrade to its core software in August. If you haven’t heard about the impending deadline for a “user-activated soft fork”, here’s the story:For close to six years, the Bitcoin community has struggled to arrive at a consensus on how to scale the 1MB block size to meet growing popularity and adoption. A proposed user-activated soft fork (UASF) is an attempt to nudge the Bitcoin network to embrace and activate segregated witness (SegWit) — which some believe to be one of the most promising scaling solutions — by August 1.In 2012, the network confirmed a daily average of 8,000 transactions. Today, that figure is around 350,000. Transaction overflow has resulted in high fees as users compete every 10 minutes for limited space in the Bitcoin block. The time it takes the network to confirm payments has also grown longer, at times going into hours.Choosing and implementing a scaling solution for a decentralized platform is difficult. Having no central decision-making body is a good thing, for the most part. It makes Bitcoin less susceptible to censorship or takeover.</p>\n<h2>SegWit</h2>\n<p>Several Bitcoin improvement proposals (BIPs) have been developed to fix the scaling problem. They all require a slow consensus-building process within the community.Bitcoin core developer Pieter Wuille first proposed SegWit in 2015 to solve issues unrelated to scaling. He wanted to fix transaction malleability, or the possibility of an attacker changing the identification details of a transaction before it confirmed.It turned out that SegWit could also create about 60 percent more room in the Bitcoin block to accommodate more transactions. It would achieve this by storing signatures separately from other transaction data.Developers, business leaders, and miners present at the December 6, 2015 Hong Kong Bitcoin Scaling Conference signed a statement declaring a pursuit of SegWit as the first layer of scaling.</p>\n<h2>Slow adoption</h2>\n<p>A team of developers selected at the Hong Kong meeting released the SegWit code in October 2016. To activate, the code requires at least 95 percent of nodes to signal their support. Miners and nodes owners, however, have not been enthusiastic about SegWit. So far only 33 percent of about 7,500 nodes in the network are signalling support for it.On February 25, an anonymous core developer who goes by the pseudonym Shaolinfry published the UASF as BIP148 on the Bitcoin-developer mailing list. He or she also released the corresponding code. The mission of the UASF was to nudge more miners and nodes to embrace SegWit and hasten its activation.Many who agree with Shaolinfry take the view that miners in particular lack the incentive to adopt SegWit. A full Bitcoin block guarantees them increased revenue in the form of the high fees users pay to speed transactions. It is therefore users who have the interest in pushing for a more efficient system.Indeed, some users are setting up new nodes specifically so they can use them to signal support for SegWit.</p>\n<h2>Soft or hard fork</h2>\n<p>Even though UASF carries the name “soft fork,” meaning a software upgrade that is compatible with the preceding version, it could turn into what is known as a hard fork. If half or more of the miners refuse to meet the demands of soft fork supporters, the upgrade could fail to recognize nodes that continue to run the older version. In the words of Cornell University computer science professor Emin Gün Sirer, “UASF is just the face saving name for a hard fork.”Indeed, any change to the core software is a hard fork if it alienates those in the network who don’t accept it, and it could therefore lead Bitcoin to split into two independent coins.Those who oppose a UASF believe SegWit provides only short-term relief. With fast-growing Bitcoin adoption, they believe the capacity created will soon fill up again and the problem will return.They also believe those pushing for UASF and SegWit prefer a smaller block size so they can implement their own second-layer solutions.</p>\n<h2>Preemptive step</h2>\n<p>To a majority of those who oppose UASF and SegWit, increasing or removing the cap on the block size is the only way to solve the scaling problem. Some also think UASF poses security risks to the network. Bitcoin core developer Gregory Maxwell, for example, has said, “I do not think it is a horrible proposal: it is better engineered than many things that many altcoins do, but just not up to our normal standards.”In the run-up to the potential fork in August, experts are advising users to protect their coins by making sure they use wallet services that support the UASF. A user could also set up a full node and signal for UASF as a way to protect their coins. Developer and blogger Jimmy Song:</p>\n<blockquote><em>“[Users] supporting BIP-148 means they can support both forks when the UASF happens. There are really only economic benefits, not really economic penalties for supporting a BIP-148 fork other than some fixed costs. [Users] do not have to choose which software they run, they can run both and really, they should if they want to maximize their value.”</em></blockquote>\n<p>On June 17, Chinese miners representing 80 percent of the Bitcoin hash power issued a statement declaring support for SegWit. They’ve also expressed their intent to have the upgrade implemented in July. If the Bitcoin community can agree to adopt SegWit before August 1, there will be no need for UASF.The Bitcoin price may drop because of possible contentious forks ahead, but if it does, it will likely recover once the deadline for the UASF passes and a resolution to the present uncertainty becomes more clear. And since investors will want to buy in prior to the recovery, it is also possible a drop won’t happen at all.<em>Rupert Hackett is general manager of</em> <a href=\"https://bitcoin.com.au/\"><em>Bitcoin.com.au</em></a><em>,</em> <a href=\"https://bitcoin.co.uk/\"><em>Bitcoin.co.uk</em></a> <em>(subsidiary of Bitcoin.com.au), and</em> <a href=\"https://buyabitcoin.com.au/\"><em>BuyaBitcoin.com.au</em></a><em>. He specializes in the digital currency and digital payment space and holds the world’s first Master’s degree in digital currencies. He writes for multiple Bitcoin and tech websites and is an acting Board Director for the Australian Digital Currency Commerce Association (ADCCA).</em></p>\n<p><br></p>\n</html>",
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}malikberryupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 22:17:00
malikberryupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 22:17:00
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}cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 22:09:00
cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 22:09:00
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}cryptowormpublished a new post: a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 22:09:00
cryptowormpublished a new post: a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 22:09:00
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | cryptocurrency |
| author | cryptoworm |
| permlink | a-brief-introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com |
| title | A Brief Introduction to cryptocurrency and Steemit.com |
| body | <html> <h2><em><strong>Introduction to crypto currency and Steemit.com</strong></em></h2> <p>Crypto currency is like stocks. Neither have any inherent value. The only reason they’re worth money is because people believe they are enough to trade real money for them, which isn’t so crazy, because money has no real inherent value either. Money, stocks and crypto currency are all just tokens that we assign value to on faith.</p> <p>The value of these tokens are based on two things: scarcity and the reputation of the person issuing them. For example, the U.S. government says, “We’re putting 10 trillion dollars into circulation. You can trade 1,000 of them for a cow. The more stable our economy is, the more our dollars will be worth. Trust us.” IBM says, “We’re putting one billion stocks in circulation. You can trade ten of them for a cow. The more profitable our business is, the more our stock will be worth. Trust us.”</p> <p>These promises are worthless until someone actually accepts these tokens as payment for real world goods. Bitcoin was just an empty promise until people started accepting it as payment. Once other people saw that happening, they said, “Holy cow! This is worth real money!? Let’s buy and sell it too.” The more demand there was for it, the more money people would pay to get it, and the more it became worth, just like stocks. So you can think of Bitcoins like stocks in Bitcoin Incorporated. It’s even sold on cryptocurrency exchanges that work like the stock market.</p> <p>The difference between crypto currencies and stocks is that there is no Bitcoin Incorporated. There’s no head office, CEO or profit margin, because there’s no product being sold. Bitcoin is like a stock in a company that doesn’t exist. There are just a bunch of servers all over the world owned by volunteers, which run programs that were originally invented as a way to back up digital files in multiple locations simultaneously and securely.</p> <p>Hospitals and big businesses used this technology so they could guarantee they’d never lose important records, and those records could never be tampered with. So employees couldn’t go back in and cook the books to cover up their mistakes or hide fraud. The system works sort of like Utorrent. There are a bunch of people all over the world running a program that allows their computers to collaborate with each other to write chains of data. Unlike torrent programs though, the data isn’t copied. Each server just shares the responsibility of creating and hosting a set amount of data.</p> <p>The value of a Bitcoin isn’t backed by this data. The data is the money. So a Bitcoin mining machine is like a money printing press, but no matter how many mining machines are online, they collectively only create a set amount of data every day, which is distributed between all the printing presses. Ultimately, the Bitcoin printing presses will produce 21 million bitcoins, and then they will stop producing new ones. I’ve heard the number 21 million is supposed to reflect the amount of gold in the world, which is in theory should make Bitcoin the gold standard of cryptocurrency. The last bitcoin will be generated sometime around the year 2040. This system makes inflation impossible, but while Bitcoins are still being created, the more miners there are, the less each person gets to keep.</p> <p>If this sounds rediculous, think of Bitcoins like digital diamonds. Diamonds have no inherent value either. They’re just common rocks. The only reason they seem scarce is because DeBeers has a monopoly on the diamond supply and only lets out a few at a time. Plus, they’ve hyped up the value of diamonds so much that people believe they’re worth money.</p> <p>If DeBeers flooded the market with all the diamonds they’ve horded, the price of diamonds would plummet, and your warehouse would become full of stupid, worthless rocks. Bitcoin miners can’t flood the market with Bitcoins and crash their value like DeBeers could with diamonds. They can’t split or reverse split the amount of Bitcoins it has issued like IBM can. They can’t print 10 trillion more Bitcoins tonight and crash its value like third world countries sometimes do with their money supply. A foreign country can’t overthrow Bitcoin and crash its economy like America did to Iraq. In a crazy, turbulent world, Bitcoin will always be stable as long as the internet exists. That’s more than most currencies can boast.</p> <p><br></p> <p>After people started paying hundreds of dollars for Bitcoins, other volunteers started running similar programs on their servers, creating their own crypto currencies and selling/trading them on exchanges. The founders of one of these exchanges, Bitshare, got thinking, if people will pay money for data records, why not make those records tied to actually human activity? Reddit and Facebook have huge servers that are filling up with bits of data. If we make a social media site that records its activity logs using blockchain databases like Bitcoin does, instead of just dumping them on regular servers, then we could monetize people’s activity on the site and then pay people to use it with the “money” their activity creates. Thus, Steemit.com was born. Steemit is a blogging platform that pays you in a crypto currency called <strong>STEEM </strong>to post, upvote and comment on its content.</p> <p>I explained all this to my brother a few days ago, and he replied, “So where’s the scam? How are the guys running this thing making money? There’s got to be a pyramid scheme in there somewhere.”</p> <p>The answer to that question isn’t black and white, but before I explain it, I have to begin by saying, Steemit doesn’t cost anything. You don’t have to pay-to-play or buy anything. You just use the site, and they give you free cryptocurrency. If that’s a scam, then it’s one I want to be a part of.</p> <p>The owners can make money by selling STEEM on the site. If you buy it, it might go up in value like Bitcoin, but it could crash if it never catches on. This makes buying STEEM tantamount to investing in penny stocks. The difference between STEEM and penny stocks is that penny stocks crash when the company doesn’t make enough money. STEEM will crash if Steemit doesn’t give away enough money. If your business model is based on giving away free money, it probably won’t fail.</p> <p>Granted, STEEM isn’t technically free. You have to trade your labor for it in the form of blogging, voting and commenting. By blogging on Steemit, you’re technically working for free in the sense that the owners don’t pay you out of their pocket; they pay you in “stocks” that don’t cost them anything.</p> <p>If there’s a catch to Steemit, it’s this. Like any business that issues stocks, it doesn’t put all its stocks on the market. The creators of Steemit keep most of the STEEM, just like Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer own most of the stock in Microsoft. So, while you might get sort-of rich investing in Microsoft stocks, you’re making Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer filthy rich without them having to invest any money.</p> <p>The big question is, will cryptocurrency and Steemit continue to grow, or are they a passing fad? I believe cryptocurrency is here to stay for two reasons. First, as I’ve already mentioned, it’s a stable currency that transcends national boundaries. Second, it’s a useful way to buy products from online black markets without having to swipe your debit card. As long as there’s an internet black market, there will be a real world need for cryptocurrency.</p> <p>However, the future of cryptocurrency doesn’t depend on the black market. You can already use it to buy regular goods and services. You can even walk into many brick and mortar stores and spend it. Since cryptocurrency is already an established medium of exchange, I see no reason why people would all of a sudden stop using it… unless the entire internet crashed, which means the apocalypse has happened and every currency will probably be worthless at that point anyway.</p> <p>The future of Steemit and thus the value of the <em>STEEM </em><strong>cryptocurrency </strong>depends on people using the site. In order for STEEM to skyrocket in value, the site needs to attract millions of more users. Steemit is currently in its beta stage, which means it still has a lot of bugs to fix and features to add. Below is a list of things Steemit needs to do in order to go viral:</p> <h2><strong>Make formatting posts easier.</strong></h2> <p>In order to center pictures, add bold letters, italics or links, you currently have to use markup language, which isn’t hard to master, but it’s very tedious. In a world where everything is becoming simpler, Steemit isn’t going to go mainstream if its users have to learn a new formatting language to use the site. Most people will just stick to one-click sites like Reddit and Facebook. You can use this site to type your posts in and add formatting easily, but this feature really needs to be built right into Steemit.</p> <h2>Put all the features on one page</h2> <p>For a moment in time I thought Google + would replace Facebook as the premier social media site because Facebook has so few features. Google + took all the best new technology and put it together in one site… but not really. Instead of giving its users one home page where they could use all these great tools, they created a dozen different sites that you have to jump back and forth to. The user experience is fragmented and frustrating. Steemit is currently going down the same path. It has a lot of innovate tools, but you have to make 15 different accounts with 15 different services to get the most out of Steemit. If Steemit can’t consolidate their features, it won’t get off the ground, and it will eventually be killed by the next social media site that succeeds at creating the next-generation streamlined, user-friendly experience we’ve all been waiting for.</p> <h2>Allow users to subscribe to tags or tribes.</h2> <p>Currently, you can subscribe to other people’s accounts. So the content they post shows up in your feed, but you can’t subscribe to tags, categories like subscribing to subreddits on Reddit. This is a major bummer that everyone on Steemit complains about, and someone is probably already working on fixing it.</p> <h2>Give users a customizable home page</h2> <p>One of the reasons Myspace became the first major social media site is because it appealed to people’s vanity by giving everyone a customizable home page to express themselves. Facebook screwed up by not giving people this ability, but at least you have a photo page and some basic bio information in the side bar. Reddit completely dropped the ball by not even having that much. Steemit is somewhere in between Facebook and Reddit. You have a home page, but you can only customize the header, and it doesn’t allow you to put much information in it. Fixing this flaw would go a long way to enticing new users.</p> <h2>Make sharing other people’s content easier</h2> <p>Myspace had a great blogging platform that allowed users to see their friends’ blog feeds right on their home page. However, most of the activity on Myspace consisted of sharing other people’s posts. Steemit has a feature called “resteem,” which allows you to share other people’s posts, but the site’s main focus is on creating and viewing original content. I personally enjoy not seeing every cat video that every one of my friends found amusing, but most people want to share cat videos. If Steemit won’t cater to this “need,” the majority of people will use a site that does.</p> <h2>Put higher rewards on sharing and commenting</h2> <p>On every social media site, the majority of the users aren’t content creators. They’re lurkers and sharers. Currently, Steemit users receive tiny amounts of STEEM for reading, commenting and upvoting, but the only way to make any real money is by posting your own content. If this remains the case, Steemit will only retain content creators, and they’ll lose the rest of their audience. This means they’ll lose the users who make content go viral, which means Steemit will be unlikely to go viral.</p> <h2>Reward people for attracting new dolphins.</h2> <p>Users in Steemit are divided into three categories: minnows, dolphins and whales. Minnows are new users with very little voting power. Dolphins are established users who have earned a significant amount of STEEM, and whales are the biggest accounts with the most STEEM.</p> <p>Steemit needs new users to grow. So it needs to incentivize its users to draw in new users. If it offered a finder’s fee, people would just create thousands of fake accounts and rake in the rewards. This could be prevented by offering a more substantial reward for attracting new users, but you only get the payout after the new user reaches certain benchmarks for posting, commenting and upvoting.</p> <h2>Eliminate dependency on whales</h2> <p>How much money a post earns on Steemit is determined by how many people upvote it. An upvote from a minnow is worth a penny. An upvote from a dolphin could be worth ten cents. A handful of upvotes from whales can be worth hundreds to thousands of dollars.</p> <p>So right now, the correct way to use Steemit is to pander to whales. This means you need to write posts about things the whales are interested in. The whales are the founders and executive team members of Steemit. What they want to talk about most, is Steemit. For example, the guy in the video below made $15k in one post, which makes it sound like anyone can get rich on Steemit. The reason he made so much money is because he’s a semi-famous person promoting Steemit, which the executives wanted desperately to promote.</p> <p><br></p> <p>If Steemit remains nothing but a whale hunt, regular users will get fed up and leave. As long as most of the whales are members of the Steemit team, the site will never become much more than a Steemit circle jerk.</p> <h2>Give away more money.</h2> <p>The key to getting someone to do what you want is to give them something they want in return. The thing people want most in the world is free money. The best part about Steemit is that it gives its users free money. The more money it gives away, the more people will use it.</p> <p>On the surface, Steemit’s business model is based on a “power to the people” mentality, but the actual income distribution looks more like late-stage capitalism income inequality than an egalitarian utopia. As long as Steemit’s whales keep hording the lion’s share of the money, the more likely its economy will collapse. The more money they give away, the more people will flock to Steemit and use it. Thus, the more demand there will be for STEEM. In the long run I believe the whales will make more money by keeping less for themselves and investing it in their users.</p> </html> |
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"body": "<html>\n<h2><em><strong>Introduction to crypto currency and Steemit.com</strong></em></h2>\n<p>Crypto currency is like stocks. Neither have any inherent value. The only reason they’re worth money is because people believe they are enough to trade real money for them, which isn’t so crazy, because money has no real inherent value either. Money, stocks and crypto currency are all just tokens that we assign value to on faith.</p>\n<p>The value of these tokens are based on two things: scarcity and the reputation of the person issuing them. For example, the U.S. government says, “We’re putting 10 trillion dollars into circulation. You can trade 1,000 of them for a cow. The more stable our economy is, the more our dollars will be worth. Trust us.” IBM says, “We’re putting one billion stocks in circulation. You can trade ten of them for a cow. The more profitable our business is, the more our stock will be worth. Trust us.”</p>\n<p>These promises are worthless until someone actually accepts these tokens as payment for real world goods. Bitcoin was just an empty promise until people started accepting it as payment. Once other people saw that happening, they said, “Holy cow! This is worth real money!? Let’s buy and sell it too.” The more demand there was for it, the more money people would pay to get it, and the more it became worth, just like stocks. So you can think of Bitcoins like stocks in Bitcoin Incorporated. It’s even sold on cryptocurrency exchanges that work like the stock market.</p>\n<p>The difference between crypto currencies and stocks is that there is no Bitcoin Incorporated. There’s no head office, CEO or profit margin, because there’s no product being sold. Bitcoin is like a stock in a company that doesn’t exist. There are just a bunch of servers all over the world owned by volunteers, which run programs that were originally invented as a way to back up digital files in multiple locations simultaneously and securely.</p>\n<p>Hospitals and big businesses used this technology so they could guarantee they’d never lose important records, and those records could never be tampered with. So employees couldn’t go back in and cook the books to cover up their mistakes or hide fraud. The system works sort of like Utorrent. There are a bunch of people all over the world running a program that allows their computers to collaborate with each other to write chains of data. Unlike torrent programs though, the data isn’t copied. Each server just shares the responsibility of creating and hosting a set amount of data.</p>\n<p>The value of a Bitcoin isn’t backed by this data. The data is the money. So a Bitcoin mining machine is like a money printing press, but no matter how many mining machines are online, they collectively only create a set amount of data every day, which is distributed between all the printing presses. Ultimately, the Bitcoin printing presses will produce 21 million bitcoins, and then they will stop producing new ones. I’ve heard the number 21 million is supposed to reflect the amount of gold in the world, which is in theory should make Bitcoin the gold standard of cryptocurrency. The last bitcoin will be generated sometime around the year 2040. This system makes inflation impossible, but while Bitcoins are still being created, the more miners there are, the less each person gets to keep.</p>\n<p>If this sounds rediculous, think of Bitcoins like digital diamonds. Diamonds have no inherent value either. They’re just common rocks. The only reason they seem scarce is because DeBeers has a monopoly on the diamond supply and only lets out a few at a time. Plus, they’ve hyped up the value of diamonds so much that people believe they’re worth money.</p>\n<p>If DeBeers flooded the market with all the diamonds they’ve horded, the price of diamonds would plummet, and your warehouse would become full of stupid, worthless rocks. Bitcoin miners can’t flood the market with Bitcoins and crash their value like DeBeers could with diamonds. They can’t split or reverse split the amount of Bitcoins it has issued like IBM can. They can’t print 10 trillion more Bitcoins tonight and crash its value like third world countries sometimes do with their money supply. A foreign country can’t overthrow Bitcoin and crash its economy like America did to Iraq. In a crazy, turbulent world, Bitcoin will always be stable as long as the internet exists. That’s more than most currencies can boast.</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>After people started paying hundreds of dollars for Bitcoins, other volunteers started running similar programs on their servers, creating their own crypto currencies and selling/trading them on exchanges. The founders of one of these exchanges, Bitshare, got thinking, if people will pay money for data records, why not make those records tied to actually human activity? Reddit and Facebook have huge servers that are filling up with bits of data. If we make a social media site that records its activity logs using blockchain databases like Bitcoin does, instead of just dumping them on regular servers, then we could monetize people’s activity on the site and then pay people to use it with the “money” their activity creates. Thus, Steemit.com was born. Steemit is a blogging platform that pays you in a crypto currency called <strong>STEEM </strong>to post, upvote and comment on its content.</p>\n<p>I explained all this to my brother a few days ago, and he replied, “So where’s the scam? How are the guys running this thing making money? There’s got to be a pyramid scheme in there somewhere.”</p>\n<p>The answer to that question isn’t black and white, but before I explain it, I have to begin by saying, Steemit doesn’t cost anything. You don’t have to pay-to-play or buy anything. You just use the site, and they give you free cryptocurrency. If that’s a scam, then it’s one I want to be a part of.</p>\n<p>The owners can make money by selling STEEM on the site. If you buy it, it might go up in value like Bitcoin, but it could crash if it never catches on. This makes buying STEEM tantamount to investing in penny stocks. The difference between STEEM and penny stocks is that penny stocks crash when the company doesn’t make enough money. STEEM will crash if Steemit doesn’t give away enough money. If your business model is based on giving away free money, it probably won’t fail.</p>\n<p>Granted, STEEM isn’t technically free. You have to trade your labor for it in the form of blogging, voting and commenting. By blogging on Steemit, you’re technically working for free in the sense that the owners don’t pay you out of their pocket; they pay you in “stocks” that don’t cost them anything.</p>\n<p>If there’s a catch to Steemit, it’s this. Like any business that issues stocks, it doesn’t put all its stocks on the market. The creators of Steemit keep most of the STEEM, just like Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer own most of the stock in Microsoft. So, while you might get sort-of rich investing in Microsoft stocks, you’re making Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer filthy rich without them having to invest any money.</p>\n<p>The big question is, will cryptocurrency and Steemit continue to grow, or are they a passing fad? I believe cryptocurrency is here to stay for two reasons. First, as I’ve already mentioned, it’s a stable currency that transcends national boundaries. Second, it’s a useful way to buy products from online black markets without having to swipe your debit card. As long as there’s an internet black market, there will be a real world need for cryptocurrency.</p>\n<p>However, the future of cryptocurrency doesn’t depend on the black market. You can already use it to buy regular goods and services. You can even walk into many brick and mortar stores and spend it. Since cryptocurrency is already an established medium of exchange, I see no reason why people would all of a sudden stop using it… unless the entire internet crashed, which means the apocalypse has happened and every currency will probably be worthless at that point anyway.</p>\n<p>The future of Steemit and thus the value of the <em>STEEM </em><strong>cryptocurrency </strong>depends on people using the site. In order for STEEM to skyrocket in value, the site needs to attract millions of more users. Steemit is currently in its beta stage, which means it still has a lot of bugs to fix and features to add. Below is a list of things Steemit needs to do in order to go viral:</p>\n<h2><strong>Make formatting posts easier.</strong></h2>\n<p>In order to center pictures, add bold letters, italics or links, you currently have to use markup language, which isn’t hard to master, but it’s very tedious. In a world where everything is becoming simpler, Steemit isn’t going to go mainstream if its users have to learn a new formatting language to use the site. Most people will just stick to one-click sites like Reddit and Facebook. You can use this site to type your posts in and add formatting easily, but this feature really needs to be built right into Steemit.</p>\n<h2>Put all the features on one page</h2>\n<p>For a moment in time I thought Google + would replace Facebook as the premier social media site because Facebook has so few features. Google + took all the best new technology and put it together in one site… but not really. Instead of giving its users one home page where they could use all these great tools, they created a dozen different sites that you have to jump back and forth to. The user experience is fragmented and frustrating. Steemit is currently going down the same path. It has a lot of innovate tools, but you have to make 15 different accounts with 15 different services to get the most out of Steemit. If Steemit can’t consolidate their features, it won’t get off the ground, and it will eventually be killed by the next social media site that succeeds at creating the next-generation streamlined, user-friendly experience we’ve all been waiting for.</p>\n<h2>Allow users to subscribe to tags or tribes.</h2>\n<p>Currently, you can subscribe to other people’s accounts. So the content they post shows up in your feed, but you can’t subscribe to tags, categories like subscribing to subreddits on Reddit. This is a major bummer that everyone on Steemit complains about, and someone is probably already working on fixing it.</p>\n<h2>Give users a customizable home page</h2>\n<p>One of the reasons Myspace became the first major social media site is because it appealed to people’s vanity by giving everyone a customizable home page to express themselves. Facebook screwed up by not giving people this ability, but at least you have a photo page and some basic bio information in the side bar. Reddit completely dropped the ball by not even having that much. Steemit is somewhere in between Facebook and Reddit. You have a home page, but you can only customize the header, and it doesn’t allow you to put much information in it. Fixing this flaw would go a long way to enticing new users.</p>\n<h2>Make sharing other people’s content easier</h2>\n<p>Myspace had a great blogging platform that allowed users to see their friends’ blog feeds right on their home page. However, most of the activity on Myspace consisted of sharing other people’s posts. Steemit has a feature called “resteem,” which allows you to share other people’s posts, but the site’s main focus is on creating and viewing original content. I personally enjoy not seeing every cat video that every one of my friends found amusing, but most people want to share cat videos. If Steemit won’t cater to this “need,” the majority of people will use a site that does.</p>\n<h2>Put higher rewards on sharing and commenting</h2>\n<p>On every social media site, the majority of the users aren’t content creators. They’re lurkers and sharers. Currently, Steemit users receive tiny amounts of STEEM for reading, commenting and upvoting, but the only way to make any real money is by posting your own content. If this remains the case, Steemit will only retain content creators, and they’ll lose the rest of their audience. This means they’ll lose the users who make content go viral, which means Steemit will be unlikely to go viral.</p>\n<h2>Reward people for attracting new dolphins.</h2>\n<p>Users in Steemit are divided into three categories: minnows, dolphins and whales. Minnows are new users with very little voting power. Dolphins are established users who have earned a significant amount of STEEM, and whales are the biggest accounts with the most STEEM.</p>\n<p>Steemit needs new users to grow. So it needs to incentivize its users to draw in new users. If it offered a finder’s fee, people would just create thousands of fake accounts and rake in the rewards. This could be prevented by offering a more substantial reward for attracting new users, but you only get the payout after the new user reaches certain benchmarks for posting, commenting and upvoting.</p>\n<h2>Eliminate dependency on whales</h2>\n<p>How much money a post earns on Steemit is determined by how many people upvote it. An upvote from a minnow is worth a penny. An upvote from a dolphin could be worth ten cents. A handful of upvotes from whales can be worth hundreds to thousands of dollars.</p>\n<p>So right now, the correct way to use Steemit is to pander to whales. This means you need to write posts about things the whales are interested in. The whales are the founders and executive team members of Steemit. What they want to talk about most, is Steemit. For example, the guy in the video below made $15k in one post, which makes it sound like anyone can get rich on Steemit. The reason he made so much money is because he’s a semi-famous person promoting Steemit, which the executives wanted desperately to promote.</p>\n<p><br></p>\n<p>If Steemit remains nothing but a whale hunt, regular users will get fed up and leave. As long as most of the whales are members of the Steemit team, the site will never become much more than a Steemit circle jerk.</p>\n<h2>Give away more money.</h2>\n<p>The key to getting someone to do what you want is to give them something they want in return. The thing people want most in the world is free money. The best part about Steemit is that it gives its users free money. The more money it gives away, the more people will use it.</p>\n<p>On the surface, Steemit’s business model is based on a “power to the people” mentality, but the actual income distribution looks more like late-stage capitalism income inequality than an egalitarian utopia. As long as Steemit’s whales keep hording the lion’s share of the money, the more likely its economy will collapse. The more money they give away, the more people will flock to Steemit and use it. Thus, the more demand there will be for STEEM. In the long run I believe the whales will make more money by keeping less for themselves and investing it in their users.</p>\n</html>",
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}2017/07/08 22:07:30
2017/07/08 22:07:30
| parent author | cryptoworm |
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| body | welcome! |
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}cryptowormpublished a new post: introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 22:02:03
cryptowormpublished a new post: introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 22:02:03
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}2017/07/08 21:58:12
2017/07/08 21:58:12
| parent author | cryptoworm |
| parent permlink | re-stacking9mm-chc-chaincoin-blasting-off-to-new-highs-even-in-a-down-market-20170708t215024223z |
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| permlink | re-cryptoworm-re-stacking9mm-chc-chaincoin-blasting-off-to-new-highs-even-in-a-down-market-20170708t215811814z |
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| body | CHC is definitely a WINNER. |
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}2017/07/08 21:50:27
2017/07/08 21:50:27
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}beautiful3upvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 21:41:36
beautiful3upvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 21:41:36
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}cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 21:41:00
cryptowormupvoted (100.00%) @cryptoworm / introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 21:41:00
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}cryptowormupdated options for introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 21:41:00
cryptowormupdated options for introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 21:41:00
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}cryptowormpublished a new post: introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com2017/07/08 21:41:00
cryptowormpublished a new post: introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com
2017/07/08 21:41:00
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | cryptocurrency |
| author | cryptoworm |
| permlink | introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com |
| title | Introduction to cryptocurrency and Steemit.com |
| body | Introduction to crypto currency and Steemit.com Crypto currency is like stocks. Neither have any inherent value. The only reason they’re worth money is because people believe they are enough to trade real money for them, which isn’t so crazy, because money has no real inherent value either. Money, stocks and crypto currency are all just tokens that we assign value to on faith. The value of these tokens are based on two things: scarcity and the reputation of the person issuing them. For example, the U.S. government says, “We’re putting 10 trillion dollars into circulation. You can trade 1,000 of them for a cow. The more stable our economy is, the more our dollars will be worth. Trust us.” IBM says, “We’re putting one billion stocks in circulation. You can trade ten of them for a cow. The more profitable our business is, the more our stock will be worth. Trust us.” These promises are worthless until someone actually accepts these tokens as payment for real world goods. Bitcoin was just an empty promise until people started accepting it as payment. Once other people saw that happening, they said, “Holy cow! This is worth real money!? Let’s buy and sell it too.” The more demand there was for it, the more money people would pay to get it, and the more it became worth, just like stocks. So you can think of Bitcoins like stocks in Bitcoin Incorporated. It’s even sold on cryptocurrency exchanges that work like the stock market. The difference between crypto currencies and stocks is that there is no Bitcoin Incorporated. There’s no head office, CEO or profit margin, because there’s no product being sold. Bitcoin is like a stock in a company that doesn’t exist. There are just a bunch of servers all over the world owned by volunteers, which run programs that were originally invented as a way to back up digital files in multiple locations simultaneously and securely. Hospitals and big businesses used this technology so they could guarantee they’d never lose important records, and those records could never be tampered with. So employees couldn’t go back in and cook the books to cover up their mistakes or hide fraud. The system works sort of like Utorrent. There are a bunch of people all over the world running a program that allows their computers to collaborate with each other to write chains of data. Unlike torrent programs though, the data isn’t copied. Each server just shares the responsibility of creating and hosting a set amount of data. The value of a Bitcoin isn’t backed by this data. The data is the money. So a Bitcoin mining machine is like a money printing press, but no matter how many mining machines are online, they collectively only create a set amount of data every day, which is distributed between all the printing presses. Ultimately, the Bitcoin printing presses will produce 21 million bitcoins, and then they will stop producing new ones. I’ve heard the number 21 million is supposed to reflect the amount of gold in the world, which is in theory should make Bitcoin the gold standard of cryptocurrency. The last bitcoin will be generated sometime around the year 2040. This system makes inflation impossible, but while Bitcoins are still being created, the more miners there are, the less each person gets to keep. If this sounds rediculous, think of Bitcoins like digital diamonds. Diamonds have no inherent value either. They’re just common rocks. The only reason they seem scarce is because DeBeers has a monopoly on the diamond supply and only lets out a few at a time. Plus, they’ve hyped up the value of diamonds so much that people believe they’re worth money. If DeBeers flooded the market with all the diamonds they’ve horded, the price of diamonds would plummet, and your warehouse would become full of stupid, worthless rocks. Bitcoin miners can’t flood the market with Bitcoins and crash their value like DeBeers could with diamonds. They can’t split or reverse split the amount of Bitcoins it has issued like IBM can. They can’t print 10 trillion more Bitcoins tonight and crash its value like third world countries sometimes do with their money supply. A foreign country can’t overthrow Bitcoin and crash its economy like America did to Iraq. In a crazy, turbulent world, Bitcoin will always be stable as long as the internet exists. That’s more than most currencies can boast. <iframe width="700" height="393" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/xZmpCAqD7hs" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> After people started paying hundreds of dollars for Bitcoins, other volunteers started running similar programs on their servers, creating their own crypto currencies and selling/trading them on exchanges. The founders of one of these exchanges, Bitshare, got thinking, if people will pay money for data records, why not make those records tied to actually human activity? Reddit and Facebook have huge servers that are filling up with bits of data. If we make a social media site that records its activity logs using blockchain databases like Bitcoin does, instead of just dumping them on regular servers, then we could monetize people’s activity on the site and then pay people to use it with the “money” their activity creates. Thus, Steemit.com was born. Steemit is a blogging platform that pays you in a crypto currency called STEEM to post, upvote and comment on its content. I explained all this to my brother a few days ago, and he replied, “So where’s the scam? How are the guys running this thing making money? There’s got to be a pyramid scheme in there somewhere.” The answer to that question isn’t black and white, but before I explain it, I have to begin by saying, Steemit doesn’t cost anything. You don’t have to pay-to-play or buy anything. You just use the site, and they give you free cryptocurrency. If that’s a scam, then it’s one I want to be a part of. The owners can make money by selling STEEM on the site. If you buy it, it might go up in value like Bitcoin, but it could crash if it never catches on. This makes buying STEEM tantamount to investing in penny stocks. The difference between STEEM and penny stocks is that penny stocks crash when the company doesn’t make enough money. STEEM will crash if Steemit doesn’t give away enough money. If your business model is based on giving away free money, it probably won’t fail. Granted, STEEM isn’t technically free. You have to trade your labor for it in the form of blogging, voting and commenting. By blogging on Steemit, you’re technically working for free in the sense that the owners don’t pay you out of their pocket; they pay you in “stocks” that don’t cost them anything. If there’s a catch to Steemit, it’s this. Like any business that issues stocks, it doesn’t put all its stocks on the market. The creators of Steemit keep most of the STEEM, just like Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer own most of the stock in Microsoft. So, while you might get sort-of rich investing in Microsoft stocks, you’re making Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer filthy rich without them having to invest any money. The big question is, will cryptocurrency and Steemit continue to grow, or are they a passing fad? I believe cryptocurrency is here to stay for two reasons. First, as I’ve already mentioned, it’s a stable currency that transcends national boundaries. Second, it’s a useful way to buy products from online black markets without having to swipe your debit card. As long as there’s an internet black market, there will be a real world need for cryptocurrency. However, the future of cryptocurrency doesn’t depend on the black market. You can already use it to buy regular goods and services. You can even walk into many brick and mortar stores and spend it. Since cryptocurrency is already an established medium of exchange, I see no reason why people would all of a sudden stop using it… unless the entire internet crashed, which means the apocalypse has happened and every currency will probably be worthless at that point anyway. The future of Steemit and thus the value of the STEEM cryptocurrency depends on people using the site. In order for STEEM to skyrocket in value, the site needs to attract millions of more users. Steemit is currently in its beta stage, which means it still has a lot of bugs to fix and features to add. Below is a list of things Steemit needs to do in order to go viral: Make formatting posts easier. In order to center pictures, add bold letters, italics or links, you currently have to use markup language, which isn’t hard to master, but it’s very tedious. In a world where everything is becoming simpler, Steemit isn’t going to go mainstream if its users have to learn a new formatting language to use the site. Most people will just stick to one-click sites like Reddit and Facebook. You can use this site to type your posts in and add formatting easily, but this feature really needs to be built right into Steemit. Put all the features on one page For a moment in time I thought Google + would replace Facebook as the premier social media site because Facebook has so few features. Google + took all the best new technology and put it together in one site… but not really. Instead of giving its users one home page where they could use all these great tools, they created a dozen different sites that you have to jump back and forth to. The user experience is fragmented and frustrating. Steemit is currently going down the same path. It has a lot of innovate tools, but you have to make 15 different accounts with 15 different services to get the most out of Steemit. If Steemit can’t consolidate their features, it won’t get off the ground, and it will eventually be killed by the next social media site that succeeds at creating the next-generation streamlined, user-friendly experience we’ve all been waiting for. Allow users to subscribe to tags or tribes. Currently, you can subscribe to other people’s accounts. So the content they post shows up in your feed, but you can’t subscribe to tags, categories like subscribing to subreddits on Reddit. This is a major bummer that everyone on Steemit complains about, and someone is probably already working on fixing it. Give users a customizable home page One of the reasons Myspace became the first major social media site is because it appealed to people’s vanity by giving everyone a customizable home page to express themselves. Facebook screwed up by not giving people this ability, but at least you have a photo page and some basic bio information in the side bar. Reddit completely dropped the ball by not even having that much. Steemit is somewhere in between Facebook and Reddit. You have a home page, but you can only customize the header, and it doesn’t allow you to put much information in it. Fixing this flaw would go a long way to enticing new users. Make sharing other people’s content easier Myspace had a great blogging platform that allowed users to see their friends’ blog feeds right on their home page. However, most of the activity on Myspace consisted of sharing other people’s posts. Steemit has a feature called “resteem,” which allows you to share other people’s posts, but the site’s main focus is on creating and viewing original content. I personally enjoy not seeing every cat video that every one of my friends found amusing, but most people want to share cat videos. If Steemit won’t cater to this “need,” the majority of people will use a site that does. Put higher rewards on sharing and commenting On every social media site, the majority of the users aren’t content creators. They’re lurkers and sharers. Currently, Steemit users receive tiny amounts of STEEM for reading, commenting and upvoting, but the only way to make any real money is by posting your own content. If this remains the case, Steemit will only retain content creators, and they’ll lose the rest of their audience. This means they’ll lose the users who make content go viral, which means Steemit will be unlikely to go viral. Reward people for attracting new dolphins. Users in Steemit are divided into three categories: minnows, dolphins and whales. Minnows are new users with very little voting power. Dolphins are established users who have earned a significant amount of STEEM, and whales are the biggest accounts with the most STEEM. Steemit needs new users to grow. So it needs to incentivize its users to draw in new users. If it offered a finder’s fee, people would just create thousands of fake accounts and rake in the rewards. This could be prevented by offering a more substantial reward for attracting new users, but you only get the payout after the new user reaches certain benchmarks for posting, commenting and upvoting. Eliminate dependency on whales How much money a post earns on Steemit is determined by how many people upvote it. An upvote from a minnow is worth a penny. An upvote from a dolphin could be worth ten cents. A handful of upvotes from whales can be worth hundreds to thousands of dollars. So right now, the correct way to use Steemit is to pander to whales. This means you need to write posts about things the whales are interested in. The whales are the founders and executive team members of Steemit. What they want to talk about most, is Steemit. For example, the guy in the video below made $15k in one post, which makes it sound like anyone can get rich on Steemit. The reason he made so much money is because he’s a semi-famous person promoting Steemit, which the executives wanted desperately to promote. If Steemit remains nothing but a whale hunt, regular users will get fed up and leave. As long as most of the whales are members of the Steemit team, the site will never become much more than a Steemit circle jerk. Give away more money. The key to getting someone to do what you want is to give them something they want in return. The thing people want most in the world is free money. The best part about Steemit is that it gives its users free money. The more money it gives away, the more people will use it. <iframe width="700" height="393" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/-W0EYe23or4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> On the surface, Steemit’s business model is based on a “power to the people” mentality, but the actual income distribution looks more like late-stage capitalism income inequality than an egalitarian utopia. As long as Steemit’s whales keep hording the lion’s share of the money, the more likely its economy will collapse. The more money they give away, the more people will flock to Steemit and use it. Thus, the more demand there will be for STEEM. In the long run I believe the whales will make more money by keeping less for themselves and investing it in their users. |
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| Transaction Info | Block #13514153/Trx a59088c469f9d6f001baa9590ccf1a51fcda795a |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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"parent_author": "",
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"author": "cryptoworm",
"permlink": "introduction-to-cryptocurrency-and-steemit-com",
"title": "Introduction to cryptocurrency and Steemit.com",
"body": "Introduction to crypto currency and Steemit.com\nCrypto currency is like stocks. Neither have any inherent value. The only reason they’re worth money is because people believe they are enough to trade real money for them, which isn’t so crazy, because money has no real inherent value either. Money, stocks and crypto currency are all just tokens that we assign value to on faith.\nThe value of these tokens are based on two things: scarcity and the reputation of the person issuing them. For example, the U.S. government says, “We’re putting 10 trillion dollars into circulation. You can trade 1,000 of them for a cow. The more stable our economy is, the more our dollars will be worth. Trust us.” IBM says, “We’re putting one billion stocks in circulation. You can trade ten of them for a cow. The more profitable our business is, the more our stock will be worth. Trust us.”\nThese promises are worthless until someone actually accepts these tokens as payment for real world goods. Bitcoin was just an empty promise until people started accepting it as payment. Once other people saw that happening, they said, “Holy cow! This is worth real money!? Let’s buy and sell it too.” The more demand there was for it, the more money people would pay to get it, and the more it became worth, just like stocks. So you can think of Bitcoins like stocks in Bitcoin Incorporated. It’s even sold on cryptocurrency exchanges that work like the stock market.\nThe difference between crypto currencies and stocks is that there is no Bitcoin Incorporated. There’s no head office, CEO or profit margin, because there’s no product being sold. Bitcoin is like a stock in a company that doesn’t exist. There are just a bunch of servers all over the world owned by volunteers, which run programs that were originally invented as a way to back up digital files in multiple locations simultaneously and securely.\nHospitals and big businesses used this technology so they could guarantee they’d never lose important records, and those records could never be tampered with. So employees couldn’t go back in and cook the books to cover up their mistakes or hide fraud. The system works sort of like Utorrent. There are a bunch of people all over the world running a program that allows their computers to collaborate with each other to write chains of data. Unlike torrent programs though, the data isn’t copied. Each server just shares the responsibility of creating and hosting a set amount of data.\nThe value of a Bitcoin isn’t backed by this data. The data is the money. So a Bitcoin mining machine is like a money printing press, but no matter how many mining machines are online, they collectively only create a set amount of data every day, which is distributed between all the printing presses. Ultimately, the Bitcoin printing presses will produce 21 million bitcoins, and then they will stop producing new ones. I’ve heard the number 21 million is supposed to reflect the amount of gold in the world, which is in theory should make Bitcoin the gold standard of cryptocurrency. The last bitcoin will be generated sometime around the year 2040. This system makes inflation impossible, but while Bitcoins are still being created, the more miners there are, the less each person gets to keep.\nIf this sounds rediculous, think of Bitcoins like digital diamonds. Diamonds have no inherent value either. They’re just common rocks. The only reason they seem scarce is because DeBeers has a monopoly on the diamond supply and only lets out a few at a time. Plus, they’ve hyped up the value of diamonds so much that people believe they’re worth money.\nIf DeBeers flooded the market with all the diamonds they’ve horded, the price of diamonds would plummet, and your warehouse would become full of stupid, worthless rocks. Bitcoin miners can’t flood the market with Bitcoins and crash their value like DeBeers could with diamonds. They can’t split or reverse split the amount of Bitcoins it has issued like IBM can. They can’t print 10 trillion more Bitcoins tonight and crash its value like third world countries sometimes do with their money supply. A foreign country can’t overthrow Bitcoin and crash its economy like America did to Iraq. In a crazy, turbulent world, Bitcoin will always be stable as long as the internet exists. That’s more than most currencies can boast.\n<iframe width=\"700\" height=\"393\" src=\"https://www.youtube.com/embed/xZmpCAqD7hs\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen></iframe>\n\nAfter people started paying hundreds of dollars for Bitcoins, other volunteers started running similar programs on their servers, creating their own crypto currencies and selling/trading them on exchanges. The founders of one of these exchanges, Bitshare, got thinking, if people will pay money for data records, why not make those records tied to actually human activity? Reddit and Facebook have huge servers that are filling up with bits of data. If we make a social media site that records its activity logs using blockchain databases like Bitcoin does, instead of just dumping them on regular servers, then we could monetize people’s activity on the site and then pay people to use it with the “money” their activity creates. Thus, Steemit.com was born. Steemit is a blogging platform that pays you in a crypto currency called STEEM to post, upvote and comment on its content.\nI explained all this to my brother a few days ago, and he replied, “So where’s the scam? How are the guys running this thing making money? There’s got to be a pyramid scheme in there somewhere.”\nThe answer to that question isn’t black and white, but before I explain it, I have to begin by saying, Steemit doesn’t cost anything. You don’t have to pay-to-play or buy anything. You just use the site, and they give you free cryptocurrency. If that’s a scam, then it’s one I want to be a part of.\nThe owners can make money by selling STEEM on the site. If you buy it, it might go up in value like Bitcoin, but it could crash if it never catches on. This makes buying STEEM tantamount to investing in penny stocks. The difference between STEEM and penny stocks is that penny stocks crash when the company doesn’t make enough money. STEEM will crash if Steemit doesn’t give away enough money. If your business model is based on giving away free money, it probably won’t fail.\nGranted, STEEM isn’t technically free. You have to trade your labor for it in the form of blogging, voting and commenting. By blogging on Steemit, you’re technically working for free in the sense that the owners don’t pay you out of their pocket; they pay you in “stocks” that don’t cost them anything.\nIf there’s a catch to Steemit, it’s this. Like any business that issues stocks, it doesn’t put all its stocks on the market. The creators of Steemit keep most of the STEEM, just like Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer own most of the stock in Microsoft. So, while you might get sort-of rich investing in Microsoft stocks, you’re making Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer filthy rich without them having to invest any money.\nThe big question is, will cryptocurrency and Steemit continue to grow, or are they a passing fad? I believe cryptocurrency is here to stay for two reasons. First, as I’ve already mentioned, it’s a stable currency that transcends national boundaries. Second, it’s a useful way to buy products from online black markets without having to swipe your debit card. As long as there’s an internet black market, there will be a real world need for cryptocurrency.\nHowever, the future of cryptocurrency doesn’t depend on the black market. You can already use it to buy regular goods and services. You can even walk into many brick and mortar stores and spend it. Since cryptocurrency is already an established medium of exchange, I see no reason why people would all of a sudden stop using it… unless the entire internet crashed, which means the apocalypse has happened and every currency will probably be worthless at that point anyway.\nThe future of Steemit and thus the value of the STEEM cryptocurrency depends on people using the site. In order for STEEM to skyrocket in value, the site needs to attract millions of more users. Steemit is currently in its beta stage, which means it still has a lot of bugs to fix and features to add. Below is a list of things Steemit needs to do in order to go viral:\nMake formatting posts easier.\nIn order to center pictures, add bold letters, italics or links, you currently have to use markup language, which isn’t hard to master, but it’s very tedious. In a world where everything is becoming simpler, Steemit isn’t going to go mainstream if its users have to learn a new formatting language to use the site. Most people will just stick to one-click sites like Reddit and Facebook. You can use this site to type your posts in and add formatting easily, but this feature really needs to be built right into Steemit.\nPut all the features on one page\nFor a moment in time I thought Google + would replace Facebook as the premier social media site because Facebook has so few features. Google + took all the best new technology and put it together in one site… but not really. Instead of giving its users one home page where they could use all these great tools, they created a dozen different sites that you have to jump back and forth to. The user experience is fragmented and frustrating. Steemit is currently going down the same path. It has a lot of innovate tools, but you have to make 15 different accounts with 15 different services to get the most out of Steemit. If Steemit can’t consolidate their features, it won’t get off the ground, and it will eventually be killed by the next social media site that succeeds at creating the next-generation streamlined, user-friendly experience we’ve all been waiting for.\nAllow users to subscribe to tags or tribes.\nCurrently, you can subscribe to other people’s accounts. So the content they post shows up in your feed, but you can’t subscribe to tags, categories like subscribing to subreddits on Reddit. This is a major bummer that everyone on Steemit complains about, and someone is probably already working on fixing it.\nGive users a customizable home page\nOne of the reasons Myspace became the first major social media site is because it appealed to people’s vanity by giving everyone a customizable home page to express themselves. Facebook screwed up by not giving people this ability, but at least you have a photo page and some basic bio information in the side bar. Reddit completely dropped the ball by not even having that much. Steemit is somewhere in between Facebook and Reddit. You have a home page, but you can only customize the header, and it doesn’t allow you to put much information in it. Fixing this flaw would go a long way to enticing new users.\nMake sharing other people’s content easier\nMyspace had a great blogging platform that allowed users to see their friends’ blog feeds right on their home page. However, most of the activity on Myspace consisted of sharing other people’s posts. Steemit has a feature called “resteem,” which allows you to share other people’s posts, but the site’s main focus is on creating and viewing original content. I personally enjoy not seeing every cat video that every one of my friends found amusing, but most people want to share cat videos. If Steemit won’t cater to this “need,” the majority of people will use a site that does.\nPut higher rewards on sharing and commenting\nOn every social media site, the majority of the users aren’t content creators. They’re lurkers and sharers. Currently, Steemit users receive tiny amounts of STEEM for reading, commenting and upvoting, but the only way to make any real money is by posting your own content. If this remains the case, Steemit will only retain content creators, and they’ll lose the rest of their audience. This means they’ll lose the users who make content go viral, which means Steemit will be unlikely to go viral.\nReward people for attracting new dolphins.\nUsers in Steemit are divided into three categories: minnows, dolphins and whales. Minnows are new users with very little voting power. Dolphins are established users who have earned a significant amount of STEEM, and whales are the biggest accounts with the most STEEM.\nSteemit needs new users to grow. So it needs to incentivize its users to draw in new users. If it offered a finder’s fee, people would just create thousands of fake accounts and rake in the rewards. This could be prevented by offering a more substantial reward for attracting new users, but you only get the payout after the new user reaches certain benchmarks for posting, commenting and upvoting.\nEliminate dependency on whales\nHow much money a post earns on Steemit is determined by how many people upvote it. An upvote from a minnow is worth a penny. An upvote from a dolphin could be worth ten cents. A handful of upvotes from whales can be worth hundreds to thousands of dollars.\nSo right now, the correct way to use Steemit is to pander to whales. This means you need to write posts about things the whales are interested in. The whales are the founders and executive team members of Steemit. What they want to talk about most, is Steemit. For example, the guy in the video below made $15k in one post, which makes it sound like anyone can get rich on Steemit. The reason he made so much money is because he’s a semi-famous person promoting Steemit, which the executives wanted desperately to promote.\n\nIf Steemit remains nothing but a whale hunt, regular users will get fed up and leave. As long as most of the whales are members of the Steemit team, the site will never become much more than a Steemit circle jerk.\nGive away more money.\nThe key to getting someone to do what you want is to give them something they want in return. The thing people want most in the world is free money. The best part about Steemit is that it gives its users free money. The more money it gives away, the more people will use it.\n<iframe width=\"700\" height=\"393\" src=\"https://www.youtube.com/embed/-W0EYe23or4\" frameborder=\"0\" allowfullscreen></iframe>\nOn the surface, Steemit’s business model is based on a “power to the people” mentality, but the actual income distribution looks more like late-stage capitalism income inequality than an egalitarian utopia. As long as Steemit’s whales keep hording the lion’s share of the money, the more likely its economy will collapse. The more money they give away, the more people will flock to Steemit and use it. Thus, the more demand there will be for STEEM. In the long run I believe the whales will make more money by keeping less for themselves and investing it in their users.",
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}cryptowormupdated their account properties2017/07/08 21:21:12
cryptowormupdated their account properties
2017/07/08 21:21:12
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| Transaction Info | Block #13513757/Trx 62013c7599e2d5e261ebfb96bddc05d859a82178 |
View Raw JSON Data
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}steemcreated a new account: @cryptoworm2017/07/08 21:15:30
steemcreated a new account: @cryptoworm
2017/07/08 21:15:30
| fee | 0.500 STEEM |
| delegation | 57000.000000 VESTS |
| creator | steem |
| new account name | cryptoworm |
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| json metadata | |
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| Transaction Info | Block #13513643/Trx 4b1e2d7be88146c2f61eac2b5628bc73a09da56f |
View Raw JSON Data
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Resource Credits100.00%
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}Witness Votes
0 / 30
No active witness votes.
[]