Laziness or Contentment? A Maximalism Story.

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When I first arrived on the crypto scene back in late 2017 I was very gung-ho about researching as much as I could about crypto. The 2017 bull run, while clearly overbought, made me realize that Bitcoin and blockchain were no longer something I could ignore. I had questions, and the Internets had some of the answers lined up for me on a silver platter.

However, my questions about crypto started to become so niche and targeted on specific subjects that Google would often lead me down a rabbit hole and begin to point to sources that I wasn't necessarily sure were accurate. I began to read random blog posts. Sometimes from Medium. Sometimes from Quora. Sometimes from a random website named Steemit.com

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WTF is Steemit.com?

Google kept sending me there over and over again. Some of the information I was getting on Steemit was really good and couldn't be found anywhere else. It was so focus-fired on crypto topics, and I wondered why that was. I also found it intriguing that at the end of posts the authors were being... paid? In dollars? That's weird. Maybe I should start a blog on Steemit... how does this thing even work?

You see I had no idea that Steemit.com was even linked to Steem or that it was even a crypto network. All I knew was that Google kept sending me there because the questions I was asking were only being answered on Steemit. It's so surreal to think about how this all went down six years later. Like remembering a dream I had once.

Eventually one day I was looking at CoinMarketCap.com and I saw the Steem token listed in the top 100 (ah remember those days? Soon™). And I was like, oh... duh... Steem must be connected to Steemit... it's literally a meta crypto blogging site. How weird.

Luckily I was easily able to leverage Steemit.com posts to learn more about Steem. Try doing that with Bitcoin or Ethereum... good luck with that. What are you gonna do? Learn to code and then spend 5 years deciphering the codebase on your own? Yeah, that's the best way to learn, said no one ever.

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And so my journey began.

I was learning a lot and thirsty for more. I wrote blog posts on what I learned and earned a few pennies for my troubles while others were earning thousands of dollars for definitively lower quality work. But that's the thing about networking isn't it? It's about who you know, and I didn't know anyone.

So I quickly realized that the best way to get noticed was writing comments on other blogs that actually had engagement, while continuing to post once a day. Sometimes someone else's post would have content that was extremely relevant to something I had written, so I'd comment and link back to my own post on the same topic. This was a time when everyone and their mother was trying to get in on the gigantic upvotes floating around, and I was told more than once that shilling my own work could get me downvoted.

But I decided that was stupid advice because the other people doing that would shill their own work blindly regardless of what the topic at hand was... and clearly that's not what I was doing. Pretty much all of those people that gave me bad advice are long gone at this point, and I have far surpassed whatever peak they hit on this network. Go me. Aren't I wonderful?

In any case, the amount of research I did back then was way way more than it is now. Is that a bad thing? Have a gotten lazy? Or is this just the natural over of things? Think back to 2017 and 2018. What was I researching? Mostly a bunch of shitcoin ICOs that are long dead; a bunch of broken dreams and failed promises. A lot of the research I did and things I believed at the time turned out to be complete bullshit... so why would I continue down that path when I could just shore up my defenses and focus on Bitcoin, Ethereum (EVM), and Steem/Hive/DPOS?

We can apply this same logic to Bitcoin maximalism. Those who got into the game early way back in say 2011 or 2012 or whatever... they did so much research on Bitcoin. They got rich off of Bitcoin. It's a tight-knit community. So when other tokens come along like Litecoin or Ethereum, why would they even bother to give it the time of day? We can see that a lot of them would not and did not. It's a path that makes sense. Tribalism isn't going to go away just because decentralization is coming.

There's also the financial side to this as well. Many maximalists did indeed get involved with alts, but it was usually during the middle of the FOMO cycle and the reason why alts ballooned their market caps so ridiculously when Bitcoin was doing well. We all know how this story ends.

It ends with everyone who FOMOed into alts getting crushed even worse than Bitcoin's massive retracements. And then when things happen like Ethereum going proof-of-stake even though the distribution is heinously centralized... should we really expect maximalists to take any altcoin seriously? Even the moniker "altcoin" implies "not Bitcoin" which in turn implies "shitcoin".

Take Hive for example.

Imagine how much research it would take into Hive before anyone came to the conclusion that it was actually decentralized. First of all, it's only been around since 2020 and has already experienced systemic failure under the Steem brand. That alone is enough to make the assumption that it can and will eventually fail again. I mean no one here expects it do but we have to use the perspective of someone on the outside looking in.

Also, Hive isn't even in the top 200 market cap right now. How many shit projects would one have to research before they even found it? Our marketing has been lacking since inception, and even the brand Hive is extremely ambiguous and could mean a dozen different products, codebases, or companies. This is fine once enough frontends are built on top of it and Hive itself falls into the background as the intended operating system, but until then we must admit it is a bit confusing.

Looking at the top 200 market cap, it's very hard to tell what is decentralized and what isn't. Everyone makes the claim that their project is the best project that has all the best attributes (fast, scalable, decentralized, valuable, etc). Wouldn't it be much easier to find something that works for you and just make the claim that everything else is shit? We can see that this is a popular strategy that makes sense in many given contexts. Tribalism being the main one.

I seem to recall this exact thing happening for tokens built on Hive as well. Users start to view the new tokens as "the enemy" and assume that the new tokens are leeching value away from the "real" decentralized product. It doesn't have to actually be true. Sometimes perception is reality.

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Conclusion

Have I gotten lazy, or is this just the natural order of things? I could have done a lot more research on DEFI in 2020 and 2021, but wouldn't that have led to the exact same result as my research on ICOs in 2018? At a certain point I think everyone needs to learn to capitulate, consolidate, and retreat from the cutting edge. The cutting edge is way too volatile and stressful. Fun place to visit: wouldn't want to live there.

All this being said, Hive is still cutting edge tech in many regards. The difference being that is it a cutting edge network that I can actually still trust and I don't have to consider it a degenerate gamble by sticking around. Show me another network where one can earn money for the work that they do. It truly just does not exist in the same capacity as Hive.

We have the incentives and the ability to scale in a decentralized manner. I've yet to see other projects that can even come close. Of course this isn't that say that they don't exist, because as the theme of this post implies: I'm not really looking. If they want my attention within the attention economy, they're going to have to prove themselves to me on their own merit. Just like Hive will eventually have to prove beyond any reasonable doubt that it has value to Bitcoin maximalists. That's just the name of the game.

Posted Using LeoFinance Beta



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16 comments
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Our marketing has been lacking since inception

Agreed, even though I've only been here for a year. I'm hoping to help on this front by slowly spinning up some PR initiatives, seeing if they work, and posting about the successes or failures I encounter.

One tactic that has come of this effort already is a little research project that will compare Hive to Lens Social. For those not in the know, Lens is a decentralized social media protocol that operates on Polygon, and their marketing is off the damn hook. Smaller and younger than Hive, they appear to be growing fast. The research project will be done in collaboration with a Lens insider and well known personality within the web3 world (hopefully some Hive exposure will result!)

This comparison research will ideally be distributed both here on Hive, Lens, and other web3 properties (e.g. Mirror). My hope is not to invoke tribalistic rivalries like you've highlighted, but rather to build bridges between the two communities. I'm sure Lens will do neat things that Hive won't, and vice versa. (E.g. it'd be cool if my Lens profile could pull stats from Hive to display or something).

After all, if web3 stuff is gonna go mainstream, 99.99% of users won't care what protocol powers their experience. They'll just want it work. Hive, Lens, Polygon, ETH... those terms will need to live under the hood :)

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Also, Hive isn't even in the top 200 market cap right now. How many shit projects would one have to research before they even found it? Our marketing has been lacking since inception, and even the brand Hive is extremely ambiguous and could mean a dozen different products, codebases, or companies.

I tried onboarding someone the other day and they kept referring to a mining operation at https://www.hiveblockchain.com/ which is the top result for "hive blockchain" which has some impressive tokenomics right now.

While they run a legit growing business they also run articles like this https://www.hiveblockchain.com/news/hive-impostor-alert-2/ that call other HIVE projects a scam and damaging the namesake.

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As far as I know Hive Blockchain Technologies is just a Bitcoin mining company listed on various stock markets. This seemed to be confirmed by their website. How they can have impressive tokenomics when they don't have a token? Am I missing something?

Also that impostor alert post doesn't seem to be implying that our network is fraudulent... even though they tried to sue us over the name (and failed hilariously because there is no one to sue).

But yeah you are absolutely right how easy it is for newbies to go down the wrong rabbit hole. Maddening really.

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Hive is making its way and I believe that the comparison with Steem or other realities at the moment can no longer hold up ... we will find out what it will be in the future but I am optimistic.

I don't demonize Steem in the past it allowed me to make excellent earnings and I also managed to get out of it before the end of the line.

Sure now it no longer has any charm for me but there are still users who prefer it, in the end it's a matter of tastes and choices... I choose Hive heh heh!

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I explored Hive while I was searching for English Premier League games and player analysis. Of course, it was not on the first page of Google but I was curious enough to know more about that player that I went past a couple of pages to stumble upon Hive.
It has to be organic as you said in the post. The more front end applications we have that solve users' real world problems the better it is.

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(Edited)

I couldn't agree more with everything you've said, I share the same experiences.

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Who said hive is not in top 200 by marketcap I am not sure about other but on coinmarketcap.com which is a most popular cryptocurrency ranking and tracking website hive is at 144th position

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Good point I was going by coingecko, as coinmarketcap was bought via Binance years back and they have stricter rules for being listed in top 200

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I don't think you should let it work you up...I think you should restrategise and recategorise things into different priority lists...It's what I do when I get overwhelmed or feel lazy.

Also make out time for stress relief, your body and mind will thank you for it

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Your experience with mine with regard to cryptocurrency and the interest to getting more information to help you fit in looks alike. From reading random posts on Google to Steemit...then I was really doing a enough research to understand more about this new world but I have gone too lazy perhaps due to low attention I give to the system not necessarily due to low support from the system/community.
When I was really crypto minded Facebook and WhatsApp were secondary as I give up 12 hours to crypto and related stuff but since Facebook and WhatsApp have a fatter part of my time the result is low engagement and low return. Doing crypto is not laziness and doesn't encourage laziness at all.
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Speaking of other platforms where you can earn money for your content; One thing I find really interesting about this platform is the difference in economics between this model and more traditional platforms like youtube. It's arguably a lot harder to start earning money on youtube but the ceiling is a million times higher than it is here. Even if/when HIVE takes off, the ability to continue earning money off of older content is pretty essential for video and music creators. I know that steemit may have been conceptualized as a blogging platform but I think it's safe to say that we have moved beyond that at this point. It can take a ton of resources to create a video or even a good audio recording and to cap your earnings after a week prevents those serious creators from coming here.

I'm really curious about how that will be dealt with in the future. Maybe Dan has some sweet tokenomics over at 3speak, I haven't gone too deep into that model recently, I seem to remember it was a bit complex and had more to do with hosting than creation but anyways.

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When one is out to find answers to troubling questions, no going back until satisfied answers are found. As you said, though am new on hive, i have not see any platform who has what hive have. It is not all about shouting on internet that their projects are best. It is about standing the time of test.

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