NEW EPISODE! EP81: How blockchain-based Everipedia is disrupting the Wiki model

in #podcast6 years ago (edited)

Everipedia is Wikipedia on the blockchain. What does that mean for privacy, openness and fair use?


It’s less than 2 weeks until the launch of the EOS blockchain and today we chat with Mahbod Moghadam, co-founder of Everipedia, a blockchain-based Wikipedia built on the EOS blockchain. Mahbod graduated from Yale in 2004 and was the co-founder of Rap Genius (now, Genius.com) which finds the meaning in song lyrics.

While building Rap Genius, Mahbod decided to create his own Wikipedia page, and was unpleasantly surprised that he wasn’t allowed. Apparently didn’t have a high profile, even after raising millions, to be accepted at Wikipedia.com.

With the idea that anyone should be able to create a wiki page for themselves, he and a few other co-founders decided to launch Everipedia.org as an “expansion pack” to Wikipedia.com. Basically, if you weren’t popular or “cool” enough to get a Wikipedia page, you could create your own page on Everipedia.

Before you think that Everipedia is some scrub website, they imported all of the current Wikipedia articles. This means that they have over 6,000,000 unique articles to search from. Before you cry “plagiarism”, please remember that Wikipedia imported the articles of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Ok, everyone cool now?

Anyways, here’s some additional information about Everipedia.org:

Everipedia background:

  • over 6 million articles
  • No ads
  • Anyone can create an article and be an editor about anything, no censorship
  • Started with all of the wikipedia articles inside of it?
  • Hired Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia AND Everipedia
  • Raised $30M, fully funded by Block.One, the creators of the EOS.io software

More fun facts, Everipedia didn’t start off as a blockchain project. They started as a website that offered reward points to incentivize authors and editors. Guess what? This influence model can’t complete with the tokenized world of blockchain. So, Everipedia networked with Block.One and raised $30M, complete bought by Block.One, and decided to be the first airdrop on the EOS platform. Ok, they didn’t drop their tokens first, but they were the first to announce. Why would they do this? Well, they want to build a community of content creators, editors and consumers. Airdropping your tokens on EOS means that you get and instant community of like-minded please. Pretty clever.

So, tune in to find out why their token, the IQ token, exists and how it incentivizes users and why they chose to build on the EOS blockchain. We’re just getting started with EOS and there’s going to be a LOT more dApps that decide to airdop in order to quickly build a community. If Dan Larimer learned one thing about Steem, it was that the initial token distribution is very important, and by incentivizing airdrops to EOS token holders, dApp team can take advantage of the year long ICO.

I hope you enjoy this episode and I’ve included all the links to keep up-to-date with the Everipedia team, Don’t forget to buy EOS tokens and register them ASAP in order to receive the free Everipedia IQ tokens. This isn’t investment advice. I don’t have any license, certification or experience to offer it. What you do with your money is your own business. I don’t care, and good luck.

Until next time...KEEP BUILDING FREEDOM!!

In Liberty,
Ashe

Contact Info:

Email: [email protected]
Website: https://everipedia.org/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/everipedia
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/everipedia-inc.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/everipedia

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Listening now for the 3rd time.

I had heard of the IQ airdrop a while ago and brushed it off because it didn't sound practical. Oh how I've learned in the last couple months.

I wonder if they have a guy to update their welding pages on the blockchain ;)

EOS is the internet, man! It's the new internet! Just like we access pages on the internet, we're gonna access apps on EOS. Holy shit, my mind just expanded so much when I realized that.

we're gonna access apps, webpages and files on EOS. IPFS is ridiculous.

If Dan Larimer learned one thing about Steem, it was that the initial token distribution is very important

This is actually one of the 2 main problems with STEEM. We don't have a proper constitution resulting in a stake based democracy instead of something like a republic. The other was the POW mining. Early on I was glad to hear @dan mention a constitution i one of the old presentations I watched and I can't think of any other coin with better initial distribution tan EOS.

completely agree. There's no real system of governance in Steem. Sure, we get to vote for BPs, but there's nothing really holding us together in a moral contract.

The early miners are also at a level of "Almost nothing at stake". I heard STEEM used to have 100% inflation too. So we basically have something like the Dash fastmine/instamine. But Dash isn't a "social" project and Masternodes are just voting on budget proposals. They have incentive to vote wisely. They don't control overall reward distribution like STEEM. They can't just vote themselves free money.

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