The Race To The Bottom

in #race6 years ago (edited)


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I keep making reference to The Race to The Bottom, but I don't have an article to link to in order to clarify what I'm talking about. This is that post.

Traditionally, the race to the bottom is a metaphor involving lowering ones standards in order to sell out and make money.

a race to (or for) the bottom
phrase of race

  1. A situation characterized by a progressive lowering or deterioration of standards, especially (in business contexts) as a result of the pressure of competition.
    "unsustainable tendering practices had created a race to the bottom among contractors"

For me the term is taking on a whole new much more positive meaning when in reference to cryptocurrency. Before now, the bottom represented the lowest standard. Now, it represents the lowest friction.


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The Blockchain and cryptocurrency are proving that middle men are obsolete and can be replaced by smart money. We no longer need escrow services. We no longer need banks. We no longer need any trusted middle man. The middle man is being replaced by digital contracts enforced by cryptography.

This is a revolutionary development, but the space is so new and underdeveloped that it's causing uncertainty and greed to proliferate. This dynamic puts a lot of people off and makes them assume that crypto is a scam. Block.One doesn't need four billion dollars to develop EOS, but they took it regardless. Now they own both 10% of EOS and 10% of Ethereum, which looks bad for decentralization.

On a side note I'd like to point out that the claims of EOS attacking Ethereum are pretty outlandish. Why would Block.One waste money attacking a platform that they own 10% of? EOS is practically a blank slate platform right now. What can you even do there? I registered my ERC-20 tokens months ago and I haven't even checked my wallet yet to even confirm if they are there. There is no reason to attack a "competitor" if your product isn't even up and running yet. Could be a rogue EOS whale I guess... but that is a lot of money to waste for such little (none) payoff.


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Anyway, back to the topic at hand. The overhead of cryptocurrency is extremely low. We now have the power to create, maintain, and develop worldwide currencies with "big" teams as small as 30 people. What does this mean for the future of crypto? It means that projects are charging too much. ICOs are keeping too many coins for themselves because they can get away with it, but it won't be like this for long.

Any development team in the world can get together and massively undercut any of these greedy projects on the market. This is especially relevant when you consider that all these projects are open source. If EOS proves to be a superior product but isn't decentralized enough a team will fork it with decentralization as the primary goal. This logic applies to all blockchain projects.

What's the best part of forking a project with the intention of decentralization? First of all, if you succeed this new fork will be considered a commodity instead of a security, providing more lax regulation. Better yet, it would be declared a currency over a commodity. Second, both projects now have a cooperative incentive to be the best project. I say cooperative over competitive because competition is falsely projected onto the cryptosphere. Both projects would have similar open source code and any of them could incorporate the others at any time.

There is no guarantee that the new project would be better than the old one. Perhaps the dev team of the first project is simply far more skilled than the fork devs. In this case decentralization didn't even matter, the old chain is still superior.

Best case scenario is that the two forks eventually come to consensus and merge back together.


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The Race To The Bottom doesn't just apply to blockchains and cryptocurrency, it also applies to their corresponding side projects. For example, I want to make a decentralized exchange on Steem. What's the first thing I would let users exchange? Votes! Correct. I would allow every single account to buy and sell votes in a decentralized manner.

If you engage in vote buying on Steem you are currently getting swindled. These services are taking huge cuts for themselves. People buying votes are getting taxed, and people selling their votes are getting taxed. It's time to introduce a free market to this platform and undercut all these greedy whales.

By allowing any account to choose how much they are willing to sell their vests for we can create a free market. If you were willing to sell your votes before at a loss just think of how many people would be looking to buy in a decentralized free market. If you were willing buy votes for more than their worth just think of how many people would be looking to sell to you. These centralized vote buying services on Steem will be rendered completely obsolete in less than a year.

Just this morning I logged into my account to see that @smartsteem had sold two of my votes at the same time. I have my account set to not sell unless my voting power is at 100%. I logged in with 95.5% voting power so it sold 2 votes at 99.5%. I was paid 0.048 SBD for 9 cent votes. Pretty annoying if you ask me. I could simply upvote myself for 45% more profit. So ridiculous.


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You want to make a bid bot? Gross!

I don't want to make a bid bot. I want to make THE BID BOT: A bid bot that anyone can use to undercut the current network of bots. And I want to do it for "free" (tips appreciated). You might think that buying/selling votes is bad for the platform and that I shouldn't waste my time, but nothing is farther than the truth. The core code I would be using to accomplish this is modular and can be used for many different actually-decentralized applications.

In the long run, I'd like to eliminate vote buying all together by reforming the trending tab. Our embarrassing trending tab is the abomination feeding bid bots in the first place. However, this is more work and vote buying will never be completely squashed. It's a valuable service. Just because it currently exploits our primitive trending tab doesn't mean it shouldn't be used in the future once these issues have been resolved.


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Transactions on Steem are supposed to be free. By charging money for a service you introduce a middle man. The Race To The Bottom ensures that this middle man will eventually be cut out of the equation.

The key to winning the race to the bottom is to start at the bottom. Cryptocurrency is extremely corruption resistant over time because less greedy behavior is constantly rewarded by the race in the form of user adoption. Mark Zuckerburg was even aware of this fact when he created Facebook. Everything was free and their were no ads so he could suck in the entire world to the platform. He then proceeded to sell out. This is not possible with crypto because everything is open source and decentralized.


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Once this new industrial revolution kicks into full gear we are going to see near frictionless systems come into place. Business models that were previously impossible will spring forth like wild fire across the globe. Citizens will no longer be forced to use currencies that are controlled by the elite. The elite will no longer have the means to dilute our buying power with inflation.

Once mainstream adoption rolls around the top cryptocurrencies will have little variance. Instead of going down a little in value every year like fiat they will go up a little instead. Profits from future innovations will trickle down into all of our wallets instead of a select few. This is the power of the race to the bottom.

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Very interesting points raised and I agree with you. It seems the demonitization that Diamandis talks about applies to all of this. Ironic since we are discussing the currencies here.

I believe greed will be a think of the past. Creativity and innovation will rule. As we get more open source and decentralized platforms, the silo effect will be going. So will the proprietary nature of things. Those who try to operate in that manner will find a group of people who set out to decentralize it and create an open source version. Over time, people will embrace that.

I do like your thoughts on the bots, I never framed them as middle men but you are right, essentially they are.

So would the ultimate bid bot have no bids? Isnt the bottom zero or near zero?

I use the words bid-bots and vote selling interchangeably at my own peril. There is no bidding involved.

Everyone has their own bot. You want to sell a 10 cent vote for 0.08 SBD. You post this information on the blockchain. Other people with the same bot can scan the blockchain and see your offer. Someone bites and replies that they want to purchase that 10 cent vote for 0.08 SBD. The vote seller confirms the transaction. The vote buyer sends 0.08 SBD. The vote seller upvotes the link given for 10 cents.

Smart contracts aren't even required because if the vote seller doesn't pay up everyone will know. The botnet will ban this account until they make it right.

A very nice side effect of this system of sidestepping smart contracts is that it provides a network of trust, reputation, and history of positive interaction on the blockchain. These positive interactions could be used to form a new reputation system that is far superior to the one that Steem is using right now.

Adding an optional bidding system is an extra complication that I could perhaps add later, but I don't think it would be required because the free market value of votes would be pretty obvious given which offers are getting bought and which ones are getting ignored.

I think it's safe to say that you could sell your votes for slightly more than they are worth, because there is extra value in exploiting the garbage trending tab.

However, this also brings up the question of curation and using vote buying to manipulate it. If you buy votes the second you post something you'll receive 25% more money than if you waited half an hour.

It's pretty obvious that the advent of vote buying popularity has created a need to give
curation a complete makeover. I've been saying for a while now that curation should revolve around resteems.

First thing i should say, yes claims about EOS attacking Eth are really dumb imo... people just want to bash on EOS tbh... You should check out and register for some of the airdrops they are doing, just having 100 EOS doesn't make you registered to all of the EOS airdrops... you can see the ones that need you to register here...
https://eosdrops.io/

Citizens will no longer be forced to use currencies that are controlled by the elite. The elite will no longer have the means to dilute our buying power with inflation.

So true! Still, taking the power from those elites is going to be hard, the elite have had the power for many decades, some for centuries, taking the power from them and giving it to the people is going to make them lash out sooner or later, and we will have to defend ourselves against them sooner or later...

Coins mentioned in post:

CoinPrice (USD)📈 24h📈 7d
BOTBodhi0.257$5.3%9.62%
EOSEOS8.818$9.58%20.04%
ETHEthereum501.336$5.08%13.94%
SBDSteem Dollars1.290$8.51%13.57%
STEEMSteem1.530$7.86%13.53%

Your post was selected and voted by the curator @pataty69 project that can be followed on my trail at Steemauto. @edicted Interesting idea I'm a bid-bot user and looking always for get more profits in my curation trail. I support you.

These centralized vote buying services on Steem will be rendered completely obsolete in less than a year.

still waiting..

Instead we got the EIP and Bot-Owners are also struggling. Cuz they wanna keep their profits..^^
But the only differnce I see is trending and Idc about trending..

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