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RE: ANNOUNCEMENT!!!!Betting, Is it hurting or Helping The Steemit Community? Special Edition Preview. No.0
within Steemit.
within Steem - yes
within Steemit - no
Their users deserve to have much better user experience and they should focus on providing that. Their slow progress on this just proves that draining steemit community is good for their business.
I think you have a misunderstanding of what Steemit does. Their site is a browser for the blockchain. If it is on the blockchain, it is on Steemit (except in a few cases where there might be legally-mandated blocking).
You are proposing a radical change to the entire model, where Steemit exercises editorial control over which blockchain content appears on the web site. I see no evidence they have any interest in doing that.
That is the problem. Right now vision for steemit is not clear (at least for me). Steemit can be general purpose "browser for STEEM blockchain" (better looking version of steemd?) or "discussion and blogging platform".
On https://steemit.com/faq.html there is:
I will not argue, that one is more important than another, because for sure there is a need for each of this things.
There are different services like busy.org which could focus on one aspect, where steemit can focus on another. What we need is clear vision for steemit and good execution of this vision.
I wrote here in another comment:
I am seriously asking, am I wrong? Even before steemit I consider myself as blogger, so for sure I have tendency to wishful thinking, and I would like to see steemit as perfect place for blogging, but the question is, whether this is actually a vision of creators of steemit.
In worst case scenario, if steemit will no fulfill my needs, I will go to other places like busy or any other service (hopefully build on top of steem), which will match my needs and vision of my own.
@noisy i can't reply in-line below due to depth, but if you look back at the initial white paper it was absolutely not specifically focused narrowly on "blogging". It was to be a social network but the idea of different forms of value (not just blog posts) being subjectively determined by voters was baked into it.
That's more the blockchain, and what I wrote about steemit.com being a direct "view" of the blockchain, not one that exercises editorial discretion. Something like what @jesta is doing with graymass is more specifically focused on blogging, where specific blog posts would appear on the authors' own sites but be backed by the blockchain. Other things on the blockchain wouldn't appear there. As the ecosystem grows, that is one direction that may thrive. It is also possible that steemit.com may in time want to narrowly focus on only a subset of what is on the blockchain, but I don't see that happening right now (strictly my opinion).