Conversation

No one's yet made a workable solution for web micropayments, but one aspirational design metaphor I like is an electricity meter. I don't think about running my dishwasher as a transaction with a price and a receipt: I just do things, and I get a bill at the end of the month.
87
70
462
Prices are (fortunately!) calibrated so that the monthly bill is not usually a big deal. If it seems high, I might dig in: hey, this appliance is wasteful! Or maybe I need to turn off the mining bots or whatever. But default-batched transactions really lowers friction.
1
1
43
It's interesting to think about monetizing web content along these lines: you just read things; small charges accumulate; you pay the bill at the end of the month and maybe change future behavior if it seems too high. You could set a cap if you wanted. Aim for effortlessness.
3
2
68
Replying to
A great point about the trouble here: how can price negotiation happen sensibly? The spec punts to browsers, but it’s quite a hard problem for the long tails.
Quote Tweet
Replying to @xeegeex and @andy_matuschak
It's an information theory question: the price signal comes from both positive and negative economic choice. Either negotiation in the bazar for the fringes, or supply demand in the bigger market. The utility model doesn't have that.
5
1
23
NFT profile picture
Replying to
What do you think of the way Brave does this with BAT? Basically as seamless as you were describing but you just engage with ads or buy an allotment of BAT upfront to cover costs and your browser pays the sites you visited every month
1
2
Show replies
Replying to
Running the web content/experiences like a utility has been the vision of many since the early days, however the same way that the other side of the transaction where production and pricing happens need the aggregate event to determine fair and predictable pricing overall.
1
4
Show replies
Replying to
This would be fabulous if it can be made to work… My impression (may be totally wrong) is that the real obstacle is not technical, it’s the KYC/AML regulation. Blockchain can evade that, but doesn’t (afaict) scale for microtransactions.
2