Conversation

Replying to
Aside: the diagram has the x-axis separating sustainable futures (above water) from unsustainable ones (below water) and the y-axis separating positive futures (right half) from the negative ones (left half). The annotations are in a weird language Web3 types speak. Primer:
Quote Tweet
1/ On NFT Twitter We have a lot of newcomers to NFT twitter. This is a thread to teach them our ways. 6529 will start this list today, but will add to it w/suggestions. NFT twitter has a great culture, very positive. Let's keep it this way.
Show this thread
1
39
Not counting all you freeloading right-clickers on here at the 0 eth level, it’s been collected by 9 people so far (7+1+1), for a total of 1.17 eth. It took me about an hour to think through and draw this, so technically this is the highest paid work I’ve ever done.
3
68
Replying to
Given you mentioned at the top money wasn’t the draw for you can you say more about the non-monetary utility you see? The post-once-read-everywhere use case is the most intriguing to me and IPFS seems like the most interesting part of the whole stack.
1
6
Replying to and
Is there currently a value-creating purpose to wallets 'owning' identity tokens within the blockchain, or are the positive use cases you've outlined (distributed content-based addressing and automagical consequences thereof) just the bait on the hook of automagic DRM?
1
1
Replying to and
In what way is it analogous to owning a right to privacy? There's no hermetic effect here. Nothing sufficiently valuable about the information is or can be concealed. All I see is an obstacle to interoperability within this domain without recognition of the assigned rights.
1
1
Replying to and
Tokens are keys that everyone has. They have been given out to everyone already. What everyone does not have is the recognition of association within the ledger. That is of value only when operating in the context of the ledger. Why do I need to accept the rules of the ledger?
1
1
Replying to and
Not sure what you’re getting at. Yes you can steal. Yes thieves can steal keys to your home and burgle it. That doesn’t mean locks are useless or that real estate ownership laws are meaningless. Just that there’s a cost to enforcement.
1
1
Show replies