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https://warpcast.com/~/channel/writinghackathon
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Edward H. Carpenter
@ehcarpenter
Here is my first contribution to the Hackathon - I published this article highlighting how three platforms are giving authors a range of ways to get paid for the time and effort they put into their work. I look forward to hearing your thoughts, and to publishing more of my Hackathon material before the June 28th! https://paragraph.xyz/@degenaissancedigest/getting-paid-to-write-in-web3/?referrer=ehcarpenter.eth
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iSpeakNerd π§ββοΈ
@ispeaknerd.eth
t2 is medium, users and writers pay for network access rather than direct to individuals. is t2 still doing contests?
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CD π©
@vagobond
Great name.
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Danica Swanson
@danicaswanson
Love the title of your newsletter. Thanks for mentioning my article! One correction: writers donβt get 100% of the fee paid by the minter. For a free (0 ETH) mint on Zora, the total fee is 0.000777 ETH (~$3). Of that, creators get 0.000333 ETH for each mint. If applicable, they also get a referral fee and/or first-minter fee. So writers can earn anywhere from 0.000333 ETH to 0.000555 ETH per mint. On Paragraph the fee paid by the collector for a 0 ETH mint is also 0.000777 ETH, and writers get 0.000333 ETH. So in many cases, writers' earnings from free mints wonβt even meet the comparable entry-level per-word rate in web2, unfortunately. It adds up if you get a lot of mints. But so far the most mints Iβve ever gotten on a single article is about 60. I donβt know of any web3 writers who make a sustainable living through minting revenues alone, so tips really help. 5555 $DEGEN in appreciation for your work.
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