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Martin K
@martinkrung
Everyone hates points, do you? I'm one of the first digital natives of my generation, even if I started late. I have been a web 1 fiddler, a web 2.0 dev, and I am cryptonative guy now. I don't like points, but you can't fight evolution, as you can't fight gravity.
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Martin K
@martinkrung
Points take away the guarantee of ownership because points are just a number in a database, which the project can change anytime. The sense of ownership, which a token gives you and what crypto people are used to, this is fading.
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Martin K
@martinkrung
A first step has been the introduction of non-transferable tokens, or better said, authority transferable tokens. Some projects have them; they are even used to incentivize their product, and the token contracts allow you to withdraw it to your wallet, but not to send it to someone else.
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Martin K
@martinkrung
These tokens don't have a market and no market price is formed. It's a nice trick. These projects can then choose the best moment to make these tokens fully transferable, mostly voted by the tokenholders themselves. If the timing is good, this may even help the initial price.
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Martin K
@martinkrung
What's fair: every participant has access at the same time. We will see what kind of dump fest this will produce. Why project owners love points is clear; they don't need a plan for points, maybe not even need legal advice.
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Martin K
@martinkrung
And: you can change the rules anytime. The distribution is not glued into a contract which you have to audit and upgrade every time you change something. So it's way more flexible. So what is the next logical step in the world of points? My web 1 + 2 + 3 experience tells me this:
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