RE: RE: Hodl Craefully Mr Oliver
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RE: Hodl Craefully Mr Oliver

RE: Hodl Craefully Mr Oliver

Hey thanks for the upvote! EOS is indeed full of red flags in a very superficial sense, but I think if we dig a little deeper, those flags become either accounted for, or are made irrelevant by a good technical plan and a demonstrable capacity by the team for execution.

As for the Brock Pierce scandal, so far as I know there's no notable substance to the scandal and in fact the FBI thought he might even be a victim in that whole thing. In any case, Pierce's personality is a madly tiny facet of the project as a whole and does not impact the technology or its planned execution. When it comes to blockchains, we should always wonder if the projects can be technically separated entirely from their creators in terms of technical operation and if they can be, then they are legitimate blockchain projects that seek utility and value entirely from their technical qualities and that's the way they're supposed to work. I don't care if Pierce is a unicorn; I care if EOS has promise to be a functional network and from what I can see, there's a lot of promise.

Projects like EOS and Neureal should fascinate us and grab us by the frontal lobes not because of who's involved but rather because of how they're structured and what they can do for the world. If they fascinate us even in large part because of who's involved, that means that we are either failing to understand the promise of open source projects to attract development talent and users, or that the open sourced projects we're looking at hold no such promise.

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