Rodney Uesaka wrote:
I've been working on a new memetic cash system that's fully peer-to-peer, and powered by Proof-of-Viral — not Proof-of-Work.
The paper is available at:
https://memebitcoin.org/memebitcoin.pdf We definitely need something like this. But can viral consensus actually scale?
For meme-tokens to retain cultural value, they must propagate across vast networks — like X, forums, chatrooms.
But if everyone starts remixing the same memes, reposting derivatives, won’t the chain of trust collapse under repetition? Wouldn’t every participant need to remember all past meme-events? That sounds heavy.
That’s a fair concern — but in practice, not every meme needs to be remembered.
MemeBitcoin relies on collective activity, not individual storage.
Viral trust emerges from the momentum of shared attention —
not from preserving every post, but from **recognizing resonance**.
Early on, participants may observe everything.
But as the viral layer thickens,
some nodes specialize in curating, remixing, amplifying.
Others simply connect, post, tag, and spread.
Over time, cultural consensus forms —
not from strict verification, but from participation itself.