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Author Topic: Introducing: Bitcoin Networked Economy Specification v0.01-DRAFT  (Read 11823 times)
eugene2k
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July 28, 2010, 10:04:19 PM
 #21

Sorry, not gonna fly. Back in the 90s everyone offered web-hosting, and technically-savvy people could create websites, anyone knows angelfire, tripod, geocities? They were big in the 90s, now you probably have to search really hard to find anyone familiar with those web-services. You know why? In the 2000s blogging sites appeared, which, in essence, killed the personal websites industry. Because it's thousands of times easier to set up and maintain a blog than it is to set up and maintain a website. We now have ebay to sell and buy stuff from other people. The spec is a step backwards: it's made with the idea that a merchant would want to create a website, manage it, process transactions etc. The merchant only wants to sell her product. That's all.

This whole policy thing, as I see it, is meant only for one thing: ease the job of the spider. And there aren't any spiders yet. Registering a standard before creating an implementation of it is just plain wrong.
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lachesis
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July 28, 2010, 10:12:22 PM
 #22

I too am a bit skeptical of the power of the spec in the merchant market, but I think it would be great for exchanges, which need to get scraped often.

The white/blacklisting stuff could be better handled by FOAF and the like.

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July 29, 2010, 05:39:37 AM
 #23

Sorry, not gonna fly. Back in the 90s everyone offered web-hosting, and technically-savvy people could create websites, anyone knows angelfire, tripod, geocities? They were big in the 90s, now you probably have to search really hard to find anyone familiar with those web-services. You know why? In the 2000s blogging sites appeared, which, in essence, killed the personal websites industry. Because it's thousands of times easier to set up and maintain a blog than it is to set up and maintain a website. We now have ebay to sell and buy stuff from other people. The spec is a step backwards: it's made with the idea that a merchant would want to create a website, manage it, process transactions etc. The merchant only wants to sell her product. That's all.

This whole policy thing, as I see it, is meant only for one thing: ease the job of the spider. And there aren't any spiders yet. Registering a standard before creating an implementation of it is just plain wrong.

That is why I used google blogger with a custom domain name.The thought of managing a website hurts my brain. Huh
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July 29, 2010, 06:31:48 AM
 #24

Hey, I had a Tripod and Geocities pages Cheesy

Ahh... memories  Smiley

However with proper plugins for major blogging platforms this spec can be a viable tool.
Kinda more work for the spec author though.

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eugene2k
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July 29, 2010, 07:52:37 AM
 #25

I too am a bit skeptical of the power of the spec in the merchant market, but I think it would be great for exchanges, which need to get scraped often.
Not until there are many exchanges dealing with the same currencies. And I'm doubtfull that many more will be popping up.
sirius
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July 29, 2010, 08:02:02 AM
 #26

Sorry, not gonna fly. Back in the 90s everyone offered web-hosting, and technically-savvy people could create websites, anyone knows angelfire, tripod, geocities? They were big in the 90s, now you probably have to search really hard to find anyone familiar with those web-services. You know why? In the 2000s blogging sites appeared, which, in essence, killed the personal websites industry. Because it's thousands of times easier to set up and maintain a blog than it is to set up and maintain a website. We now have ebay to sell and buy stuff from other people. The spec is a step backwards: it's made with the idea that a merchant would want to create a website, manage it, process transactions etc. The merchant only wants to sell her product. That's all.

This can still be used by the vast number of merchants or companies who do have a website. Those who don't can use a plugin on their blog, webstore or social networking site.

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This whole policy thing, as I see it, is meant only for one thing: ease the job of the spider. And there aren't any spiders yet. Registering a standard before creating an implementation of it is just plain wrong.

It's not wrong. We're developing here.

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August 06, 2010, 04:24:45 AM
 #27

I'm wondering about the "pair" names.  Is "BCUSD" short for "BC/USD" or BC per USD?  I believe the examples used are reflecting a USD/BC or EUR/BC exchange rate (which is the convention for most exchangers).  In this case, it would be more appropriate to use USDBC or EURBC.

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