G-Bert
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September 22, 2014, 03:46:28 PM |
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Did Xander Shepherd quit XC and join nhz? Pizpie also?
Xander does XC's Linux releases. Pizpie does social media and a whole lot of quality networking. Nothing has changed in this regard. Nothing's new about this either. They've both always been involved in several projects. Go look up their post histories. I am actually sorry for you, because you have taken a lot of bullets for the team. I believe you are doing your best, but really, things like the NHZ annon aren't helping a lot, I believe you should be given much more responsibility and intiative by the team on your part, because I am certain XC would have been way more undervalued right now hadn't it been for your commitment to it, and all the time you spend in the forums. Gotta +1 this too. You are a true asset to the community Arlyn, can't imagine what it would be like without your constant updates and general positivity. Seems unfortunate when these kind of situations occur, you seem to get left out of the loop and then take all the shit afterwards! haha. Anyway, onwards and upwards.
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XChat XJkVnYD4N4oSjNStgbAUD6UyWuBTWuMRgv public key fuYPYmK4Sj57PkU2NKg1gKW91euMKkstQPeeexUcxnb8
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 03:47:13 PM |
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So let's get this straight:
XC team members are not employees.
They support XC and devote significant resources to it.
But they do not work exclusively for XC.
Expect to find that people have other commitments. This is not detrimental to XC, it's life.
It is not necessary that we clarify or get the community's permission every time someone does something.
dude you pic fights where there are none. Perhaps, but it's on behalf of the team's growing frustration about how our ethic of collaboration and mutual beneficence gets interpreted as somehow betraying XC. This is a perception that we all feel needs to change. It's important to us. one post like pizpies and it would have been settled. sometimes i don't get your logic. one or two sentences of insight was to much? We were discussing what to say. Anyone could've posted that. It just so happened that Nick did. Collaboration is one thing. Team members joining another coins team is completely different and looks bad no matter how you spin it. Spreading your resources thin is always bad.
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cryptico
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September 22, 2014, 03:48:16 PM |
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So let's get this straight:
XC team members are not employees.
They support XC and devote significant resources to it.
But they do not work exclusively for XC.
Expect to find that people have other commitments. This is not detrimental to XC, it's life.
It is not necessary that we clarify or get the community's permission every time someone does something.
dude you pic fights where there are none. Perhaps, but it's on behalf of the team's growing frustration about how our ethic of collaboration and mutual beneficence gets interpreted as somehow betraying XC. This is a perception that we all feel needs to change. It's important to us. one post like pizpies and it would have been settled. sometimes i don't get your logic. one or two sentences of insight was to much? We were discussing what to say. Anyone could've posted that. It just so happened that Nick did. Collaboration is one thing. Team members joining another coins team is completely different and looks bad no matter how you spin it. Spreading your resources thin is always bad. Does not look bad to me....we still don't even know what this will bring to xc... stop whining..
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gadgetnerd
Member
Offline
Activity: 136
Merit: 10
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September 22, 2014, 03:49:46 PM |
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So let's get this straight:
XC team members are not employees.
They support XC and devote significant resources to it.
But they do not work exclusively for XC.
Expect to find that people have other commitments. This is not detrimental to XC, it's life.
It is not necessary that we clarify or get the community's permission every time someone does something.
dude you pic fights where there are none. Perhaps, but it's on behalf of the team's growing frustration about how our ethic of collaboration and mutual beneficence gets interpreted as somehow betraying XC. This is a perception that we all feel needs to change. It's important to us. one post like pizpies and it would have been settled. sometimes i don't get your logic. one or two sentences of insight was to much? We were discussing what to say. Anyone could've posted that. It just so happened that Nick did. Collaboration is one thing. Team members joining another coins team is completely different and looks bad no matter how you spin it. Spreading your resources thin is always bad. Does not look bad to me....we still don't even know what this will bring to xc... stop whining.. +1 stop whining or tell us what you can do for XC. There is to many here acting like they own the place..
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 03:51:31 PM |
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So let's get this straight:
XC team members are not employees.
They support XC and devote significant resources to it.
But they do not work exclusively for XC.
Expect to find that people have other commitments. This is not detrimental to XC, it's life.
It is not necessary that we clarify or get the community's permission every time someone does something.
dude you pic fights where there are none. Perhaps, but it's on behalf of the team's growing frustration about how our ethic of collaboration and mutual beneficence gets interpreted as somehow betraying XC. This is a perception that we all feel needs to change. It's important to us. one post like pizpies and it would have been settled. sometimes i don't get your logic. one or two sentences of insight was to much? We were discussing what to say. Anyone could've posted that. It just so happened that Nick did. Collaboration is one thing. Team members joining another coins team is completely different and looks bad no matter how you spin it. Spreading your resources thin is always bad. Does not look bad to me....we still don't even know what this will bring to xc... stop whining.. +1 stop whining or tell us what you can do for XC. There is to many here acting like they own the place.. I'm offering up my opinion, that's all. Obviously, you are free to disagree.
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cryptico
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September 22, 2014, 03:54:10 PM |
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Why didn't you tell us evil XC PR Member
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synechist
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1190
Merit: 1000
To commodify ethicality is to ethicise the market
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September 22, 2014, 03:54:42 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change.
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Co-Founder, the Blocknet
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 04:00:18 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community."
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jibble
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September 22, 2014, 04:03:29 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Their contract would forbid it, also all creative rights when employed by those companies goes out the window, you come up with a million dollar idea, be sure that it will be ripped from you faster than a crack addict after a fix
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georgeblair
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 46
Merit: 0
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September 22, 2014, 04:05:38 PM |
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Collaboration within the cryptocurrency community at large (like any community) is important to the success and innovation of crypto in general. You can't expect a new space like crypto to thrive and grow if it remains insular and afraid to reach out to other coins. Besides, it's not like those XC members are taking over those other coins (and abandoning XC). PS. No collaboration of the XC goat though. That will not stand.
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synechist
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1190
Merit: 1000
To commodify ethicality is to ethicise the market
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September 22, 2014, 04:08:15 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Good point. The shareholders would be outraged. So yes, the situations are not analogous: - Crypto is fluid, communal, and not held together by legal contracts. - This makes it vastly more innovative and flexible than corporations. - It also makes it vastly less small-minded than the corporate scarcity-dominated mentality. - Community fosters superabundance. Anything that does this is beautiful and should not be replaced by a dynamic that creates scarcity. Big up for community!
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Co-Founder, the Blocknet
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holyprofit
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September 22, 2014, 04:08:35 PM |
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Perhaps, but it's on behalf of the team's growing frustration about how our ethic of collaboration and mutual beneficence gets interpreted as somehow betraying XC.
[ snip ]
Just so's you know, for every person whining there are 10 out here wondering what the hell the issue is - most of us know that we are buying in to and supporting a fantastic project and do not doubt any of your commitment every time you interact with other coins. And one other comment for our community is that the coins that eventually win out from the gazillions will be the ones that have a gained respect and trust and recognition throughout the altcoin universe, not the ones that pretend every other coin is shit and should be shunned.
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 04:09:58 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Their contract would forbid it, also all creative rights when employed by those companies goes out the window, you come up with a million dollar idea, be sure that it will be ripped from you faster than a crack addict after a fix That's exactly my point -- These elements are in place for a reason. Their contract would forbid it and they surrender creative rights to help ensure the success of the company and protect shareholders.
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Mountaingoat
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September 22, 2014, 04:11:18 PM |
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Collaboration within the cryptocurrency community at large (like any community) is important to the success and innovation of crypto in general. You can't expect a new space like crypto to thrive and grow if it remains insular and afraid to reach out to other coins. Besides, it's not like those XC members are taking over those other coins (and abandoning XC). PS. No collaboration of the XC goat though. That will not stand. What is with the XC goat?
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holyprofit
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September 22, 2014, 04:11:33 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Good point. The shareholders would be outraged. So yes, the situations are not analogous: - Crypto is fluid, communal, and not held together by legal contracts. - This makes it vastly more innovative and flexible than corporations. - It also makes it vastly less small-minded than the corporate scarcity-dominated mentality. - Community fosters superabundance. Anything that does this is beautiful and should not be replaced by a dynamic that creates scarcity. Big up for community! Read and enjoy .. http://www.businessinsider.com/how-microsoft-and-apple-work-together-2013-6?op=1EDIT: yes the best do indeed work with the best
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 04:12:56 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Good point. The shareholders would be outraged. So yes, the situations are not analogous: - Crypto is fluid, communal, and not held together by legal contracts. - This makes it vastly more innovative and flexible than corporations. - It also makes it vastly less small-minded than the corporate scarcity-dominated mentality. - Community fosters superabundance. Anything that does this is beautiful and should not be replaced by a dynamic that creates scarcity. Big up for community! The situations are analogous to a degree. Are you telling me that if Dan (atcsecure) were to officially announce that he was coding (as an official dev) for another coin, that XC 's price would not crash? And that XC holders would not be outraged?
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battbot
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September 22, 2014, 04:14:30 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Good point. The shareholders would be outraged. So yes, the situations are not analogous: - Crypto is fluid, communal, and not held together by legal contracts. - This makes it vastly more innovative and flexible than corporations. - It also makes it vastly less small-minded than the corporate scarcity-dominated mentality. - Community fosters superabundance. Anything that does this is beautiful and should not be replaced by a dynamic that creates scarcity. Big up for community! Read and enjoy .. http://www.businessinsider.com/how-microsoft-and-apple-work-together-2013-6?op=1That addresses collaboration -- which I support and think is a good thing for XC. Right now, I am speaking to the fact that two core XC team members are now official team members of another coin. This is not the same as collaboration.
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hoertest
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September 22, 2014, 04:15:58 PM |
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like i said i see the colaborations positive and i don't accuse anyone from "betrayal". but i can see why some are irritated as well. look at the track record: cache: jasin threw it out there. key review: well i don't wanna bring those feeling up again ( all reviews afterwards executed perfectly) quibuck: their thread first nhz: again they go first i thinks thats what more gets on the nerves of some. some react totally inapropriate in my optinion but what i wanna say is the team, if it feels frustrated, should not forget that. regarding colaborations the track record of leaks stands and its bad luck that yet again it happened. so again i understand both sides a little. seems to be my thing lately Anyway we have been through worse discussions in here. its healthy and always came out beneficial. i'm looking forward to the actual details and more info tomorrow. it will be good i'm shure. i hope some kind of review agreement from a public figure for XC is part of it.
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jibble
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September 22, 2014, 04:19:03 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. I'll give an example from my own life: - I do analytical philosophical research into sign action - I have a music career - I design gliders All of these "spread my resources thinner". But this is not a problem. It's life. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Their contract would forbid it, also all creative rights when employed by those companies goes out the window, you come up with a million dollar idea, be sure that it will be ripped from you faster than a crack addict after a fix That's exactly my point -- These elements are in place for a reason. Their contract would forbid it and they surrender creative rights to help ensure the success of the company and protect shareholders. Your point would be more legitimate if the comparison was on 2 companies , highly centralized , highly competitive in a centralized format , constantly buying up or patent trolling anything that shows innovation. Not decentralized and has one of the main focuses centered in open sourcing everything. You are not a shareholder when you buy a coin, you are buying into a currency, not a company. You can agree with them and disagree with them, but if you are going to disagree and the reason for the disagreement is a broken logic comparing it to something that it is trying to become better than, something that has been brought up as a solution to the very things you are comparing it to, features and implementations that make it the complete opposite of what you are comparing them to. then don't expect people to actually take note.
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synechist
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1190
Merit: 1000
To commodify ethicality is to ethicise the market
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September 22, 2014, 04:21:45 PM |
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Team members joining another coins team looks bad no matter how you spin it.
That's precisely what I'm trying to suggest is a misperception. The basic fact is that joining another team is an act of community. People join because their friends have a project that they're keen to help with. The perception that there is competition, scarce time-resources, and thus a "betrayal" in joining another team, is just the wrong paradigm. This is community. It's intertwined. It's close-nit. And it's superabundant in resources. There is no scarcity. There are only plentiful networks. When XC needs something, what do you know? Many people come forward to provide it. This will not change. So I suppose the shareholders of Apple or Microsoft would cheer if Tim Cook or Satya Nadella were to "co-join" another company under the guise of "community." Good point. The shareholders would be outraged. So yes, the situations are not analogous: - Crypto is fluid, communal, and not held together by legal contracts. - This makes it vastly more innovative and flexible than corporations. - It also makes it vastly less small-minded than the corporate scarcity-dominated mentality. - Community fosters superabundance. Anything that does this is beautiful and should not be replaced by a dynamic that creates scarcity. Big up for community! The situations are analogous to a degree. Are you telling me that if Dan (atcsecure) were to officially announce that he was coding (as an official dev) for another coin, that XC 's price would not crash? And that XC holders would not be outraged? They'd dump if they adopted a scarcity-dominated paradigm. If they adopted a communality-and-thus-superabundance paradigm, they'd see it as a sign of a healthy ecosystem that's benefitting them as much as others. As an interesting aside here, it's still commonly thought that the biological realm is dominated by competition and evolutionary natural selection. Funnily enough this hasn't been the consensus since the 1980s, when biosemiotics took off as a field and people realised that symbiosis was both more fundamental and more prevalent than competition.
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Co-Founder, the Blocknet
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