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Topic: Synereo - page 5. (Read 10211 times)

sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 08, 2016, 05:49:40 AM
#76
Got to admire the type of people who are investing in Synereo's AMPs:

once a druggie, always a druggie.

Nope. Only alcohol now. I am sure of that. She hates marijuana now. And recently she got a job again putting the rivets into the airplanes we fly in. So you better stop flying Boeing.

I don't think Synereo will want to be associated with you any more, because if people read about your proclamation that no one can improve themselves, then this present Synereo in a very bad public image if they don't disown your comments. Since you were the primary supporter of Synereo in this forum having started the discussion threads about it.
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 501
April 08, 2016, 04:17:38 AM
#75
What is happening to Synereo guys, more than +500% during the night?

Looks like the party has stalled, down to 16k now. Could go either way now

Yes, watching it closely and hesitating to buy a few more from the profit made when it did +500%.
hero member
Activity: 1068
Merit: 523
April 08, 2016, 02:02:30 AM
#74
What is happening to Synereo guys, more than +500% during the night?

Looks like the party has stalled, down to 16k now. Could go either way now
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 07, 2016, 01:32:31 AM
#73

They believe that users will agree to be paid to watch some ads in order to earn the BTC to pay to not see ads on their other favorite sites. That is the carrot. The stick is that normal ads will be blocked by default for all users.

Problem is that there are much more lucrative monetization gamification models than advertising, which spam and intrude on users less. Advertising is going to die and be replaced with superior gamification which is more attuned to users' preferences.

Also users and publishers don't want to hand such control over to the Brave team. The only solutions that will be widely adopted will be those not controlled by anyone, i.e. decentralized protocols.

Brenden Eich better stick with his core competency of the programming language Javascript.

Spot on! advertising is the proverbial megaphone, even when it's targeted to people who have shown some 'interest' it's an inferior method compared to even product placement which is subliminal. I know if a blogger has gained my trust for being authentic and knowledgable in something, I will always consider their recommendations, but currently have little way to micro compensate them. Even on this forum there are users who's opinions I rate very highly, and if there was an easy way to tip them I would more often (i.e browser plugin). I'm not going to open a wallet and send them 50 cents, but I would if it literally was one click in my browser.

I don't think anyone ever paid their rent from their TipJar.

If you have a specific project, you can crowdfund to get the necessary economy-of-scale to make it work. But just TipJar that sits there is afaik pretty much insignificant.

So while it sounds nice, the economics ostensibly don't work:

Read the linked "why ChangeTip must die".

Perhaps you will argue that tips will be greater if people have an easier and more instant way to tip.

Let's say I have 10,000 readers per month at my blog, and 5% of them tip me on average 50 cents. That is $250 per month. That won't even pay rent. And 5% is I think fairly high conversion rate.

Also I think people get tired of tipping. It sounds nice and everyone is motivated at the start, but over time they will grow weary of the cognitive load of, "who do I tip this month?". They have to organize all their web activity and analyze it. The cognitive load is the real killer.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 06, 2016, 07:57:10 PM
#72
Problem is that there are much more lucrative monetization gamification models than advertising, which spam and intrude on users less. Advertising is going to die and be replaced with superior gamification which is more attuned to users' preferences.

Interesting! Do you have any examples of "lucrative monetisation gamification models"? Conventional online advertising seems to be on the verge of death indeed.

Why bombard with banner advertising when you can recommend/mention/link to something (preferably which is entirely free to start using, and which itself uses gamification to earn revenue) within the context of your content which your reader really needs and then receive an affiliation income from which is much greater than the income from spamming readers with shit only usually less than 1% of readers are even interested to click on. In other words, highly targeted advertising without violating the privacy of the user to track their interests and without bombarding them with banner ads.

In case someone might conflate this with Synereo's and Tsu's plan to pay social networking users to share, the salient distinction is that the social networking user is there to share to gain the synergies and love/reputation whereas the blog or publisher is focused on publishing (and monetizing his work so he can continue publishing). Also the social networking user doesn't have reach of readers of a publisher, unless of course he has a high reputation of sharing things that so many others reshare. So one could see some social network publishers arise, but this can't be a model to pay most of the users as I explained in the Synereo thread.
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 501
April 06, 2016, 04:13:09 PM
#71
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

What is happening in two weeks?

Synereo will release their beta.

nice will watch this closely.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 06, 2016, 09:57:19 AM
#70
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

What is happening in two weeks?

Synereo will release their beta.
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 501
April 06, 2016, 09:50:02 AM
#69
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

What is happening in two weeks?
hero member
Activity: 1068
Merit: 523
April 06, 2016, 09:18:22 AM
#68


IANAL so readers consult your own attorney, but my layman's understanding is they can NEVER fix the fact that they presold ILLEGAL unregistered investment securities to non-accredited USA investors. I implore you to understand the Supreme Court's Howey test. This will haunt this project until the SEC and/or FinCEN comes after them. Greg Meredith is a USA citizen. I really don't have any idea what he is thinking that he thinks he can raise money in this way and not end up in big trouble later.

If they wanted to raise funding to work on Synereo, they could have attempted a crowdfunding or to attract angel/venture private placement investment. But that would require them to have a well vetted business plan or convincing altruistic explanation. Instead they sell technobabble delusion to unwary n00bs and pumpers (same as Ethereum is doing, but at least Ethereum ran away to Switzerland so they think they can avoid USA securities law and still sell to non-accredited USA investors).

Any entity selling an ICO is (intentionally or perhaps cluelessly) corrupt. Period.

I warned you months ago. You have no one to blame but yourself, for not studying and listening more carefully.

Decentralized social networking projects are not novel. The list is littered with failures as you were told already upthread[1].

I don't hate them. I wished them good luck upthread. I am just feeding back frankly the reality.



Some useful information here. I really don't know what's gonna happen though, really depends on interpretation, so I wont be surprised if the SEC goes either way (allow or crackdown)

https://www.sec.gov/investor/pubs/holdsec.htm
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 06, 2016, 01:33:30 AM
#67
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

No adoption and no use case is vaporware.

Any one can write some code and do a testnet demonstration and claim they have created something. GitHub is littered with code that no one uses.

We'll soon see.

IANAL so readers consult your own attorney, but my layman's understanding is they can NEVER fix the fact that they presold ILLEGAL unregistered investment securities to non-accredited USA investors. I implore you to understand the Supreme Court's Howey test. This will haunt this project until the SEC and/or FinCEN comes after them. Greg Meredith is a USA citizen. I really don't have any idea what he is thinking that he thinks he can raise money in this way and not end up in big trouble later.

If they wanted to raise funding to work on Synereo, they could have attempted a crowdfunding or to attract angel/venture private placement investment. But that would require them to have a well vetted business plan or convincing altruistic explanation. Instead they sell technobabble delusion to unwary n00bs and pumpers (same as Ethereum is doing, but at least Ethereum ran away to Switzerland so they think they can avoid USA securities law and still sell to non-accredited USA investors).

Any entity selling an ICO is (intentionally or perhaps cluelessly) corrupt. Period.

I warned you months ago. You have no one to blame but yourself, for not studying and listening more carefully.

Decentralized social networking projects are not novel. The list is littered with failures as you were told already upthread[1].

I don't hate them. I wished them good luck upthread. I am just feeding back frankly the reality.


legendary
Activity: 1162
Merit: 1042
White Male Libertarian Bro
April 05, 2016, 10:32:22 PM
#66
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

No adoption and no use case is vaporware.

Any one can write some code and do a testnet demonstration and claim they have created something. GitHub is littered with code that no one uses.

We'll soon see.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 10:29:04 PM
#65
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.

No adoption and no use case is vaporware.

Any one can write some code and do a testnet demonstration and claim they have created something. GitHub is littered with code that no one uses.
legendary
Activity: 1162
Merit: 1042
White Male Libertarian Bro
April 05, 2016, 10:28:31 PM
#64
AMP tokens for vaporware

You've got about two more weeks to use that lame retort before people will start calling you a blatant liar.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 10:28:17 PM
#63
So the users have the ideological motivation, but when it comes down to it, they prioritize what is convenient, efficient, and serves real needs they have, such as contacting mom and cousins on Facebook. That is the hurdle the the irrelevant income offer doesn't solve.

This is where we differ.  You think people will perceive the income as irrelevant where as I do not.  Even if they earn enough money to purchase a few meals out a year,

Seriously I've learned the hard way several times in my life with failed projects that humans prioritize their important desires and needs. That income is absolutely irrelevant and worse yet is an insult to many people (which is why ChangeTip must die).


Well, I think calling it an insult is a little severe.  Most people would welcome any money they could earn off their online participation.

Read the linked "why ChangeTip must die".

I think they will be motivated to join and retake control of their personal online presence.  Most people do not solely rely on Facebook to keep in close contact with their family members.  It is more of a causal liaison point for posting pictures and such.  Imo, changing over to another social network isn't that big of a hurdle for most users, especially when they will be transferring their information not only to a social network, but a social sharing platform which will host not only Synereo, the social network, but also a plethora of other online social software.

Afaics, Facebook is for sharing/interaction/feed amongst strangers, friends and family, with more emphasis on the first two than family.

If the "other online social software" has some compelling features, then they may adopt. I have not yet seen a list of these planned features and an ETA on their implementation.

The technology stack which Synereo utilizes and is built upon is an open source platform which any other type of social interaction software can use and build off of the existing softwares' userbase.

Ah here we go again with the Ethereum "it can do everything" lie, which we explained is not true in the Ethereum Paradox thread.

No API can do everything. Until we see specifics from Synereo, then that general statement is as useful as dirt.


Users have a finite cognitive and time resource which they allocate to the highest priorities in their lives.

How do you explain MySpace losing market share to Facebook?

MySpace was mired into a static page model and failed to innovate and most especially around the network effects of feeds, social updates, apps and games (which is precisely what I realized is the niche I need to go after to challenge Facebook in the long-term but the cases which require a decentralized protocol):

http://techcrunch.com/2011/06/28/sean-parker-on-why-myspace-lost-to-facebook/
https://www.quora.com/What-could-MySpace-have-done-differently-to-avoid-losing-to-Facebook/answer/Edward-King <--- read this
http://www.forbes.com/sites/adamhartung/2011/01/14/why-facebook-beat-myspace/

Facebook is in a similar but worse situation as MySpace was back then.  Not only does Facebook not see the need to adapt to a decentralized setup, but they are in fact, structured in such a corporate fashion that they are unable to do so.  Such a decentralized arrangement would cause massive, if not complete, revenue losses for any centralized social network, which would cause the entire corporation to go bankrupt and cease to be.

As this already provided upthread link explains[2], unless you have a compelling decentralized use case, you will not get people to abandon the convenience of Facebook.

sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 10:14:56 PM
#62
Synereo pumper of presold AMP tokens for vaporware, wants to attack me already:

All Shelby has released is a drawing that puts him on track to be sued by Nintendo for trademark infringement.



A copyright owner can’t prove infringement by pointing to features of his work that are found in the defendant’s work as well but that are so rudimentary, commonplace, standard, or unavoidable that they do not serve to distinguish one work within a class of works from another.

The "stock" idea of working class hero, gaining abilities from powerups, and South European origin are however all usable.

Features of above logo:

✓ Wavy moustache
✓ Pointed eyebrows
✓ Eyes with misaligned pupils
✓ Semi-long nose
✓ Hair above a music headphone

I presume DecentralizeEconomics is alleging infringement on Wario?



✓ Jagged moustache
✓ Curved eyebrows
✓ Eyes with aligned pupils
✓ Stubbed nose
✓ Hair on the sides under a hat
legendary
Activity: 1162
Merit: 1042
White Male Libertarian Bro
April 05, 2016, 04:53:27 PM
#61
So the users have the ideological motivation, but when it comes down to it, they prioritize what is convenient, efficient, and serves real needs they have, such as contacting mom and cousins on Facebook. That is the hurdle the the irrelevant income offer doesn't solve.

This is where we differ.  You think people will perceive the income as irrelevant where as I do not.  Even if they earn enough money to purchase a few meals out a year,

Seriously I've learned the hard way several times in my life with failed projects that humans prioritize their important desires and needs. That income is absolutely irrelevant and worse yet is an insult to many people (which is why ChangeTip must die).


Well, I think calling it an insult is a little severe.  Most people would welcome any money they could earn off their online participation.


I think they will be motivated to join and retake control of their personal online presence.  Most people do not solely rely on Facebook to keep in close contact with their family members.  It is more of a causal liaison point for posting pictures and such.  Imo, changing over to another social network isn't that big of a hurdle for most users, especially when they will be transferring their information not only to a social network, but a social sharing platform which will host not only Synereo, the social network, but also a plethora of other online social software.

Afaics, Facebook is for sharing/interaction/feed amongst strangers, friends and family, with more emphasis on the first two than family.

If the "other online social software" has some compelling features, then they may adopt. I have not yet seen a list of these planned features and an ETA on their implementation.


The technology stack which Synereo utilizes and is built upon is an open source platform which any other type of social interaction software can use and build off of the existing softwares' userbase.


Users have a finite cognitive and time resource which they allocate to the highest priorities in their lives.

How do you explain MySpace losing market share to Facebook?

MySpace was mired into a static page model and failed to innovate and most especially around the network effects of feeds, social updates, apps and games (which is precisely what I realized is the niche I need to go after to challenge Facebook in the long-term but the cases which require a decentralized protocol):

http://techcrunch.com/2011/06/28/sean-parker-on-why-myspace-lost-to-facebook/
https://www.quora.com/What-could-MySpace-have-done-differently-to-avoid-losing-to-Facebook/answer/Edward-King <--- read this
http://www.forbes.com/sites/adamhartung/2011/01/14/why-facebook-beat-myspace/

Facebook is in a similar but worse situation as MySpace was back then.  Not only does Facebook not see the need to adapt to a decentralized setup, but they are in fact, structured in such a corporate fashion that they are unable to do so.  Such a decentralized arrangement would cause massive, if not complete, revenue losses for any centralized social network, which would cause the entire corporation to go bankrupt and cease to be.
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 05:52:08 AM
#60
So the users have the ideological motivation, but when it comes down to it, they prioritize what is convenient, efficient, and serves real needs they have, such as contacting mom and cousins on Facebook. That is the hurdle the the irrelevant income offer doesn't solve.

This is where we differ.  You think people will perceive the income as irrelevant where as I do not.  Even if they earn enough money to purchase a few meals out a year,

Seriously I've learned the hard way several times in my life with failed projects that humans prioritize their important desires and needs. That income is absolutely irrelevant and worse yet is an insult to many people (which is why ChangeTip must die).

I think they will be motivated to join and retake control of their personal online presence.  Most people do not solely rely on Facebook to keep in close contact with their family members.  It is more of a causal liaison point for posting pictures and such.  Imo, changing over to another social network isn't that big of a hurdle for most users, especially when they will be transferring their information not only to a social network, but a social sharing platform which will host not only Synereo, the social network, but also a plethora of other online social software.

Afaics, Facebook is for sharing/interaction/feed amongst strangers, friends and family, with more emphasis on the first two than family.

If the "other online social software" has some compelling features, then they may adopt. I have not yet seen a list of these planned features and an ETA on their implementation.

Users have a finite cognitive and time resource which they allocate to the highest priorities in their lives.

How do you explain MySpace losing market share to Facebook?

MySpace was mired into a static page model and failed to innovate and most especially around the network effects of feeds, social updates, apps and games (which is precisely what I realized is the niche I need to go after to challenge Facebook in the long-term but the cases which require a decentralized protocol):

http://techcrunch.com/2011/06/28/sean-parker-on-why-myspace-lost-to-facebook/
https://www.quora.com/What-could-MySpace-have-done-differently-to-avoid-losing-to-Facebook/answer/Edward-King <--- read this
http://www.forbes.com/sites/adamhartung/2011/01/14/why-facebook-beat-myspace/
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 501
April 05, 2016, 05:06:55 AM
#59
Please correct about Odnoklassniki being sucessful, it is totally uncorrect. Only old russian stayed on Odnoklassniki, everyone changed to Vkontakte (most succesful russian social network) and/or Facebook.

Done. Sincere thank you. I am absolutely ignorant about the European social networks.

No worries, I would be ignorant aswell about theses if I did not have a russian girlfriend
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 05:06:22 AM
#58
Their main advertisement point is the first point, actually. Which leads to a kind of "grassroots" ad spam, people posting the same thing over and over again, low quality/big quantity posts, generic comments, stuff like that. And there are sponsored posts, which are basically ads.

So are you telling me the model leads to more spam (low quality/big quantity sharing)?

This is where Synereo reputation model comes into play so that users who spam low quality will have lower reputation in the eyes of the target viewers. So thus this another evidence that Synereo's model of paying users to share isn't economic for users (because Tsu's users only find it most economic to share low quality/big quantity).

r0ach, smooth, I, and some others think the only killer app of blockchains is probably currency because of the self-referential requirement of what a block chain can reach consensus on securely. Thus technically we think all the other crap won't work, unless it is using a centralized block chain and then what is the point of that?

Bitcoin locked up large $ transfers. Monero has locked up anonymity. I am going after micro-transactions.

To be honest, I don't understand this statement. Maybe I'm missing some parts of the thought process, part of it might be a language barrier. Anyhow:
While this might be nitpicking, I think representing non-monetary value is a valid idea for blockchain tech as well; basically like stocks or shares.

You would need to digest the Ethereum Paradox thread and perhaps a couple of other threads r0ach started wherein I and smooth commented. I am stating a technological conclusion that I believe we arrived at, which basically is that there is no decentralized block chain consensus that is secure (doesn't violate Nash equilibrium) with external data (external to the block chain). And without decentralization, we lose the permissionless, trustless quality that makes block chains worthwhile. Note it would help a lot if someone put that into a white paper. Perhaps on my TODO list, but I have a lot of work to do now.

Greg Meredith @ Synereo has a different model for decentralized consensus that isn't based on a block chain. It is based on (in my poor understanding) propagation within a process calculus that models the nodes. Note the AMPs use a block chain, but the other aspects of Synereo's model do not. Greg's model may have some useful applications notwidthstanding I think they have the marketing model wrong for Synereo.

Note I am not saying there might not be some way to redesign some of the aspects of Synereo's focus in order to improve the marketing plan. It is usually possible to redesign something, but that doesn't mean it is probable. The multiple reasons (biggest one being preselling AMP tokens!) I didn't choose to enter Synereo Hangouts and try to work with them instead of making my own project includes that I studied them enough to come to the conclusion that their culture of development, their various skillsets, and their existing inertia in the current focus would not be an ideal fit for what I want to do. For starters, there is no way I will be working with a guy who has himself spread all over the place (Casper, etc) and not laserbeam focused on my project. It doesn't mean I disrespect their abilities though.

As Guy Kawaski says, I have a very low tolerance for bullshit and too much blahblah (although one would wonder about that claim given the number of posts I have made in these forums).
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 262
April 05, 2016, 04:52:10 AM
#57
Please correct about Odnoklassniki being sucessful, it is totally uncorrect. Only old russian stayed on Odnoklassniki, everyone changed to Vkontakte (most succesful russian social network) and/or Facebook.

Done. Sincere thank you. I am absolutely ignorant about the European social networks.
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