Let’s talk investors: The fly on the wall... of the padded cell of Steemit
Firstly a word on “the experiment”
Whale Free Zone
Like many I’ve noticed that there is an experiment to give the ‘dolphins’ and the ‘minnows’ more influence on how rewards are allocated. This initiative attempts to neutralise "Whale" accounts by self-abstaining and downvoting other Whales that vote.
Whilst I understand the sentiment I cannot help feel that we’re slipping down the rabbit hole of insanity. What might make sense to the ardent “Steemian” will seem like madness to the newcomer trying to understand how this platform works. "So today we have people downvoting to counter-act the upvoting of people that have too much influence which some feel they should not be exercising, this is temporary action for an indeterminate period, introduced randomly yesterday with no prior notice...."
You almost need a PHD in “Steemism” to follow what is happening on this platform!
Elementary my dear Watson
I think the effects of “no whale voting”, is self-evident. Smaller accounts will have more influence, will reward larger amounts and the rewards will be more evenly (as there are more smaller accounts that vote on more stuff). It isn’t rocket science.
What is alarming is the disregard for the feelings of regular users. As I stated elsewhere "most authors won't get the memo nor care [about the rationale], they'll just see the downvotes and the zapping of rewards that could have been." Way to kill morale for the sake of an experiment.
Passive investors
I invest, I don’t work!
As much as I love the existing userbase, I’ve had my fill of navel gazing recently. I want to spend a bit of time contemplating ways STEEM can on-board new investors.
The world is awash with passive investors. Most investors simply want their money to work for them. They want to get in on a good thing early and see returns on their investments two to five years down the road. Hopefully their passive investment will make them a mint in that time. The last thing most investors want to do is to spend every waking moment micro-managing an investment.
Nightmare on STEEM Street
STEEM is currently a passive investors worse nightmare. The larger the passive investor the worse the nightmare it seems. For investors need to curate in order to maximise their profit. And heaven forbid a large “passive” investor fall in love with the platform. They could very easily find themselves center of a shitstorm should they exercise their SP in the wrong way!
"Investing in STEEM" too little like “investing” and too much like “hard work”.
There is light in the tunnel
A fantastic change coming up in the next hard for (HF17) is the ability to delegate STEEM power. This will be a godsend for the passive investor. They will only need to find a Guild or someone to delegate their SP to, and reap the rewards. This is the level of involvement an investor can get used. Decision on how to maximise their gains (by choosing the best performing Guild) is much more up an investors alley.
Forking make real change!
I believe that STEEM can go one better in making an even more compelling case for investors. And that is to go forward with the concept of “investor class” accounts, along the lines of what @timcliff in his post last month:
- All accounts with more than 250 MV of SP would be "investor class" accounts.
- All accounts with 250 MV or less would be "regular users".
- Users with "investor class" accounts would only use a maximum of 250 MV worth of their voting power.
While most will see this measure as a means of appeasing the discontent of the “regular user. I see this as also a means of helping ‘sell’ the platform to new investors.
STEEM is scarce, no really it is
In December STEEM went from hyper-inflationary to super scarce overnight. However I don’t think the rest of the crypto world cotton on to that fact. Within the STEEM bubble it’s easy to think that everyone understands the implications of HF16. However most people hear the FUD, see the charts, think the charts reinforce the FUD and just steer clear of STEEM. I wonder how many people actually know that the inflation of STEEM is restricted to just 9.5% pa and decreasing?
What I like about the investor class account concept is it allows us to tell the story of the scarcity of STEEM more easily to potential investors.
Storytime
Let us say 250MV equates to roughly 100K STEEM. With less than 250m STEEM there will likely be under 2500 “investor accounts”. With so many STEEM locked up (e.g in the @steemit account) it likely to be a maximum of around 1000.
With STEEM at around $0.08, it will currently cost $8,000 to become an investor class account holder. Should STEEM slip to $0.01 that would likely cost under a bitcoin for a STEEM investor account.
All of a sudden new small to medium sized investors looking to diversify their crypto portfolio have a target amount of STEEM to shoot for. Rather than this nebulas "the more SP the better." approach.
100K SP. 100K SP will make your account an investor class account. This will give you the maximum voting power and other benefits.
100K SP and an “investor class” account for a STEEM investor can be the equivalent of having 1000 Dash and a masternode for a Dash enthusiast.
The fact that others may hold millions of SP is less important when everyone over 100k SP has the same voting power.
So… what are the other benefits
The question then becomes what should be the “other benefits” of an investor account?
@timcliff suggests
- In exchange for not voting with the SP beyond 250 MV, all SP above 250 MV would earn additional interest.
- The additional interest would be paid by eliminating curation rewards.
- The "investor class" users would also be given a "moderator" ability, which would allow them to use their SP beyond 250 MV for downvoting abusive posts or canceling out the downvotes made by other moderators.
This is where I disagree.
All accounts should get curation rewards
Firstly all accounts should be entitled to curation rewards. I’ve stated the case elsewhere, however I strongly believe that curation rewards are one of STEEM’s USPs.
Only investor accounts should get SP interest
Secondly, I believe the interest payments on holding SP (15% of 9.5%) should be reserved for SP over 250MV on an account. This would be fair to existing large investors. It would also incentivise others not just become investor class account but to store more SP in their investor account. Thus locking up even more STEEM.
Take from rewards if needs be
I’m not sure whether an exclusive share of the existing SP interest will be enticing enough. If it isn’t I’d also consider reducing the author/ curation reward for 75% to 50% in order to fund additional interest for SP over 250MV.
To my mind, there is no point in authors/ curators getting 75% of the pie, if the pie is constantly depleting because no investor is willing to get involved and buy STEEM.
Fork unwritten rules
To summarise, I’d suggest
- In exchange for not voting with the SP beyond 250 MV, all SP above 250 MV would earn interest. SP below 250MV on any account will not earn interest.
- All account earn curation rewards. With the ability for people to earn ‘passive’ rewards by delegating SP to guilds
NB: The issue of moderation, I think is a separate debate, I personally favour some kind of Flag Review Council, however I don’t think that debate should be conflated with this one.
In conclusion, rather than introducing ‘unwritten rules’ about how and when Whales should vote, we should fork changes where there is consensus. If we’re going to have an experiment, let’s have a real experiment. Let’s fork a change that will not only give more influence to minnows and dophins but will also give a compelling story to introduce new investors into the platform.
if you invested then somebody downvotes what you upvote - i dont think you are happy
I'm totally on the same page with everything you just said!
I really like the idea of an "investor class account". Investing is already such a normal thing to do in the crypto world but Steemit has made it sound super complicated. IMO the price of STEEM would probably be way higher right now if the crypto community just saw it as another cryptocurrency and didn't even know about"Steemit" the crazy blogging experiment lol (which I love of course).
And you're right, I think most of the crypto community still thinks it's hyper-inflating away. For instance, here's a comment I got on one of my youtube videos last week:
I think once people start to see Steem for what it really is... an amazing technology, we'll see the price corrected back up.
I really like the development of this idea between yourself and @timcliff. I'm strongly in favour of incentivizing more passive investment and the 'investor account' idea. However I've an issue with a threshold system for it.
If an individual with sufficient wealth wants to get around the threshold system, they can. It's just a matter of having multiple accounts and powering up each one to/near the threshold. So it doesn't prevent a single individual from having disproportionate influence, it only discourages it by virtue of the lack of 'investor interest' by taking that approach.
The threshold system is also a needless barrier to entry, and a barrier which we may find fluctuates to an extreme degree if Steem actually takes off. One of the best things about crypto is the low barrier to entry for investing. It means that people of all income ranges, from anywhere in the world, can invest in a potentially high return asset. This isn't true in the world of traditional finance where investing in anything but a generic savings account (low returns) isn't cost effective until you have a certain amount saved. That amount is far too much for most people. Today 250MV is almost $11,000. The range of a small investor, but only around 100 people have invested that much in Steem at this point. Unless Steem is a flop, the price of 250MV is going to rise. If Steem reaches $1 again, we're talking $120,000. That's in the range of a middle class investor if they have a high risk tolerance (it's not going to be a small part of their portfolio). At $100-$1000, 250MV is the domain of the super rich ($12 million to $120 million).
An alternative approach would be to separate VESTS into 'Influence Shares' and 'Interest Shares'. Anyone can turn their Steem into either of the two. Influence Shares would be voting power, which gives curation rewards but no access to the investor reward pool. Interest Shares would give access to the investor reward pool but no voting influence and no curation rewards. Once we have a fixed pool for each, all users can decide how much they want of each. A more passive investor can buy interest shares exclusively. An active curator would buy influence. And you could choose anywhere in between.
Correct. I think incentiving people down the "investor interest" route is the best approach.
I'm not wholly against individuals having multiple accounts. I just think people should be incentived against it. Right now the opposite is the case and it's proving detrimental to the platform.
I don't see the threshold as a barrier to entry. People can still purchase SP and curate at any level. I'd argue the lack of a threshold acts as a barrier to those wishing to purchase modest amounts of SP as their upvotes have little or no power.
It's worth noting that most POW coins offer nothing in terms of incentives for holding, besides speculation that value might increase in the future. That is still the case with STEEM. Someone can purchase at these prices, hold and hope for the value to increase.
I'm not wedded to 250MV, the right threshold could be much less. Also the threshold could decrease as the value and adoption increases... I'd leave that to the general consensus.
I think there is some merit in this. I would guess that some people are curating badly purely as a means of squeaking out more rewards. If forced to choose between the two they'd remain passive. However I still think this approach is still vulnerable to people "having disproportionate influence", so no further forward on that score.
Some worthy ponder-able thoughts as usual...
FYI - with the change in the upcoming HF, if a whale delegates their voting power to another user, the user who the SP is delegated to receives 100% of the curation rewards.
In order for it to work as 'passive investment' the original SP holder would need to retain a portion (or all) of the curation rewards. This is not how the change in the HF is implemented.
Thanks for clarifying.
I'm sure there will be Guilds that kickback dividends to those that delegate SP as an incentive. It'll be interesting to see how it plays out.
Thanks for this info! I wrongly assumed (probably like many of us) that the curation rewards would go to the delegator. But this makes sense because I also got the impression from somewhere that new accounts would be given both SP and delegated SP upon creation... which made me wonder if the @steemit account will be delegating it's voting power - any insight into that?
I don't have any 'official' info, but I suspect that the @steemit account will be delegating SP to new accounts as part of the account creation process. I am pretty sure there is still a minimal portion of the account creation fee which must be paid through actual STEEM transfer though, so that part will still get 'paid' by the account.
Thanks! This could get very interesting!
Right, so the insiders will benefit even more.
We can make our own way without whale help, tyvm.
Why you want to insist on picking winners as a good thing, and thereby creating losers, is beyond me.
To each his own, even if that means that bad large investors starve the platform until it collapses.
If you got enough sp to make others rich, perhaps you should stop giving out welfare for insiders, and donate it to @fasl.
IMO.
I'd agree with you if I wanted to see 10 people give 100,000usd, but I would rather see 1,000,000 people give 100 usd.
If your math only works for investors we will not become btc's replacement.
What do you think the price will do when 3 people in the smallest towns become outlets for steem for cash?
I'm afraid that this platform will not see it's potential if it is made a millionaires boys club.
I'm not saying that doing that wouldn't be good crapitalism, it would likely make a profit, but it won't change the world.
A stated goal of the project.
10 people giving 100k usd and 1m people giving 100 usd are not mutually exclusive.
The current model is pretty much exclusive to handful people, so any move in the right direction is a good thing.
So, knowing that, do you think allowing whales to farm out their power to their sycophants is a good idea?
Presumably, this is not gonna benefit me, and it will harm more than just me.
I really don't need any whale welfare to get by, especially at the expense of other poor people.
Am I given a choice in this matter, or like Walmart's buying life insurance on it's employees naming the corporation as beneficiary, can the whales force it on me?
I realize the curation awards go to me, and self voting my own posts would be in my best economic interests, but I don't want the current crop of insiders to sink a spike into the platform.
I'd rather see organic excellence rise to the top, not the opinions of the few fed by power.
Allowing this will allow the current crop of overlords to spread their dna on the platform to the detriment of organic spontaneity.
We won't know what 'we' make of it because the whale power will drown out 'our' voice.
Capisce?
Jmm good Info ... Can someone please clarify to me then, I fell I am confused on the economic model now, I mean the role of witnesses (PoW), SBD interest savings...
one way to think of downvotes is as another type of upvote, allocating rewards to everything but "x".
interesting
If the fly on the wall is Brundlefly he will do a lot more than just hang out on the wall. He will arm wrestle you and rip your arm off. Bee careful.