Does it include abuse too on Steemit?
Exactly what abuse do you see? I saw a bad post, i pointed out it was bad (and why) and i voted accordingly.
Does it include abuse too on Steemit?
Exactly what abuse do you see? I saw a bad post, i pointed out it was bad (and why) and i voted accordingly.
some interesting points in a constructive way in this particular comment.
Therefore, upvoted that particular comment. Having said that:Don't agree with your conclusion, @sigmajin but, you brought out
Would like to thank you, sigmajin
Your enthusiasm has given me some ideas for some fresh posts.
To start with, id ask myself if maybe there's a reason, aside from being born petty and motivated by greed, that the whingers (should not be a word) for whom you have so much contempt maybe have a reason for their dissatisfaction.
On a platform where one of the biggest problems is that it leaks userbase like a sieve, don't you think just attributing dissatisfaction to bad genetics is maybe just a little counter productive.
then maybe rethink statements like this
because aside from being patently false, its more than a little insulting to people who bought in (rather than ninja mined their way in) and have taken a bath since.
Then maybe rethink statements like this:
Because its also patently untrue. The people on the ground floor were ninjas. And dan wrote a blog post about how clever it was to keep most people off of the ground floor. At best, ned and dan invited any investor to join on the second floor. An invitation the acceptance of which resulted in a pretty significant payday.
Which is the fundamental problem with your whole thesis. You want users to stick around and accept not making a profit during what you represent as a nascent period of corporate development where no profit is realized by the organization at all, but whats really a period where significant profit is realized by a very few, at the expense of most users participating for free.
Of course, its upto you to opine on whether you feel a post is good or bad.
Beauty, as they say, is in the eye of the beholder :)
Starting from the top, I asked
What would you advise to "think critically" about investing?