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RE: Has Automation Killed Steem’s Proof of Brain?

in #steem6 years ago

Over 50%! Well it figures. Life pulled me away from Steemit soon after I got involved so it was a false start but I´m back.

I never got started in curation trails and all of that because it did not make sense to me although I empathized with some reasons for doing that.

It left a lot of questions. And that itch remained their until I cam back recently.

So I had to know Why this is considered a good thing, or necessary and I needed to see first hand so I got set up on Steem Auto just last week and commenced.

And I hated it. No personal presence with the actions that are being taken (yes, I knew that but I had not felt it yet- the void) so to me was neither satisfying or meaningful. For those who have experienced the value that is the steemit community, I think it is apparent- if souls are not participating / interacting, there isn´t much worthwhile value. This IS a community, no? This is the Big Thing that surprised me when I started. I was exploring income opportunity and crypto for the first time too, but I had no idea of the impact that a community of diverse strangers would have on me personally.

Of course bots are a dehumanizing force here. And this is a microcosm of what? Exactly. What if this is the resulting challenge that feel in our laps? A higher priority ahead of Steemit and the blockchain?

Or am I just catching perspective, that it has been fading away around us for decades.. that the unexpected attraction I found, resembles what is already too far gone- even almost forgotten, and I have never felt more sad than I do now.

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Thanks for your excellent comment, @dougbudlong.

I have four or five authors on autovote myself (20% of daily available VP) and I do not always manage to read all their posts. Mea culpa, mea culpa.

At the same time, I also benefit a trail but most of value I've gotten out of Steem has been the personal, off-chain interaction.

Your last paragraph is an interesting topic. A Guardian columnist recently wrote that most adults can not leave Facebook longer than 10 days, when they realize how hollow their lives have become.