Steemit Succeeds if We Make it Succeed - Analysis to Help Yourself and Steemit Grow in Quality
Do you want to succeed in a quality Steemit platform and community? Do you want Steemit to succeed in providing quality content to others?
I will attempt to explain how to achieve success for yourself in Steemit by putting the quality success of the Steemit community first.
I emphasize quality, because this is also what I am interested in creating in terms of content, and I don't want low quality content to be populating the platform which removes visibility and exposure of higher quality content that has to compete for time and attention from human eyes and valuations to process. The more low quality content there is, the harder it is to find the higher quality content that appears among it.
- What are you ultimately doing on Steemit?
- What is your goal being here?
- Is it about you improving your financial position?
- Is it about you and Steemit improving?
- Or is it about you, Steemit and the world improving?
Quality content matters.
I didn't read the whitepaper originally, as I thought it was technical information about how the crytocurrency worked, like Bitcoin's whitepaper. But it has other valuable information! Here are some excerpts from the Steemit White Paper to help you understand some things.
Note, you can go to the bottom for the Summary Tips if you don't want to read the longer explanatory part. Thank you.
Steem White Paper Excerpts and Commentary Tips:
"Steem is designed around a relatively simple concept: everyone’s meaningful contribution to the community should be recognized for the value it adds . When people are recognized for their meaningful contributions, they continue contributing and the community grows."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 6
Meaningful contribution to create quality content. That is the purpose and goal, not to maximize how much you are going to get paid by posting content like the mainstream media provides to entertain people. If people create content of the usual kind that entertains most people in the world as we already have it, there is nothing really unique going on here other than you getting paid to create what I consider is low quality "trash" to fill people's consciousness with. We have enough of that on T.V., in the news, in magazines, etc. for people to lose themselves in and not care about what is REALLY happening in the world.
My goal is to improve the quality and condition of our way of living, through having quality content being learned by many, and improving all of our quality of thinking. Quality content that provides meaningful value to help people understand more about the current condition of the world and themselves, and how to improve it. That is my goal to help Steemit's quality improve.
"Voting input from community members is critical for Steem to accurately allocate payments to contributors. Voting can therefore be viewed as a crucial contribution and worthy of rewards on its own."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 7
Your vote also matters! I repeat, your vote matters! You will understand more as we progress.
"In the cryptocurrency space, speculators jump from cryptocurrency to cryptocurrency based mostly on which one is expected to have short-term growth. Steem wants to build a community that is mostly owned and entirely controlled by those with a long-term perspective. ... SP is a requirement for voting for or against content. This means that SP is an access token that grants its holders exclusive powers within the Steem platform."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 9
You need to care about the long-term survival and progress of Steemit by primarily focusing on meaningful, quality content creation and upvoting, not by primarily focusing on creating wealth and money for yourself. That comes as a consequence of the quality of the platform and community. I'm not saying don't have generating wealth for your content as a goal, I'm saying don't have it as your primary goal. But you also do need to be able to create meaningful content if you plan on making money, keep that in mind.
In the end, it's up to everyone here to choose what they value, for better or worse. To work to create content for that value and curate other people who create that value.
"In order to give everyone an equal opportunity to get involved and earn the currency people must be given an opportunity to work."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 16
Yes, you need to WORK and earn the wealth generated by the Steemit platform and community. It will not likely comes to you by putting in little effort and posting low quality entertainment filler for people to absorb. Yes, you can make some money that way, and probably even by focusing on the lower consciousness filler of entertainment, the "bread and circus" to keep people engorged on distracting information, videos, pictures, etc. People will consume that material on Steemit, just as they do on other platforms like Facebook, the Internet as a whole, and the mainstream media.
But again, the goal and purpose is to focus on meaningful higher quality content in order to improve the quality of the community itself. For me, which may differ from you, that is to focus on meaningful information about the state of our current condition in consciousness and the world, and ways to change it through empowering information.
That is the higher quality information I am goal-oriented and focused towards providing and upvoting on Steemit. I want things to change in the world. What do you want to come about through using Steemit?
"The more competitive the market becomes, the more difficult (higher quality or quantity) it becomes to earn the same payout.... Every vesting user casts their votes on who did the best work and at the end of the day the available money for that day is divided proportional to the votes such that everyone with even one net positive vote gets something."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 16
As more people join, and more people focus on higher quality content, then the focus is always on increasing the higher quality content everyone produces, while the lower quality content will be ignored and go nowhere. Hopefully, those people up their game and the quality of their content, or stop with their posting.
"the vast majority of the rewards will be distributed to the most popular content"
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 20
"Taking popularity as a rough measure of value, then the value of each individual item is given by Zipf’s Law. That is, if we have a million items, then the most popular 100 will contribute a third of the total value, the next 10,000 another third, and the remaining 989,900 the final third.... The impact of this voting and payout distribution is to offer large bounties for good content while still rewarding smaller players for their long-tail contribution."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 20
It's assumed that those posts that become popular are representative of the highest quality content, and they get the most payout, i.e. the top 100 get 1/3 of the daily Steem generated wealth.
Your votes matter in who becomes popular. If you want to join the "cult of personality" popularity band-wagon as popular personalities join Steemit, and upvote their content regardless of its quality content, because you think you can "cash-in" on the upvoting popularity and receive Steem Dollars and Steem Power for it, you don't understand how the platform is meant to function.
This is the wrong mindset to have, as I have already explained. Don't focus on making money by attaching yourself to popular personalities in the hopes of getting rich by riding their wave of popularity.
When you do that, what do you think happens to all there other non-100-top-posts? They get less votes. That content does not get as recognized, as the visibility and exposure is reduced due to most of the votes being given to the popular personalities. That content does not generate wealth for those people who put in the work to create it.
Those who are popular may be creating quality content, or not, but they have a large following of supporters who are going to vote for them anyways, simply because they are popular.
So ask yourself, is their content the most valuable? Is it higher quality than other people's work who are less popular and less known? What if you were one of those people? How would you like it to have your high quality content ignored in favor of the more popular people getting most of the votes all the time simply because they are popular and people upvote based on that popularity? Do you upvote something popular simply because it's popular? Do you upvote the popular posts because you want to "cash-in" on the payout?
You need to think about these things. If you want more quality material to get upvoted, then you need to stop thinking in terms of popularity, and also stop thinking in terms of what you're going to get back from your upvotes in terms of Steem Dollars or Steem Power.
If people focus more on finding quality content and upvoting it, then they are going to help quality content creators become more popular by increasing their visibility and exposure. In turn, they will also be increasing their Steem Points and Dollars because they upvoted someone less popular and made their content popular. You will be doing the very important work of helping the Steem platform and community recognize and reward quality content creators which will increase the quality of Steemit itself, and you win as well! If hardly anyone functions like this, then the less popular quality content will not likely be recognized for what it is.
Rather than all the votes going to a few popular people who get all the payouts, and the other quality content being ignored, now the community will grow overall in greater numbers of quality content being recognized by more people and forcing more people to put more effort into creating quality content of their own! If you just vote for the popular personalities, even if they do have quality content, the rest of the community will NEVER grow.
"The economic effect of this is similar to a lottery where people over-estimate their probability of getting votes and thus do more work than the expected value of their reward and thereby maximize the total amount of work performed in service of the community. The fact that everyone “wins something” plays on the same psychology that casinos use to keep people gambling. In other words, small rewards help reinforce the idea that it is possible to earn bigger rewards."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 20
Your vote matters a lot! Even as a "minnow", this is the power you have to recognize quality content and improve the overall quality of the Steemit platform and community. Does that make sense? If you are, or are not, creating quality content of your own, it doesn't affect the responsibility you have to curate and upvote meaningful quality content that will improve the overall quality of the system you are a part of. And we all gain that way!
There are more low Steem Power users on Steemit, minnows, than there are dolphins or whales. The majority of people can set trends, and the higher Steem Power users, who are fewer in number, will recognize what the community is voting for and be influenced by this. That is how many of the bots work as well.
In the end, the minnows have the power to influence who gets upvoted by the larger Steem Power players and set the trends for who gets more visibility and exposure to their content. If you vote for the same people, then only they climb, regardless of the quality of their content. If you focus on the quality content instead of the personality, then more quality content gets recognized and improves the overall quality of the Steemit community platform.
You will gain as well by upvoting quality content, even if it's only a small return before they get more recognition and upvotes.
If you want to be a content creator, then you need to up your game, put up some better quality content, or stand aside and let others do it. Please do not simply post content to try to make money. I can't stress this enough. The goal Steemit has is to develop a community of meaningful quality content as created by you, me and everyone else! Monetary potential is part of the reward for creating quality content, it is secondary to the primary goal of quality content creation.
You can tell some people are primarily focused on making money by the money-related posts that get upvoted, like "Steem Dollar", "$STEEM/BTC", "Bitcoin", and other analysis focused threads that get huge payouts simply by providing market analysis for people to make money.
Ask yourself, is this the type of content that will raise the overall quality of Steemit as a platform to provide quality content for people on the Internet? As yourself, if everyone created content like this, how would the condition of the world improve? How can the world, Steemit, and yourself, benefit from upvoting certain content over other content? Think about this more deeply. This is why I emphasize upvoting quality content, and why I focus on a certain type of content that will raise the quality of our consciousness, our thinking, and as a result the overall quality of the world as well.
Please don't create content, or curate, based on thinking of making money, or by looking at what is "popular", or by giving people the usual low quality fodder they are accustomed to getting in the mainstream media or the Internet, that they have been conditioned to think they "want".
Deep down, people are yearning for quality truth even if they don't know it yet. Quality truth is what will enrich the quality and condition of our lives! Truth is that important, yet many don't recognize it's supreme value and importance to improve all our lives. Please help people learn more quality information. Stop providing content based on people's conditioned desires for entertainment and other low quality information, simply because you want to make money or be "popular".
We are all in this together (just as the White Paper uses the crab bucket analogy). We either raise all the higher quality content together and profit (and not only focusing on repeated upvotes for certain people's content), or we raise the lower quality content together by posting mediocrity to drown out the quality content. It's up to each of us to do the work to make it happen!
Upvoting Power and Weight
On the Curation Reward page it states:
...users with small amounts of vesting STEEM should:
- Vote on content others haven’t voted for, to maximize the percentage increase in voting
- Vote on fewer posts, the more you vote the more diluted your STEEM Power.
It also says:
"This means that being the first person to vote for a post gives you the greatest possible weight for your STEEM Power."
This is not exactly accurate. See this post which says:
... The value of being first depends entirely upon the subjective estimate of the final value of the post.
Our solution is to offer a reverse auction for curation rewards on votes cast within the first 30 minutes. The price starts out at 100% of your curation reward and falls toward 0% over 30 minutes using the curve (1-t2). The longer a bot waits to vote, the lower the fee will be. However, if someone else chooses to vote before you it would lower your potential absolute reward.
When people vote early, the fee is given to the author. In all likelihood the reason people are willing to vote early is because the author has a solid reputation and the content is clearly valuable. If the content is less clearly valuable then it requires more effort on behalf of curators.
Final outcome: those who vote early do so selflessly (rewarding the author), those who vote late are also doing so selflessly. Only those who vote in the critical window will earn high profits from curation and only if they correctly move first without moving too fast.
It is our estimate that most people paying attention to new posts (curators) will naturally vote 10 to 30 minutes after a post is made. This allows time for review and variance in time of discovery. Those who vote naturally will on-average earn a meaningful amount from curation (relative to their Steem Power). There is very little incentive to vote instantly after a post is made unless you really want to reward the author.
Your time of voting after a post comes out, is correlated with a percentage of Curation Rewards you may potentially receive. See The 10 Commandments of Upvoting on Steemit.
Also, this post:
Your vote begins to power down in percentage terms (have less influence) and drops of a cliff after approximately 20 votes
Summary Tips:
- Don't upvote all the time. 20 times per 24 hours, maximum 30.
- Vote for quality content that matters, that you want to help reach more people, make popular and help grow the community, not on content you think will be popular. This only concentrates the votes into the popular content, regardless of quality, and ignores the other quality content that needs help to gain visibility, exposure and become more successful to help the overall community grow in quality.
- Don't upvote content you think will be popular simply in the hopes of making money or getting Steem Power. Vote for content you know is quality. I focus on things that matter.
- Take the time to read the content. Comment useful feedback, additions or corrections (even if the author might not want to hear it, truth and quality matters more than possibly getting people to dislike you).
- Vote after 15 minutes to get a possible 50% of the 25% payout that goes to curators. Vote after 30 minutes to get a possible 100% of the 25% payout that goes to curators. Possible, but unlikely, because there are other votes that the 25% curator payout is distributed towards as well.
- It takes 1 day to regain 20% of your voting power you lose when you go over the 20 votes per day limit. Let it recharge fully to get the most out of your voting power weight. Check your Vote Count and Vote Power weight, by putting in your name here.
- In a payout, 75% goes to authors, and 25% goes to curators. 50% of the 75% is in Steam Dollars and 50% is in Steem Power.
- You can upvote your comments.
- Create networks with others based on common values, meaning, purpose, and goals on the content type you want to curate for on Steemit.
That's about it.
Good luck fellow Steemians! Improve the Steemit community and improve your success as well!
Thank you. Peace.
Personal Note:
- I have been in the Steemit community for a little more than two weeks (first post August 7th, 2016).
- I purchased $150 of Bitcoin for the first time, for the sole purpose of buying STEEM tokens and converting it to Steem Power, on August 8th just after making my first post. I saw the potential of Steemit as revolutionary, even though my post only got $0.26 total.
- I focus on creating high quality content that matters, to get people to understand how thinking functions, how to think better, how to understand reality and themselves better, and ultimately leading to how to change the world we live in for the better.
- I re-invest all of my Steem Dollars into Steem Power for now (sell SBD for STEEM, then Power Up), so as to help my own ability to curate others and upvote quality content. This helps the overall quality of Steemit when I have more Steem Power to upvote quality content.
- I still need to regenerate my Voting Power weight because I was voting poorly at first. I only recently learned how to do it better. Trial and error.
- I mistakenly started off with highly detailed, complex, in depth articles about thinking, the Trivium Methodology, consciousness, logic, etc. People do not tend to like to read that much material. Keep the content short and simple, before you gain a following of people who will appreciate more complex and well thought out quality material. Especially when you are new, you get less exposure for that much work anyways.
Author: Kris Nelson / @krnel
Contact me for questions, networking, sharing ideas, etc.:
Email: [email protected]
Facebook: Kris Nelson
Image source: steemimg.com
Let's care about what's REALLY happening in the world!
Really nice words and useful content, thanks!
Since I'm a newbie here (this is my first comment) and I'm still scrolling through the 'suggestion posts', I will ask this here (is it ok?): how can I save your post?
Thanks again!!
You can save the page as HTML in your browser. Try that out. Thanks for the feedback. Changing minds is hard :P
there is no way you can make people earn less by saying "hey please only upvote content you feel is valuable and don't just upvote because it's popular", so imo this whole post is complete nonsense.
It's not working, and is not our duty, it's the codes responsibility to make it work, people will always go the least friction way, and when the most optimal way to earn steem is to upvote popular posts rather then unpopular ones that have quality.
please don't think bitcoin is successful because people wanting to make banks obsolete, it's working because people can make money with it, ofc there is a large driving force that consists of people that want to do good, but they only can do so because it's giving them money.
We are the community, what we do, is what Steemit is. If we put our efforts into this, we can succeed and become #1 social media!
I love that this article champions integrity! Thank you, @krnel, for being real.
I've heard a lot of people trying to phrase a persuasive appeal to those who are disgruntled with the disconnect between how everyone says it's supposed to be and how it clearly is on Steemit. You don't have to be in it for low reasons like money or popularity to choose the obviously winning strategy. The feeling of "doing it right" is better than the feeling that something isn't right.
There's a sense in which, right now, each of us is asking every other person here to band together in trust. If we all choose the loser high road, we'll all win.
I do expect it will take a fair amount of intentional movement toward quality to counteract the observation that the way to be successful is to get a whale to look at your posts and upvote what you expect to trend. It feels really good to hear earnest talk of the need to upvote quality. It explains why we have to do the counter-intuitive thing, which does feel like the right thing, afterall.
Thanks for the feedback! I am trying to get things to change and trying to get others to understand its importance for everyone here who wants Steemit to succeed as a quality platform. My work represents that goal. I want everyone to do it. To stop just posting things that have little impact on evolving consciousness changing the world for the better. Many people can't, and they can curate or start to learn about higher-minded concepts and up their game.
Take care. Peace.
I can see where @whatsup is coming from by thinking nobody cares about good, meaningful information.
Like life lessons that should be given to our children in their formative years. Ideas that could inspire them to affect real, positive change in this world. Access to information resources to better aid them in their journey and increase their chance of success.
It is disappointing to see the good information being scrolled over by most and lost in all the "garbage" content.
In the past, the best information was usually occulted, hidden away, and only discussed in secret. While it is more widespread and available today, the minds of "the people" have been purposely corrupted and pretty much closed to any new contradictory information.
For me personally, 9/11 eventually became my catalyst to "dig deeper". I then began my synchronistic journey of truth discovery....and through all the denial, hassle, and ridicule, I'd do it all again in a heartbeat.
Superb post.
good write up
Kudos. Pay no mind to the naysayers.
Thanks for sharing!
Really nice post @krnel with more people like you around I think we will start seeing a change in what the content that makes the trending sections is.
Thanks for reading. I hope so. I learned a lot in two weeks here. I am devoted to making Steemit a QUALITY success, and want people to change their behavior for the better and stop with their focus on making money. We need to turn this ship around and get it on the right course for everyone and the world to benefit from quality information being disseminated. Take care. Peace.
The feeling I was having joining this (21 Oct, 2017) was that people will earn lots of money following the way my friends (in my college on FB) gain 100s of likes per photo just because they think they should like it just because the more u like, the more likes u get there!!! (I wasn't and still ain't among them)
But what I get reading this post is that:-
Pease correct me if I am wrong, and tell me the exact meaning of CURATOR, (liquid) steem, steempower, steemdollar, sbd. And anything else that I miss about the working of STEEMit. I have understood what the author wished to say about the quality if content we should create and vote for.
Quality Content is the worst part of the white paper, the voiced goals and the whale voting I have ever seen. Nobody gives a shit about quality content.
If you think I am wrong. Watch the "new" thread for a while. Watch the quality content.... Scroll on by, with no attention.
I give a shit about quality content.
Do you vote for it though? I know I do, but I also vote for what is popular.... so I think I am a part of the problem.
The biggest challenge is finding these quality posts in the 'new' feed. :) My current ratio is 20:1.
Downside: Time-consuming --- Upside: Better Content in Steemit in the near future! :D
My rules:
Flag for content that seemed to be made by a bot (or run through Google Translate!)
Mute for Authors who post in Languages I cannot understand
Mute authors who share content I'm not likely to engage in
Comment on posts or engage in comments. :) Well...if I have something of value to offer.
There are a lot of things everyone can do about this. And from what I see there are more amd more ideas about changing that. Now, they need to be seen and spread too. So it is something to consider. You have a rep and followers. You writr cool stuff. You also read cool stuff.
Link to the cool stuff you see, that didn't gain traction in the first hours. That way you effectively sharing your power in form of followers & rep with people you find are providing the quality content.
I agree! Don't forget that you have readers for content outside of Steemit! :) You can bring them here..or build them on another platform then eventually bring them here.
I'm in the process of reaching out to my contacts to pitch them the upsides of joining Steemit. I use this post to make it easier for them to get their head around what the platform is all about. :D
We are in uncharted territory right now. Whether or not "quality" content is being ignored or upvoted is a) an entirely subjective assessment, and b) impossible to plan against since, literally, no one really knows what will happen next since its all theoretical at this point.
All that can be done is to keep moving as an ecosystem towards expelling destructive developments from the platform while rewarding constructive developments. Even this is wholly subjective since plenty of people can argue about what will be good for the long term interests of the platform.
Even if 51% constructive is rewarded and 49% destructive is rewarded, its still a net gain and better than the alternative.
Just keep building. Keep creating. Keep voicing opinion. This ball has already started rolling down the hill. It's pretty well out of the control of onesies and twosies at this point and organic changes will only get slower as we move ahead.
I really do care.
Although I love your passion and agree with all you say to make this platform better, there is no way fighting Zipf's law.
/"Taking popularity as a rough measure of value, then the value of each individual item is given by Zipf’s Law. That is, if we have a million items, then the most popular 100 will contribute a third of the total value, the next 10,000 another third, and the remaining 989,900 the final third.... The impact of this voting and payout distribution is to offer large bounties for good content while still rewarding smaller players for their long-tail contribution."
~ Steem WhitePaper, pg. 20/
I just wanted to point that out and say keep it real.
A good read @krnel and educational. Thanks and keep it up
I'm glad that I have found you here on Steemit. Wonderful insights.
Thank you :) Glad to see your insights on the future of the blockchain, as I am a noob in that department, but I slowly learn about it more and more, it's not my main focus in learning.
Hi, great article! How did you learn all this? Where did you get all these information?
Would you be so kind to help me understand something...in this picture from steemstats I don't understand what does the numbers 0.086% and 0.008SP mean beside my name on the right. Does this mean that I got 0.008SP for upvoting or commenting on the post, which represents 0.086% of the curation reward?
I really love the bit about creating quality content, not polluting the internet with more of...well, what's already out there. I just joined a year after you (august 2017) and as a journalist, that's been a long time goal of mine. Creating quality content, not more internet fodder. I really hope to see this platform grow along those lines. Thanks for this great post!
Thanks for your post and so great to hear someone talking about TRUTH!
Not a popular topic I know, but if we want a world to live on then we need to take note and stop destroying it! I'm new here and still learning and finding my way around, but haven't seen too many posts yet on changing the planet and doing good. There doesn't look to be an obvious tag for this either? Perhaps if there was a tag for 'Global Change' or something similar then this would encourage more posts on this topic.
I'm still working on my first introductory post, where I do talk about how 'Truth, Integrity and Discernment' have the power to change the world, if people could feel and know this then who they interacted with would be quite different! Also money would go to those doing good and not those conning, cheating and doing evil in hidden ways.
I have a question about voting on posts - I like to vote on posts that have helped me or I feel are good. I've read that payouts happen after a week or so, so does it help the author or Steem community to keep voting for older posts if we like them?
Thanks again for information and desire for truth!
I wonder about that too. I assume that even though the original post is old, if the comment is less than 7 days old, it ought to get some payout if it is upvoted. But I may be wrong.
Awesome post. Im new on SteemIt and I will use your post as an example to my posts and behaviour on steemit. TY!
Ok, great! I like the article. I also want to be in enviroment that cares more for the quality. But, but, but... "Please don't create content, or curate, based on thinking of making money" I believe is not realistic wish with all these $$$ under every comment and every post here. Why we all here than? Of course to create content baging for money or just spam or scam is wrong, but the end of the day all of the peole concider the money as one even greter reason to be here and I dont see nothing wrong in this. This is the motivator to build this community or I am getting it wrong?
OK. I will not upvote it, but just know, you are awesome.
It's up to the steemians to heed this advice. It's up to steemit to keep growing in a way that mitigates self-serving activity on this platform. Keep putting out more of this! As a steemit noob I had a hard time follwing along the entire article. Thanks!
A really helpfull article!! Thank you! I am really new here, and I like to be part of a community in which at least one person cares about the quality of the articles! There is so much we can say that matters, that it would be a waste to spend even a minute in things that do not matter! I will be writing about things that I think matter to be better people, citizens and people of this world!
Reading your article was really useful and has changed my perspective on how I will approach engaging with Steemians.
I am yet to write my first post and I have been spending time trying to understand what kind of value I can offer and how this place works.
Reading through trending topics etc, I started thinking about which topics I could write about to write something of interest to the community.
I think now I will be more authentic to myself and write about what I know and enjoy with less focus on what people are looking for. Who knows, maybe someone will enjoy reading about my niche world.
Cheers, Kiya
Your post is on point, except that I think it is idealistic to believe that most people act rationally or with any thought to the greater good or the long-term. I am by nature a humanist, except that I do not believe humans are innately good or rational. People act with short-term goals and rather selfishly. Your article was written a while ago and so many things have happened since then on steemit. Has your viewpoint changed a little since then? I started here thinking I would never pay for an upvote, until I learned it is impossible to even be seen unless you get down and muddy by relinquishing those principles at least to geta small push start. I wrote a post on my sister blog a few weeks ago in which I mentioned that the reputation score is best seen as a measure for myself of the degree to which I've reached my own audience - a measure of the success of my own brand. Each account's rep score reflects the progress of that account along it's own path. My path is unique.
It is good to learn here are great people on steemit like yourself. Take care.
@krnel, tulisan Anda merubah pola pikir saya terhadap steemit.