It's also more "intuitive" than typical blockchain use-cases. Truly disruptive innovations hit a wall, or a ceiling, because they require folks to modify or (worse) break their habits. That's why their grow slowly, at first.
But using the blockchain to verify or debunk content is already consistent with habit, and thos is "disruptive" in the Silicon-Shallow sense. Internet sleuths & debunkers are long habituated to using the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. And look at how quickly archive sites like Archive-today and Archive.is have taken off: they snapshot forums and other media edited frequently.
And there's always someone around who's screenshot a controversial and later-deleted Tweet!
So blockchain archiving - for sleuthing or debunking - is already consistent with long habit.
I give 5-7 years and this will be live..!! Stephen
It's also more "intuitive" than typical blockchain use-cases. Truly disruptive innovations hit a wall, or a ceiling, because they require folks to modify or (worse) break their habits. That's why their grow slowly, at first.
But using the blockchain to verify or debunk content is already consistent with habit, and thos is "disruptive" in the Silicon-Shallow sense. Internet sleuths & debunkers are long habituated to using the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. And look at how quickly archive sites like Archive-today and Archive.is have taken off: they snapshot forums and other media edited frequently.
And there's always someone around who's screenshot a controversial and later-deleted Tweet!
So blockchain archiving - for sleuthing or debunking - is already consistent with long habit.