yep. but you have to agree, the control of dev in steem is too tight, and it shuts out potential free labor, and there is no rep or rewards to incentivise.
there is big issues baked into the architecture. some were for sure intentional, but most were just fad following like lemmings.
i am just doing a reboot. I was trying to show people how the errors have benefited the worst kind of people, and they are defending the indefensible. time to move on.
Steem is open source. No one stops you from developing for it and fixing bugs. You could probably earn quite a bit from the community too.
There are issues in every architecture, that is how it works, nothing is perfect there are tradeoffs everywhere.
Your critique sounds like you have no idea how Software development looks like. I'm happy to be proven wrong but your arguments are not really convincing.
It really sounds like 'all are evil and plotting xy or following the masters' and that is a heavy claim without any backup facts.