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RE: Stake it or leave it: Is Hive worth it?

in LeoFinance4 years ago

On reflection, an increasingly large part of why I started participating here — and continue to participate here — is quite simply that I enjoy writing/blogging and have for a couple of decades... and what sets Hive apart from other blogging venues is that the social aspect is much stronger than on Blogger, WordPress or wherever. Those sites are really pure blogging sites, as opposed to a social blogging site.

Do the rewards serve as an incentive? Absolutely! And perhaps the biggest thing the Hive ecosystem has going for it is that it's the easy way into crypto. In a sense, it's parallel to the "CoinStar" change machines at supermarkets that count your loose change...and allow people to buy Bitcoin. No "special education" is needed here, you have the potential to get crypto for doing something you already know how to do... participate on a social media venue.

Financially, this has always been a long term play for me... I see the possibility that we may be part of (at least) a step towards some future version of how people get money, as more and more of the tangible things humans "do" in the world get taken over by AI and automation, and we are simply not needed to run assembly lines, be diagnosticians, checkout clerks, warehouse stackers, etc... and yet we still are part of the greater thing known as the total economy. Again, though, we are looking at the 5, 10, 20 year time horizon. But is that really that long? I just checked my Facebook profile and it shows that I joined on 15 March 2007... 13 1/2 years ago. I'd love to think I can do a similar check on Hive, in 2030!

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Those sites are really pure blogging sites, as opposed to a social blogging site.

I find the same. I feel there is more interaction here, even though there are less comments perhaps.

Haven't heard of coinstar - interesting concept :)

Perhaps the timeline is being pushed up with corona, that will eat millions of jobs that won't return in the US alone. Then, the civil unrest we are seeing is symptomatic of these issues, which will drive the shift to new opportunities harder. It will take time to normalize of course, but it might not take that much time - Time will tell though ;)

I imagine the schedule is being fast tracked by Covid and the world situation... more and more people here realize that the jobs they have been laid off from, or "furloughed" from simply won't BE there, ever again.

In the background, there is a mass of automation activity going on, plus demand will drop in some consumer areas. So, it is pretty bleak for many.