The decentralised finance club needs to make their core values poster bigger and easier to understand

We’re here in 2023 and they still forget that the core value of “not your keys not your wallet” is the equivalent of putting your cash under your mattress instead of using a bank and the complexity that comes with that is unavoidable.

You can get more people to use a mediocre product/technology by making it easy to use

People will use complex products/technologies if they are useful enough.

But these people can’t make it useful so they keep banging their head against the wall trying to make it more simple.

It is inevitable that they will try the even lazier route of deceiving people into thinking it is simple.

Nitter: https://nitter.net/evanvar/status/1699032296870015232

edit: changed title to reduce keyword matches in lemmy fediverse searches

  • SteveOP
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    12
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    1 year ago

    here’s a stupid meme that might explain my post

    freeway exit meme: "make it useful" straight ahead "make it seem simple" freeway exit that "web3" car is taking

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    I find it insane that people would expect you to connect your crypto wallet with a website. The levels of trust there are crazy.

    Best practices maintaining crypto are keeping it offline, air gapped. Definitely not in the browser.

    • SteveOP
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      71 year ago

      That’s what I find incredible about this community. We’re here in 2023 and they still forget that the core value of “not your keys not your wallet” is the equivalent of putting your cash under your mattress instead of using a bank. The complexity that comes with that is unavoidable. It is essential that you know you are in control of an entity that is there or is not there, and no insurance can bring it back because it is fully decentralised.

      You can get more people to use a mediocre product/technology by making it easy to use

      People will use complex products/technologies if they are useful enough.

      These people know they can’t make it more useful so they keep banging their head against the wall trying to make it more simple.

      It is inevitable that they will keep trying to deceive people into thinking it is simple.

    • @Astroturfed
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      31 year ago

      Don’t you know, the best way to make the decentralized wave of the future, new money, money work best is to give third parties access to it and centralize it.

  • @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    Nobody even knows what the fuck web 2.0 actually is. CSS? JS? SPAs? Flash? No flash? Rounded corners? Ad blocker blockers? Sevice workers? Sans serif fonts? Lack of “under construction” gifs?

    Web 3.0 is inevitable, not because blockchain or machine learning shit is revolutionarily useful, but because whatever becomes popular will end up being called web 3.0 anyway.

    Also annoyed at the .0 BS. Maybe it sounded cool and techy in the 90s but if the major versions are already nonsense, how the hell are you gonna have a minor one?

    • SteveOP
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      101 year ago

      I never recognised web 2.0 because my first encounter with it was a PM walking up to my desk and asking if I could code in web 2.0

    • TAG
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      61 year ago

      Web 1.0: You put some contents on the Internet and monotise people who want to read it.

      Web 2.0: You put up a public forum and monotise people both contributing content and reading content.

      Web 3: Cryptocurrency (the use of the World Wide Web is optional).

      Web 3.0 as defined by the author of Web 1.0: Sematic Web: Everything is linked to everything else with an explanation for how they are related. Instead of learning information, we all play Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        I’ve been thinking about this reply for some time now, and while I think you’re being tongue-in-cheek (in which case, good sneer!), I resent this. I reject the noxious characterization of the web and its supposed generations as being defined by their method of monetization and the concept insults and saddens me.

        It also doesn’t match the usual way people use phrases like “web 1[.0]” and “web 2[.0]”, which generally boils down to approximately whether a site looks more like it’s Geocities Angelfire academic homepage HTML written in Windows Notepad or like a typical Squarespace Dreamveawer Wordpress Django Drupal Framework de jour fuckness.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Hmm, odd. I’m already (oh god kill me) old enough to remember when because “semantic web” was a term thrown around even before web2 got to be known as web2 (and this wasn’t even that long ago)

        Don’t think I’ve seen the thing of “3.0 as per author” as you mention here, link?

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          check it out, it’s kind of interesting as a sort of way to treat web technology like a database (and some bits feel surprisingly close to Prolog in semantics, which tracks) but it’s been pretty spectacularly unsuccessful at gaining any real adoption (which gave the cryptobros ample opportunity to hop in and parasitize the term, leading to their also spectacularly unsuccessful version of web 3). see also solid, which is an implementation of a bunch of Semantic Web ideas (and it barely works, and I’m fairly certain I remember seeing a bunch of folks quit the project all at once recently), and note that the web, semantic web, and solid are all Tim Berners-Lee projects

          • SteveOP
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            71 year ago

            The Semantic Web was TBL’s Xanadu.

          • Jonathan Hendry
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            61 year ago

            @self @froztbyte

            “conceived the Solid project … as a way to give individual users full control over the usage of their data”

            "Berners-Lee’s research team collaborated with the Qatar Computing Research Institute "

            I see a potential problem.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            Oic

            I hadn’t actually realised it was a stolen term (although in retrospect, uh, that tracks)

            At each recurrence of running into shit like this, I’m glad (and optimistic(?)) that the average coiner shitbird tended more greedy than clever, and that that by itself would help self-shorten the period of awful

            (There’s still the remainder, of course, and they have to be kept watch on as usual)

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I don’t wish you work

      But I will probably enjoy seeing what happens if they show up, no lies