That's what I mean, you're not familiar with what's happening, yet you comfortably dismiss the whole idea of blockchain as ill-conceived and impractical.
So both of your major criticisms are being actively addressed by very smart people who plan to have them solved in the near to medium term future.
Does that in any way change your view of blockchain? Maybe it could possibly work? Or, no, it's just a hopeless dumb idea that will surely crash?
>That's what I mean, you're not familiar with what's happening, yet you comfortably dismiss the whole idea of blockchain as ill-conceived and impractical.
It's not "the blockchain" anymore if they've changed the fundamental mechanisms of its operation (e.g., eliminating miners, which the sibling commenter indicated as a goal).
It may be a blockchain, if we want to use "blockchain" as a generic descriptor for a chain of cryptographic signatures, or a blockchain-inspired / blockchain-derived concept, but "the" blockchain, as in the blockchain concept developed for use with bitcoin, is fundamentally dependent on mining for its validity. Change that, and it's not really "blockchain" anymore, at least not as used in the current vernacular. And that's fine -- bitcoin quickly outgrew its britches and needs revision.
>So both of your major criticisms are being actively addressed by very smart people who plan to have them solved in the near to medium term future.
Yes, that's awesome. I'm glad that some people are now deciding that these issues deserve a response instead of continuing headlong into the hype abyss. Why should this mean that people can't complain? If I hadn't, I wouldn't have known that Ethereum is working on a solution. :)
>Does that in any way change your view of blockchain? Maybe it could possibly work? Or, no, it's just a hopeless dumb idea that will surely crash?
Again, I haven't reviewed it yet, but sure, changing the mechanisms of operation could potentially make a thing called "blockchain" workable. "A rose by any other name..." and all that.
So both of your major criticisms are being actively addressed by very smart people who plan to have them solved in the near to medium term future.
Does that in any way change your view of blockchain? Maybe it could possibly work? Or, no, it's just a hopeless dumb idea that will surely crash?