All great points. And I agree with you on most everything.
I care about the major complicated projects succeeding, e.g., 0x, Golem, Augur, Aragon, to name a few. They can go the DAO route, or I can do my part in helping. Help me get in touch with more projects if you're connected.
Open sourcing right off the bat will have the opposite effect. If it works at scale, we will be pitting the attackers against the developers. I would rather get this tool in the hands of developers first. I welcome other people developing the same :) - better yet: I've already developed a version, come help me make it useful for the community.
Yeh, I totally see what you are saying and the end I agree with you, even as die hard FOSS as I am.
Having checked out your website I am pretty excited about what you are doing. How are we to ever build true value delivering services if the underlying architecture is not secure? This has been my biggest worry with the entirety of the space. That we will move too fast, lose focus on security first, and end up building gigantic infrastructures on shaky foundations thus turning into the very incumbents that we are aiming to displace.
With the idea I am planning on, I will most certainly need your services. I need for all parties to 1) understand the benefits of trustless sytems, and 2) be able to trust the trustless system in an environment where each party is relatively conservative in that it dislikes and discourages disruptions. Security will be of paramount importance.
Anyways, thanks for making this, its great to see such efforts being made in the space. We need less hype, and more maths, as I like to say.
I care about the major complicated projects succeeding, e.g., 0x, Golem, Augur, Aragon, to name a few. They can go the DAO route, or I can do my part in helping. Help me get in touch with more projects if you're connected.
Open sourcing right off the bat will have the opposite effect. If it works at scale, we will be pitting the attackers against the developers. I would rather get this tool in the hands of developers first. I welcome other people developing the same :) - better yet: I've already developed a version, come help me make it useful for the community.