Not sure how you got the idea for this piece, but interesting exploration of why some form of trust is still required in blockchains, and why it’s not necessarily a bad thing.
Reputation obviously matters, and it’s good that the blockchain is transparent enough for us to be able to fish out bad actors.
Question though: do you think that this “need for credible creators” problem will be solved by itself as web3 grows? I feel like there’s an ingrained incentive for good behaviour since the blockchain forces transparency.
Not sure how you got the idea for this piece, but interesting exploration of why some form of trust is still required in blockchains, and why it’s not necessarily a bad thing.
Reputation obviously matters, and it’s good that the blockchain is transparent enough for us to be able to fish out bad actors.
Great piece!
Question though: do you think that this “need for credible creators” problem will be solved by itself as web3 grows? I feel like there’s an ingrained incentive for good behaviour since the blockchain forces transparency.