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[–]SoCo 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (3 children)

I can't imagine pay-walls ever really working. People have tried so long. Once you get access, you copy the content and re-post it somewhere else. People have already been trying the paywall concept with crypto for articles and porn; I suspect it hasn't proven the greatest.

Having software that makes payments without interaction is super dangerous. That already means it is unencrypted and ready to be drained with the slightest exploit or malware. These sort of hot wallets should only have small amounts of funds in them, and only briefly.

While I can relate to concerns about how people might leverage crypto to monetize the web, I think innovation in doing so is a very good thing. The scourge of advertisers and their embedded role of personal data collectors is the worst and needs to end.

I've seen innovations like Brave Browser and their ideas with Basic Attention Token come along. I wasn't stoked about the idea of getting paid to opt-in to ads, but any innovation, especially optional ones seem good progress. I really liked their additional strategy of making it easy to tip websites, even setting up small automatic tips when you visit. This sort of voluntary payment I really like. Many sites I wish I could easily tip, especially when finding a particularly useful article.

I think many entire industries are fighting for ways to monetize their content and they should get paid somehow for it or good content will go away. New technology gives the ability to do this in new bad or good ways. I'm hoping good ways will prevail.

[–][deleted] 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (1 child)

[–]SoCo 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Yeah, both are based on Firefox. Mozilla's version of Firefox has a shit-ton of stuff that collects every website you visit, and even pings when you close a tab. Most popular browsers are pure spy apparatus (ie Firefox Chrome and more). Telemetry, malicious site blocking, SSL cert checking, account protection, and the such are just excuses to track you or leak your usage to parties that can. Open source forks of browsers are important to avoid this.

TorBrowser has been around quite awhile as a security enhanced fork of Firefox. Brave Browser is the same, but quite newer. All "new" security is subject to a long road of painfully being run though the ringer. I don't see why the DNS leak (of onion addresses) were being made, as it doesn't make sense to send addresses out to check, but it seems Brave Browser was made aware of it with their hack/bug bounty system and fixed it rather quickly. That seems the tail of how we expect bugs and security issues to be found and fixed now days.

[–][deleted] 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

I can't imagine pay-walls ever really working. People have tried so long. Once you get access, you copy the content and re-post it somewhere else.

The searches we see are pigeon holed. There used to be a lot more unique results when searching, now there's a billion results that are the same 20 things over and over. Cutting off access to information is trivial. Especially if everyone starts using web3 browsers.

There aren't many unique, viable browser options either. Chrome, Mozilla, and Safari, I think that's it. Not really difficult to imagine being forced to adopt Web 3

Just seems like taking public water, bottling it, and selling it back to us. We had a free web, we now have a corporate web. We get less and are expected to pay. And we'll probably have ads too. This is all about maximizing value from the consumer. Which is great, unless you're a consumer.