Hive's Biggest Contribution Might Be To Digital Identities
For much of the world, the Internet is a vital part of our lives. There is no way around utilizing this medium. We access our news, pay bills, and derive our entertainment from this. It is also a major part of our communication with others.
At present, each time we use an application, we log on. The challenge here is that we own nothing. Our identities are controlled by centralized entities. They control whether we exist in the digital world or not.
Yahoo. Gmail. Facebook. KIK. Zoom. Skype. Twitter.
No matter what the platform, or service, we have to maintain their permission to engage. Sadly, whatever we do is not ours. All of our interactions, regardless of who they are with, is only with the permission of these entities. As many of us are aware, our digital lives can vanish in an instant.
This is a problem because the likelihood that the evolution of the Internet, along with expansion along these lines, is almost guaranteed to continue. We are not going to reverse the multi-decade trend that is in place.
Here is where Web 3.0 might have the most impact.
Source
Account Ownership
This is something that is overlooked by so many. Granted we are in the early stages but ownership of our digital lives is going to become a more important subject. People are starting to realize, albeit slowly, how crucial this truly is. Whether it is for business or pleasure (Web 3.0 is going to merge the two), having access is paramount.
It is the single topic where Web 2.0 falls completely on its face. We are also not going to see a change in the abovementioned companies anytime soon. The reality is they crave control since that is what their business models are built around. Web 3.0 is being constructed with something completely different.
Therefore, having a Hive account might end up being a windfall for all those who are taking to time to get one. Again, we are at the embryotic point in the process yet we can start to see where this is going.
It really boils down to a simple question: do you want to own your stuff or not?
The answer is rather obvious. Contrary to the WEF, who doesn't want ownership of their lives? Why does anyone think this will not extend to the digital world?
In short, we are going to start forming deeper and more robust digital identities as the technologies available to us expand. Do you want this in the hands of Mark Zuckerberg?
Naturally, the answer should be clear.
Hive - Powerful Account Management System
One of the biggest advantages to Hive is that it does offer a powerful account management system. It starts with the ability to actually name your profile. This is something that is not a given in the Web 3.0 world. If one is looking to connect a Metamask wallet, for example, look at how that is named. The wallet address is a series of letters and numbers.
Another aspect to this is how each account is protected. We can debate whether 20 consensus block producers is enough until the cows come home. However, what cannot be disputed is that, after the Justin Sun attack, the ability to take over the pool and place in sock puppets was removed. The ninja-mined stake is now in the Decentralized Hive Fund (DHF). This cannot be used for governance voting.
What this means is that Hive is decentralized enough in its governance to protects accounts from being closed by a group of the Top 20 getting together. Also, an outside attacker is going to have an issue there are layers in place to deter such action.
For these reasons, it is safe to say that Hive accounts are legitimately protected and provide full account ownership. The only caveat is, of course, that one much retain his or her keys.
This means that Hive has the capability to provide ownership of one's digital life, at least as it pertains to activities done using Hive's account management system.
Digital Identification
Try to imagine going through life without much of an identification. Think of how hard it is to engage in even the most basic of services without that.
Now, if we apply the same concept to the digital realm, consider what it would be like if half of your abilities vanished while you were sleeping. This would be the threat if the likes of Zuckerberg keep growing in power.
Logging in with Google, Facebook, and Twitter is extending the reach of those companies outside their own platforms. They now have control over your life on whatever you are signing into.
Consider this reality with money tied to those applications. How much control do you want to give then tech companies?
With concepts such as avatars, advanced gaming, mixed reality, and a host of other things such as DeFi increasing in likelihood, we can easily see how our digital identities are only going to grow.
The question is who owns it? Is it you or an assortment of major tech companies?
Hive has a concept that few realize so far. Having one log in accessing many different games or applications is priceless. We do not realize how big this is. If we view this through the lens of the totality of our digital lives, we see this as a major part of the foundation.
For onboarding purposes we see many applications starting to allow people to sign up using a Facebook or Twitter account. While this makes sense, the truth is people should be looking the other direction. Applications and games should start integrating Hive's account management system into what they are building.
That is where the true need is going forward. We need to take back control of our digital lives.
Hive has a system in place that will allow for this.
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At the rate Hive is going, by the time other tech developers realise ot Hive would be too big for them.
I'm happy to be here at the beginning.
My question is...what is more important at this point...investors or mass adoption?
It's a bit of a chicken/egg issue. Hive needs more users to get noticed, but users go where the people they want to follow are or where there is an audience. Investors would give the price a boost and attract people, but they want to see a thriving platform.
That is true although a kick ass application will solve a lot of that. We can make great headway if we get an application that pulls in a couple hundred thousand users.
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It's just a question of what the 'killer app' will be. Splinterlands already has loads of users, but most do nothing elsewhere on Hive. I think we need to find a niche where Hive can make a big difference. Some will say that could be the people who get banned from other platforms, but they may not attract the masses. Just have to keep pushing in lots of directions to reach that critical mass.
I agree although we could make the case a lot on Splinterlands is more bots than anything else.
Killer app is going to have to be something tied to Hive. Right now my bet is on what the SpkNetwork is doing or the evolution of microblogging into ProjectBlank.
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Keeping free speech here would be a nice start. Instead of those in Alt media or those discussing issues like vaccine injuries and government corruption getting mass downvoted by the same whales. I’m not talking about spam. I’m talking about seeing a literal well researched post being attacked and made invisible. I see it being written off as laughable but there numbers will add up over time. Many People most people I’d say don’t want to come to a decentralized place for things they can do on centralized apps. It’s largely freedom and talking about censored topics that companies like Facebook censor. I know there’s many who are just happy and very good bloggers who love photography and art. But I think the number who don’t like what they are seeing if larger then many writing it off realize. I had a Steemit account and lost the keys and just life got crazy after March 2020 so I’m newly here I admit. It just really struck me seeing some well meaning respected people hit like this. I’m not talking about the Blurt trolls, from what I see there mainly just angry people suggesting a pathetic replacement. I’m talking about long-standing accounts who are mass downvoted by the same 5 whales on and off for speaking about a topic deemed disinformation or something.
There are a lot of opinionated people here and they will use their stake as they see fit. The whales take a lot of responsibility as their actions have a lot of weight, but then they also have the most to gain from Hive growing.
I can see some people who have had big downvotes on some 'controversial' posts making a lot on others. Others just made themselves really unpopular on Hive, so they will struggle.
Hive is what it is. It is not always 'fair'. Anyone can buy a big stake if they want to prop up posts. I'll support the stuff I want to see more of.
Actually, at this point, I think it is developers. We need people to build games and applications that people use. Utility is still needed.
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A nice start would be these mega whale accounts not censoring posts about uncomfortable issues to zero thus making the posts invisible after a while. This issue just came to my attention today. I’m quite turned off by Hive at this moment. When I was on Steem in 2017 I remember these topics were not censored. Think I’m going to stop buying anymore Hive. Sad
We don’t need “Games”
We need no Censorship!
Games can be played anywhere centralized, I mean who cares about games. I see people here leaving because of collusion by 5 huge whale accounts crushing them because they talk about things like vaccine side effects and government corruption. I think this place is loosing not winning after my first month back. I had a Steemit account and looked from far the past two years. Honestly Hive is kinda starting to suck. The most appealing part to so many was the decentralized idea and lack of centralized censorship we see on the Facebooks of the world. I unfortunately have had my eyes opened the past 24 hours to how bad this censorship is here. Just bummed as I am just done with a 2 year period where I worked 18 hours a day and never bothered coming here. With a new gig and more free time I had looked forward to building my Hive stack to 250K and going long. Now it’s like what’s the point. Hive no doubt will not be going away but if free speech isn’t a focus anymore what’s the point is the take many will be left with. Just staking to make 20%? To play games? Nah this can’t last without free speech. If it’s just safe same as mainstream site why would people wanna come on in massive numbers? Again it’s not going away but I don’t see much growth without free speech and a few whales (likely some of the multiple accounts owned by one person making the control likely by 2-4 people. It’s gross. I just wasn’t aware till now.
Solutions to problems are like sunshine. really good one!!! Good day.
I helped a friend set up a Hive account over the weekend and explained to her with one Hive account you can access any application on Hive with the same username.
We indeed have this capability but are not looking at how unique it is to have such capability.
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It is unique and the fact the account cannot be closed down. The account is with one as long as he or she is able to protect the keys.
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Identity management has long been an issue. You can't always be sure that someone on a given platform is really who they say they are. Groups like Hivewatchers have been asking users to verify themselves by linking to their Hive account from elsewhere, e.g. Twitter. It would be useful to have that verification stored against the account so anyone can check it.
A while back I played with Keybase that implemented public key encryption and could use it to verify account ownership by posting a signed message there. I thought it was good, but it did not take off. I know a few Hive people used it. You can see on my page that I verified various things. I am sure it would be possible to integrate Hive into that as they have a fairly open protocol.
Meanwhile, being able to log into sites with Hive would be great. I know some people have been working on it, but Hive is still below the radar.
I have to admit the idea of linking my Hive identity to ones held by Twitter, Google and Facebook concerns me. It means that they'd add all my Hive activity to the data they already hold.
The "if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear" argument most certainly doesn't hold true when it comes to big tech; all it takes is one post at any point ever voicing an opinion they don't like, and they can cause a lot of problems.
I like signing in with Hive from a single account that I own. I'd be more concerned about signing into Web2 sites with my Hive keys. I heard a rumour Facebook are putting a huge amount of effort into building a database of who owns which keys. I'd definitely want to be comfortable that if I'm signing in, it's through a Web3 app that doesn't reveal the actual keys, and certainly one that only needs the posting key.
We are not being forced to link accounts, but with enough data it is possible to make some assumptions about who controls what. I gave up a long time ago on being anonymous. I just don't use Facebook any more than I have to.
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That was the topic of my video last night. Web 2.0 ie Facebook are moving into NFTs if you will connect your wallet to it.
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Wither zero-knowledge proofs, logins can be made without revealing pertinent information like passwords and keys. The question is whether or not social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter can be trusted to use them and make them secure. The answer is a big, fat resounding "NO!"
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.Really good points here. Hive could be poised to be the "gatekeeper" for all things digital if the right things fall into place. I'd much rather use an account that I own to login to sites versus my Google account which could be deactivated at any time.
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I have always thought this was one of the biggest distinctions between Web 2.0 and Hive.
Account ownership.
This along with Platform ownership thus Skin in the Game are tome, revolutionary.
To me it is the baseline for Web 3.0.
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Good to know. I am really puzzled by this ninja mining.
It took me 8 months on Hive to realize this.
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I think the identity system is good but I don't want it to be fully linked to everything in my life. In a sense, I do like how Hive does everything through a username because when I saw things in like metamask with addresses, it's a tougher hurdle to get used to.
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I think it’s a huge turnoff. We should be fully anonymous. This place isn’t what I remember from back in the day. I see censorship from accounts with millions of Hive power downvoting people talking about the Great Reset and Vaccine injuries. Then I just see praise and pushing for Identity and yay this or that. It’s worse then Steemit was. I’m really turned off. Power down incoming
With the technology advancement and digitisation being simplified,it all comes as an advantege to the Hive and other networks. Thank you for the post.
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