Aug 05, 2016, 11:38 am
So. Kim Dotcom is going to launch a MegaUpload2.0 where you make micro payments for file pieces. This clicked with me because just the other day someone posted on bitcointalk.org a link to the spec for IPFS where it talked about Bitswap. This Bitswap, was described as a market place for blocks (torrent hashes/chunks) and I think that is what K.C is probably talking about with his Bitcache.
I'm not a Golang expert so it'll take a while to investigate but what it seems to do is enable a content provider (or copyright holder) to no longer have to charge for an entire product (a whole DVD) but can charge for a small part/chunk of the product. Whereas before you would pay $20 for a DVD, you will now pay 10,000 x 0.2 cents every-time you download it. Furthermore. If you get a corrupt block or it is rejected for whatever reason, then you may have to buy it again. They would also be able to change pricing by just increasing or decreasing the number of blocks you get for you 0.2c. Your DVD would still be 0.2c per block but now you need 20,000 but still the price is advertised as "0.2c per block"
I'm ambivalent about this. As an incentive system to share blocks it has merit. As a content distribution model for profit it has huge potential for scamming.
Has anyone else looked at this tech?
I'm not a Golang expert so it'll take a while to investigate but what it seems to do is enable a content provider (or copyright holder) to no longer have to charge for an entire product (a whole DVD) but can charge for a small part/chunk of the product. Whereas before you would pay $20 for a DVD, you will now pay 10,000 x 0.2 cents every-time you download it. Furthermore. If you get a corrupt block or it is rejected for whatever reason, then you may have to buy it again. They would also be able to change pricing by just increasing or decreasing the number of blocks you get for you 0.2c. Your DVD would still be 0.2c per block but now you need 20,000 but still the price is advertised as "0.2c per block"
I'm ambivalent about this. As an incentive system to share blocks it has merit. As a content distribution model for profit it has huge potential for scamming.
Has anyone else looked at this tech?