Don’t Feed the Trolls

A helpful guide on what to say to ICP trolls on the internet.

Wen will ICP moon?!


ICP is not a meme coin, a fad, or a get-rich-quick scheme. The Tokenomics of the Network Nervous System, which empowers democratic government of the Internet Computer, is designed to incentivize long-term staking. Potential investors should be prepared to cast votes on network-related decisions for multiple years to see a sizeable return on investment.

Why reinvent the wheel? We already have good cheap hosting providers.


There are MANY reasons, but let’s just talk about platform risk right now.

  1. Farmville, a Zynga game, got forced out from using Facebook, and its stock plummeted.
  2. Parler, a right-wing social media site, was taken down by AWS and had to build its own infrastructure.
  3. And Epic, the creator of the game Fortnight, was forced out of Apple app stores.

All three of these were the result of centralized hosting providers. Decentralized hosting providers can provide interoperability, security, transparency, and openness.

Crypto is bad for the environment.

We agree that carbon footprint should be a primary concern when working on any project, and the Internet Computer is thoughtful about how it sips electricity. Bitcoin and Ethereum indeed use a considerable amount of electricity. This is because of their redundant “Proof of Work” model, where many servers compete to do the same work, resulting in the vast power consumption we’ve read about.

The Internet Computer does not work this way — instead, using a modified “proof of stake” system that writes to the blockchain much more efficiently — using by our calculation less than 1/500th of the power consumption per transaction.

But wen moon?!

Again, ICP is not a meme coin or get-rich-quick scheme. Do not count on social media hype-fueled price spikes that benefit the few at the expense of the many. Instead, the Internet Computer is about sustainable growth in price that matches sustainable growth in utility.

ICP is too centralized


Right now? Considering it has only been eight months since the mainnet launch… I don’t think so. I am personally a fan of Progressive Decentralization, and if you look at the history of Ethereum, you will see plenty of examples of this.

So are node providers, boundary nodes, and the NNS follower structure too centralized right now? Yes, for sure. BUT are there concrete things that the DFINITY foundation (and the community) can do right now to improve decentralization? Absolutely. And we are seeing this across the board.

ICP is a scam coin

It’s not. The team that designed the Internet Computer is still around today, working hard on the Internet Computer. Most of the ICP staked at Genesis remain staked for the maximum option of 8 years. Publicly available network dashboards show that no rug pull has occurred.

The DFINITY Foundation also does not control listed market prices for ICP. Check out Kyle Langham’s substack for price and supply analysis for more information.

Doing anything on the blockchain is too slow and expensive.

The Internet Computer was designed from the ground up to fix these problems with blockchain technology. The internet computer uses a “reverse gas fee model,” which means that the cost of doing work on the blockchain is never changed to the end user like it is on Ethereum with gas fees.

Instead, it’s built into the overall hosting cost, with fixed, predictable rates that are designed to scale. It was also built to prioritize speed and security — providing two-second finality times to confirm and write blockchain transactions — making it fast enough to conduct business in real-time.

For more information, please visit:
icp.guide
dfinitycommunity.com
icpjesse.medium.com

Special Thanks:
Tree vector: created by upklyak www.freepik.com
Troll illustration: BeyondTheAle
Music: “Adventure” by Alexander Nakarada serpentsoundstudios.com

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  • Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed on this website are solely those of the original author and other contributors. These views and opinions do not necessarily represent those of the Dfinity Community staff and/or any/all contributors to this site.