Indeed, those do seem to be the choices. I'll hold on to them to see if a use case appears. ๐ ๐ ๐ โจ ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
Indeed, those do seem to be the choices. I'll hold on to them to see if a use case appears. ๐ ๐ ๐ โจ ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
Simply awarding a badge to the top holders of a token (such as HBIT) is enough motivation for Hive users who are interested in the token to buy (more of) it and hold it. ๐ค
!WEED
!PIZZA
Indeed, I've noticed that. I've learned to be very discerning with layer-2 projects, because I've seen so many fail, especially as of late. ๐๐๐โจ๐ค
!ALIVE
!PIZZA
Hope that the HBIT project won't be one of those projects that would fail! ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
Me too! The main point of failure for layer-2 projects is that most of them are run by only one individual. Those that have multiple people as a solid team, fair better. ๐ ๐ ๐ โจ ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
I wonder which Hive token tipping projects are not (mostly or fully) run by only one person. ๐ค๐คฏ๐
!LUV
!PIZZA
I don't think that I am aware of any tipping projects that aren't solo run, which is indeed a bugger, especially over the long term. ๐ ๐ ๐ โจ ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
@savvyplayer should add on the post about Hive tipping tokens who the human operator(s) of each tipping bot is, so that Hive users are better informed of who manages each Hive tipping project. ๐ค๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA
That's actually a very good idea, as that is very helpful and useful information to share with people. ๐๐๐โจ๐ค
!LUV
!PIZZA