a POS blockchain secured by X or 100 X amount of dollars?
Do I launch in a network used by Y or 100 Y number of users (my potential clients)?
Do I launch in a system that is interoperable or that can only talk to itself?
As you can see, some of the "features" of retail adoption are also selling points for enterprise adoption.
Most enterprises will care little about those points. Main items of importance include: - 9/10 enterprises will want to launch in hybrid, keeping items of proprietary importance under their complete control - attributes of interest to an enterprise customer will involve security, maintainability, upgradability, and reliability, cost of deployment, cost of operation - $$ do not secure a blockchain, cryptography does — they will potentially have an interest in post-quantum readiness - do I need to teach my staff an entirely new technology, or can it be deployed using existing language skills and development tools? - what level of training and support is available? - does the product include adequate documentation and other materials in addition to direct support? - what is the project track record of fixing bugs/issues as they inevitably arise? Are these corrected in a timely manner? - what degree of interoperability is there for integration with my existing systems - how will deploying this technology enable our organization to expand/grow/save $ going forward — what are the tangible benefits and competitive advantage gained?
I've written proof of stake solutions. You could look at the code until you are blue in the face, and nowhere in there does it have a mention of dollars
I would need ~ 100 million dollars to buy 33% of staked CSPR vs ~ 20 billion dollars to buy 33% of staked Ether and halt (or worse) each chain.
It doesn't work like that. The price would skyrocket as you keep buying.
Proportionally for each chain described above I presume.
I wrote a similar post a few days ago.
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