TLDR

I think v4v means that you will commit work even if the full value will not be returned for a while or at all. That you will encourage people to pay you back at the price point they find appropriate and not a price tag that you put. I’d be interested what nostr:npub1vwymuey3u7mf860ndrkw3r7dz30s0srg6tqmhtjzg7umtm6rn5eq2qzugd thinks. He isn’t taking any advertisement money for his podcast that he made 1000+ episodes off, and I doubt he is making more than paying the electricity bill for the hour he’s recording and paying back the equipment.

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Discussion

What is value, and who determines it?

Your kids lumpy pencil holder is valuable to you. To me, it's a child's unskilled art project. What makes it valuable?

I spend 8 hours making a chair, I think it's worth $1200. You can buy a chair for $50 from Ikea. Why is my chair worth $1200, and why would you give me $1200 for it?

Now, where it gets interesting, is my examples are one offs that have a definite amount of time, material and energy that went into them. What do you do with a digital object that can be reproduced indefinitely?

If a digital object took me 8 hours to make, is it still worth the $1200 I'd like to get in exchange for my time?

What if 1 million people see it, should they each pay me a fraction of a cent? Could one person pay me $1200 and everyone else gets to consume it for free?

What if only three of the million that see it think it's valuable to their life, how much should they pay?

Are there other things people can do that provide me value that aren't monetary?

Could they promote my work or repurpose it or make artwork for it?

Is their labor in support of my work valuable?

How do you determine value when it can be copied indefinitely with no additional cost to you?