I wonder how long it will be before I get kicked out of the local blockchain meetup for asking difficult questions.

Tomorrow's topic is DAOs and I plan on asking about hostile takeovers, discussion and debate before votes, spam votes, attack proposals (which have been successful in the real world, what problem DAOs are solving (counterfeit votes?), and the idea that every person needs to be informed and vote of every thing is inefficient, exhausting and unsustainable.

This isn't the first time I've shown up with a bunch of pointed questions either. So if they don't get sick of me at some point, I guess I'll have to conclude that my [largely critical] input is valued.

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You know how it is; the one who shatters the "happyness" is the first to go...

Dr. Hax is so disruptive...

How disruptive is he?

He's so disruptive, he got kicked off of Nostr! 🥁📀

OK, and with that, I'll see myself out. GN #Nostr

Difficult questions tend to be informative for the most people in the long run, because they inspire (or provoke if you will) people to think for themselves.