Maza has had plenty of publicity.
What it lacks is credibility because nobody has started promoting it adequately among the tribes.
When someone seriously starts promoting it as a tribal currency it will jump to the sky. I'm willing to donate a fair amount of my coins to a solid distribution effort but it has to be directly to people for whom the coin is intended.
A lot of MZC holders are probably willing to donate substantially to distributing the coin but it has to be in a practical way.
With Mazacoin being SHA-256, same as bitcoin,
how many of the miners, do you think, are actually native indians?
Isn't it just bitcoin miners, who then mine any old SHA-256 coin?
The miners get their hands on the coins before anyone else does,
what if most of the miners are actually non-indians?
Wouldn't it make sense, to have an indian coin,
where it is the indians who do all the mining,
therefore the indians get their hands on the coin first?
I don't think there is any controls over who mines the coins though,
so although it is named after something indian,
it might actually be anyone on the internet(including non-indians)
who actually are mining the coin.