If the dev doesn't follow the rules he set out to do I could hard fork it and invalidate the premined coins. Is everyone ok with that?
Surely that would destroy the coin's whole declared purpose and uniqueness.
Only uniqueness is phony story for 50% premined.
DEV's have only vague claims about giveaway to all Icelanders. In reality, most of the Islanders WON'T claim their coins. In reality DEV's can't GUARANTEE anything. DEV's can't even guarantee that claims would be made by Iceleanders, as it's not really that hard to generate thousands of fake ID's.
DEV's doesn't have government issued way to verify nationality of people claiming coins.
Look at Iceland ID format:
THIS IS PURE SCAM or DEV's are totally retarded.Iceland
Main article: Kennitala
All Icelanders, as well as foreign citizens residing in Iceland and corporations and institutions, have a Personal Identification Number (Icelandic: Kennitala, lit. identification number) identifying them in the National Registry. The number is composed of 10 digits, of which the first six are the individual's birth date in the format DDMMYY. The next two digits are chosen at random when the kennitala is allocated, the 9th digit is a check digit, and the last digit indicates the century in which the individual was born (for instance, '9' for the period 1900-1999, or '0' for the period 2000-2099). An example would be 120174-3389, the person being born on the twelfth day of January 1974. The Icelandic system is similar to that in other Scandinavian and European countries, but the use of the identification number is unusually open and extensive in Iceland. Businesses and universities use the kennitala as a customer or student identifier, and all banking transactions include it. The National Registry (Icelandic: Þjóðskrá) oversees the system. A database matching names to numbers is freely accessible (after login) on all Icelandic online banking sites. Given this openness, the Kennitala is never used as an authenticator. It is worth noting that the completeness of the National Registry eliminates any need for Iceland to take censuses.