Should the test run fail due to lacking participation, I will take that as a vote against truly distributed, OpenSource Exchanges and for the control of Bitcoin through the corporate state. Consequently, I'll withdraw.
So to move this discussion a bit ahead in what maybe the right direction, would you please detail how the reward system in ZeroReserve works and how it would facilitate adoption?
The routing of payments can carry a small fee. This fee is currently set to "0". the plan is to enable fees and let the market regulate them once Payments can go through multiple routes, so nodes can choose the cheapest route.
The more payments you route, the more you earn.I expect the network topology to move outwards from a "kernel". As the network grows, these nodes at the topological center are more likely to route payments than newer nodes. That is particularly true if you developed strong business relations with your peers and have substantial credit. Large credit makes a route more likely.
There is also the fact that credit is not necessarily symmetric, not even mutual. Participants may know you and grant you credit, even though you don't know them and therefore do not grant them credit.
Your work and your contribution is truly appreciated.
There is only one way to show appreciation. Follow the "Getting Started" guide (link in the signature) and send your Certificate to
3f40a66fa91aba29487cc6ac938d0687@ns3.ativel.comIn case anyone wonders why this email address looks weird - the email is going into the Retroshare Network, where it is untraceable. The mailbox is actually a Retroshare GXS ID. There are other reasons to install Retroshare than just Zero Reserve. Untraceable Email is one of them.