[OBORONA-SPAM] ? this should be a false positive answer inline.. Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email. ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ On Sunday, February 2, 2020 12:20 AM, Zenaan Harkness <zen@freedbms.net> wrote:
On Sat, Feb 01, 2020 at 10:24:33AM +0000, other.arkitech wrote:
I do share the code with devs for specific patches under NDA.
NDA? LMAO! Frankly, at this point I should tell you to get lost.
said who?
There might be something lost in language barrier - or not, not sure here.
There are perhaps not many "hard core floss devs" willing to sign an NDA with you.
The question folks will want answered is "why should I sign an NDA, just to look at code or to write some modules?"
But again, perhaps we are missing something between the language barriers...
Knowing the following getting repetitive, I strongly suggest beginning discussions on the real fundamentals - some are simply not grasping that your "virtual/ collective/ public ledger taxation" model is something we want to get on board with.
It might be - but such a "might be" must live in the minds of those you want to convince to join you, see?
Such conversations might best be started with questions.
Here's one such hypothetical beginning:
Do we consider roads to be "public infrastructure"?
In what ways can we pay for roads?
Do we want more roads?
What criteria should we use for deciding amongst the different ways to pay for new roads?
Good luck,
Thanks for changing route Zen, As Punk-Stasi points out the Public System definition is vague at this point. what this USPS proposes is a bottom-up approach to a Public System, starting from the fundamentals. The proposal is to replace current Governments with a low-cost distributed machine that would collect inputs and produce outputs in infinite loop. A system that would have a real view of the 'common interest' because it would not apply filters in people's input. The system would be able to let people decide whether if a 'road' is convenient or not, and how to fund it. Everything is better compared to our current model of participation in the society based on ticking a box every 4 or 5 years.