A guide to Hive - from my experience

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(Edited)

Introduction

I have helped lots of people to get started on this platform. If you are not used to blockchain platforms then it can be very confusing. I will try to answer questions a newbie might have. My plan is to keep updating this post rather than creating lots. I lose out on rewards doing it that way, but I think it is better to have everything in one place. Feel free to correct me on anything or suggest things to add.

I am not an expert at all the financial aspects of Hive, but I can still earn and enjoy it. I hope this can build into a reference to help others do the same.

A lot of this information can also be found in existing documentation. I would recommend looking at:

Hive

If anyone wants to translate this then please go ahead. I just ask that you mention me, but if you can allocate me a share of the rewards that would be great.

Welcome to Hive

I am assuming you have just acquired an account. Number one priority is to secure your keys. If you lose control of them then you have no access, but someone else may. The owner/master key should only be used for tasks like changing your keys. Never enter it into a site you have not verified. Ideally you should store it somewhere off-line such as a flash drive, with a backup.

What is Hive?

Hive is a blockchain, similar to Bitcoin and Ethereum. It has tokens that you can exchange with other users and buy or sell on exchanges. Some key features that distinguish it from other blockchains are:

  • It does not require massive 'mining' farms that consume lots of energy. The token distribution is via 'proof of brain' where users get to decide who gets them via their votes on content. The more tokens you have staked, the bigger your influence. The block processing is done by 'witnesses' who just need a fairly powerful PC.
  • Transactions are free. Other blockchains charge for transactions, so sending small amounts is not viable. On Hive you could send out fractions of a cent all day and there would be no charge. The transactions are also fast and should only take a couple of seconds to complete.
  • You can earn by posting blogs, writing comments and by voting on that content. All the text is stored on the blockchain and nobody else can remove it.

Key Management

You should get the Hive Keychain extension or mobile app to store your posting, active and memo keys. Then you should not have to actually give your key to dapps (distributed apps). You will just have to give your used name and confirm the transaction to log in. Various blockchain actions, especially those involving moving funds require a transaction to be signed and so you will have to confirm those too.

The various keys are as follows. You will want at least Posing and Active set up in Keychain:

  • Owner: Keep this very safe as it controls all the others. You should only need this when changing your keys. Otherwise never enter it online.
  • Active: Used for any financial operations such as transfers.
  • Posting: Used for posting, commenting and voting.
  • Memo: It is possible to encrypt a message in a funds transfer and this with decode it.

A few dapps use Hive Signer instead. This stores the keys within the browser, but give it the lowest level access necessary.

If someone else created your account and gave you the keys then you should change them. This can be done in Peakd or Hive Wallet. As I said above, keep a secure copy of the new keys.

You may find at first you cannot comment much as you run out of Resource Credits. This is like a battery that powers your account and it needs time to recharge. That happens quicker when you have some Hive Power. If you have none then you can get a free temporary delegation from Gift Giver. I often delegate to new people to get them started. Power up anything you earn and you can stay active.

If you need an account

There is a cost to creating a Hive account, so generally you will have to either pay or give some personal information such as an email address. There are various ways to create an account:

  • Signup for Hive lists several.
  • LeoFinance allows you to create one based on your Facebook or Twitter account.
  • If you have a friend with enough Resource Credits they can create an account for you, but make sure you update the keys. I can do this if necessary.

How do I make money?

This is likely to be one of the first questions. Hive is a blockchain, somewhat like Bitcoin, but unlike many blockchains it allows anyone to earn, so you do not need to actually buy any of the cryptocurrency to get started. When you create a blog post on Hive people can vote on it for a week, after which it will be assigned a share of the daily rewards. How much you get depends on how large a stake those voters hold.

Your funds in Hive fall into one of three main types:

  • HIVE (using caps to distinguish from the platform) is the main currency. When it is in 'liquid' form (not powered up) you can transfer it to another account with zero fees in just a few seconds. The value fluctuates according to how the markets feel.
  • Hive Power (HP) is the 'staked' form of HIVE. You 'power up' to get it. This determines the value of your vote. When a post pays out a share goes to those who voted for it, so as well as rewarding others your can earn from voting. Be very aware that it takes thirteen weeks to totally 'power down', so be sure you do not need the funds urgently. This is partly to prevent speculation by moving between HIVE and HP to take account of price changes. You do earn a form of interest on your HP.
  • Hive Backed Dollars (HBD) is a sort of stable coin that is supposed to stay at around $1. I do not fully understand how that is done, but there will be posts about it. You can move HBD to savings where it earns interest. The rate may seem good, but with careful curation you can earn a decent amount with HP. HBD has no effect on the power of your vote.

Depending on the state of the market your post may pay out in a combination of these three, but there is an option to get it all as HP.

NOTE: The rewards shown on a post are what is split between creator and curators, so you will only get about half that amount after a week.

Some cryptocurrency exchanges support HIVE so you can trade it there. Those I know of include:

These exchanges may require some proof of ID (KYC=Know Your Customer) as they are subject to laws around money laundering. Some may be limited by what country you are in.

There are various ways to convert cryptocurrency to fiat (£/$/€ etc). I use Wirex. I can buy Litecoin with that and convert it via one of the exchanges.

What is a dapp?

Distributed apps are those built on a blockchain and Hive has dozens. You can find most listed on Hive Projects. I will summarise some of the main categories.

Blogging

These dapps let you read, post, comment and vote the social posts of Hive. They all have the same basic functions, so you should try them and see which feels most comfortable.

  • Hive.blog is the default interface, but it still offers all you really need.
  • Peakd is my preferred desktop web interface. It has more options for how you view posts and tools to view your stats.
  • Ecency has a web interface as well as desktop and mobile apps. By using it you earn tokens that can be used to 'boost' posts. They have a microblogging option called Waves.

The are also specialised front ends that are dedicated to particular topics or forms of content. Some have their own tokens you can earn as well as HIVE:

  • 3speak is a video platforms much like Youtube.
  • Leo Finance is all about money, including cryptocurrencies, but also has a microblogging platform called Threads that is for any type of post.
  • STEMGeeks covers science, technology, engineering and maths (or math if you prefer).

More are listed here.

I will say more about blogging later.

Games

There are lots of games on Hive. In these you can earn tokens that can be exchange for HIVE (see below). The games will use the Hive blockchain to hold details of transactions of tokens as well as game items so it is not possible to people to take them from you. I only play a few of the games, so I do not have experience of all of them. These include:

  • Splinterlands is a monster battling card game and the biggest blockchain game out there with hundreds of thousands of players. You choose a set of cards to compete against an opponent, with various criteria, and can win tokens as well as items that include cards. Some of the cards sell for huge amounts. You do have to pay for an initial pack to start playing.
  • Rising Star is based around the music industry. You start as a humble busker and work your way up by running missions. You can buy cards to speed your progress. It is what some may call an 'idle game' in that there is not a lot of interaction, but you still need to find a strategy to progress. There are various optional elements to earn or collect special cards. It is free to start playing.

Other games are listed here.

Statistics

There are lots of online tools to monitor your account. These include:

  • Hive Now
  • Hive Tasks
  • Hive Stats
  • Hive Buzz. This also shows you badges you can earn for achieving various milestones with your account as well as for attending events. Those badges have no monetary value, but people like them anyway.
  • Hive Block Explorer and Hive Blocks show the actual blockchain transactions. This can be useful to see if something got processed.

Should I blog?

Not everyone may consider themselves a blogger, but it is a way that anyone can earn on Hive. It is not necessarily somewhere you would post personal stuff such as pictures of your kids as there are no privacy controls like some of the other platforms. Everything is public and unfiltered. That means people can be nasty if they want to, so it may not be suitable for young kids. Pretty much anything goes, so you can find porn there as well as recipes, art, travel, gaming, politics and anything else you can think of.

I always tell people to make it fun, so you should follow people whose content you enjoy. I would recommend looking at what others do before you dive in. Do not expect to make a lot initially as you have to build an audience. You can do that by engaging with what others do.

A good place to start are the many communities. Many are dedicated to a particular topic. There are some where people just post hoping to get votes, but you may get less engagement there. Note that most communities have rules and moderators can exclude you for breaking those. Peakd and Ecency have the option to cross-post to communities so you do not need to (and should not) duplicate a post. Cross-posting makes a post appear in multiple places, but only earns once. That can get it seen by more people, but putting it in too many may be considered spam.

The Threads (Leo Finance) and Waves (Ecency) microblogging platforms both use comments to store the text so do not get automatic votes. These provide an alternative to other platforms for those who want to post lots of brief updates, links or memes.

There are also many contests offering prizes. With those too you need to check the rules.

The main parts of a post are:

  • The title. This should be something attention grabbing, but be honest rather than spammy.
  • The content. This can include text, images, video (from 3speak, Youtube or elsewhere) and audio (Soundcloud). See this guide on embedding from other sites. Having at least one image can be useful as this appears in the feed. Formatting is done with Markdown, but can include HTML too. This post has lots of tips on formatting.
  • Tags. These are used to help categorise your post, but some can also earn you extra tokens. You should only use tokens that are applicable to the content.

You can post about whatever you like, but you should bear in mind that others will decide the value.

By default posts will pay out in 50% Hive Power and 50% and liquid funds. If you intend to mostly power up you can set a default of 100% HP rewards in the Peakd and Hive.blog settings.

Even if you do not write many posts you should still comment. That can gain you followers and comments can earn good rewards. Make your comments sincere and build conversations rather than just saying variations of 'Nice post!'.

Things to not do

We do have freedom on Hive, but activities that can be seen as cheating or that would bring the platform into disrepute are frowned upon. This is where the dreaded downvotes come into play. Rewards can be removed as well as added and the community gets to decide the value. Any of the following may attract downvotes. Votes affect your reputation score and if it is driven low enough your content is hidden by default. Some such activities include:

  • Plagiarism is taking content by others and presenting it as your own. You can include text and images by others, but you must give attribution and the post should be mostly original content. Some people are very good at tracking down plagiarism even when it is translated from another language.
  • Impersonation is pretending to be someone else and we have have plenty of apparent celebrities appear who turned out to be fakes. One way to prove your identity is to link to your Hive account from another site you control that can be trusted. That could be a social media account with lots of followers. You can verify yourself with Hive Watchers. They are a group who look out for abuse of the platform. You really do not want to get on their blacklist.
  • Abusing votes. People will try all sorts of activities such as voting for themselves (including via proxies). Your post rewards are supposed to be based on what others think. There are bots that give out votes for using a tag, but ensure your post is valid for that tag or you may get blacklisted.
  • Recycling content. Posting the same item again is frowned upon unless there are major revisions. This is why it is important to build your audience before posting all you have.
  • Attacking others. If you are going to start fights then be ready for trouble, especially if it is with a big account. They can wipe you out if they want to.
  • If you post more than you comment then you are doing Hive wrong. Engage!

Basically if you try to cheat the system you are likely to be found out.

Curation

When you start off you will probably have very little HP, so I would not worry too much about voting. Your voting power decreases with each vote and gradually recharges. You can give ten full votes per day and be back to full in 24 hours. You can check your voting power in some of the dapps and I suggest keeping it above 70%. When your vote is small I would suggest just voting on posts rather than comments as there is a payout threshold.

Accounts can delegate HP to boost your vote. You can get a temporary boost from Gift Giver. If you delegate to certain accounts they will pay you, but you may prefer to keep control over what you vote on.

You can automate your vote with Hive Vote to vote for everything someone posts or to follow the voting trail of someone else. To maximise your returns you need to be a content discoverer. If you vote on something before the big guns get there then you make more.

Secondary tokens

I have mentioned that you can earn various tokens from games and by using tags. These can be traded on Hive Engine. As with any exchange prices can fluctuate. Some tokens can be staked to allocate them to posts you vote on. Others allow for giving of tips via comments. A recent addition is Hivebits that can give you a token once per day if you use a command in a comment.

I suggest looking into the various tokens and see what tags others use. Some are for specific purposes and you can get blacklisted for abusing them.

Tags such as #proofofbrain #palnet #neoxian can be used on just about any post.

I see people who seem to be relying mostly on such tags to earn, but I would always recommend trying to get human followers who will vote for you. Otherwise your earning potential can be very limited. I see some just boosting their posts with Ecency tokens that they buy, but that may have a low profit margin.

Hive Engine uses a form of HIVE called SWAP.HIVE. They charge 1% to convert between those, but Bee Swap charges 0.25% or HivePay at 0.2%. You can buy and sell tokens for SWAP.HIVE. You should check the prices and amounts available when doing this. It may appear that a token has a high value, but that may just mean that someone is trying to sell it at a high price and there may not be any buyers.

Witnesses

The witnesses are the people who process the blockchain. This can be done on a powerful PC and they do get paid for it. The users get to vote for up to thirty witnesses. The top ones earn the most and also get to decide what changes should be applied to the system. Check the list and see what they do. You can select someone as a witness voting proxy for you.

You can see who I vote for if you scroll down on my Hiveblocks page. I do update my votes from time to time. You should check if witnesses have gone inactive and try to use all thirty votes.

Discord

A lot of discussion about Hive projects happens over on Discord to avoid cluttering up the blockchain, so get an account and go there if you cannot find the help you need in posts. Most are very helpful to newbies.

Links

I will include links to other posts that are worth a read:

Translations:

Have fun

I always say this to people. When you start our on Hive you may not make much, so you try to enjoy it as you would other social media that does not pay you at all. Get your friends on board and seek out others who share your interests. We have people from all over the world and so you may well make new friends. There have been international meetups (both physical and virtual) where you can actually talk to these people. This is a social platform and being anti-social will not get you far.



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117 comments
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I like the way this was written, thanks for posting!
I'll be sharing this for sure. <3

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Cheers. I'm trying to make it understandable. I am still learning stuff.

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Very easy to understand guide. Shall be sharing this with mates that ask me what the heck I do lol.

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This was enlightening even for me.
Thank you for this.

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Thanks for the enlightenment man

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Nice post. Lots of good stuff in there. I think you have handled it pretty well. Covered just about everything I can think of. I think it would be really cool if we had some kind of mentor program here on Hive. I think 10k Minnows kind of fills that, but maybe something a bit more. I was just thinking about my worker and how well he has been doing here on Hive. I remember back to when I started and it was pretty horrible. I think my tutelage has helped him be more successful than I was when I started. I think more people need that.

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I'm working with one guy right now and that inspired this. People need to find their own way eventually, but it is a steep learnng curve.

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Yeah, for sure. That is why it is important to guide those who are new. If would have had a "me" when I started, who knows where I would be!

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Thanks Steve, a very helpful and informative post

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(Edited)

I !LUV this! Thanks @steevc. I shall be sharing with others 😃

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Cheers. I hope it's useful to them. !BEER

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@blackdaisyft & @arashthr this is really useful. If you haven't seen it yet I highly recommend reading. And don't worry if you don't understand everything in here (I don't!) but there may be answers to several questions you might have. And there are some very useful "do's and don'ts" as well as "how things work in Hiveland" here.

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If anything is unclear let me know and I will try to improve it.

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Thanks Steve. No, I think it's great. It's more that our new Hivians both have English as a second (or third!) language. And we're all still learning much of the jargon so I think it just takes time and exposure, hey?

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I am happy for anyone to translate this as long as they mention me.

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Yes! I finally know what curation means (how and why I received curation rewards it's another matter 😅)

Really helpful guide and I bookmarked it so I can review or send it to other newbies like myself. And also to keep an eye for possible updates. @steevc really great idea for updating the same post 👍 much easier to have all the basic information to start in one place!

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Ok, more questions. How do you bookmark posts @blackdaisyft? Since you now know things on here I don't, please teach me! 😄😁😊

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Perfect! I have the chance now to give something back for all your teachings 🙏 I don't know the technical words but I use PeakD interface mostly. When you open a post you have a little bookmark sign next on the top right side of the screen 👇

bookmark.png

In PeakD I see you can also bookmark comments 😀 Hope it helps!

Hugs 🤗

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@samsmith1971 have you seen this? I know you're always helping newbies, so I thought of you! 😍🤗😘

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hi thanks for the tag, I have now bookmarked Steve's post. I also use Ryzeonline's guides. Both have their place 🙂 I probably should have shared the links to those with you! (she heads off to grab them and drop them on one of Caroline's posts 😂)

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Fabulous Steve. This is great for beginners. I think you have chosen the right approach to keep everything on one post that you keep updating... I mean people can always still support your updates through the comments ;-) I would! !PIZZA !ALIVE

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Great summary! I really appreciate the links to more information like other games and statistics.

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Excellent post and for sure helpful to newbies, thanks for your guidance over 5 years ago.

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We've all learnt so much, but nobody knows it all. It can be hard to help someone find their way, so I felt I needed to write stuff down.

Hope it's all good with you.

!BEER

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Everything is public and unfiltered. That means people can be nasty if they want to, so it may not be suitable for young kids.

This nasty thing is unfortunately true for most other social media platforms, including even multiplayer video games. Young children without control/supervision are in danger on the internet.

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Even though I have been a part of Hive for nearly 4 years it was good to read your post of the do's and don'ts. I vividly recall being told to vote for myself hearing that it was the norm and so I have. But, it is obviously time I stopped!
I enjoy writing and connecting with others, meeting many very interesting friendly supportive and kind people along the way, many of whom I still remain friends with.
Thanks for the post @steevc, have a happy day.

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I will admit I self-voted in the early days, but then I was making nothing. Since my vote has been worth something it just felt wrong and I can do a lot of good voting for others. I still earn from the curation. If I see a post with a big self-vote then I probably won't add to that. Just my preference.

!BEER

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Sorry I missed this one when it was new - super helpful and well written guide - thanks @steevc

!PIZZA !BEER

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No problem. Cheers for the !BEER

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Sorry, out of BEER, please retry later...

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Oh no! Where has all the BEER gone!

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Very informative and useful from someone that just started out in hive. Thanks.

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This is a very good article about HIVE. Can I translate it into Japanese to attract new users? I will add your original article in English, of course. 😉😉 🥦 !LUV 🥦

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Please do. Just include a link to mine.

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This is a fantastic post. Now that I have been here for a couple of months actively, I have got my head around the terms etc. One thing I have noticed is that voting on comments for little accounts like mine is a total waste of time, so save your votes for posts.
I could not see a link to a list of witnesses to vote on, maybe you could include that in future?
Have bookmarked this and will be back to check and refresh myself. Thank you:)

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You can see my witness votes if you scroll down here. People can use me as a proxy voter, but I think it is worth looking at what each witness does. I support those who I see making contributions I value.

!BEER

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okay, that is excellent, cheers for that😁

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I added it to the post.

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brilliant thank you, that was a quality article

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I didn't read through all the comments so in not sure if someone already mentioned this. However, I think it's important to point out in an article like this that HP is not only for vote value, it also determines RC which are required for everything you do on chain.

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I could mention RCs too. That is important for newbies.

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Great post @steevc I’m going to read it a couple of times to get a full understanding of how this all works. I’ve been on here for 2 days now and the sign up I think I happened to complete by luck, not sure if I have set it up people but I’ll get there. But anyway thanks mate.

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The main thing is to ensure your keys are safe as you need to avoid risk of losing your account. Take your time finding your way around and have fun.

Let me know if anything is unclear.

!BEER

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Hello , This post is fantastic, I am on your account at the suggestion of user@bozz from which I am learning very interesting things, if I had seen this post last month when I started on hive it would have helped me a lot however, it is still useful to me, I I would like to ask you something, regarding what you say about voting before a whale arrives, I knew about the hard fork and they mention in that update about the fact of voting for a publication after 24 hours and that you win the same of course depending on the hp, please? can you clarify this for me? and about the witnees, I have voted for 5, that should be done only once a month for each witness? I thank you very much. I am new and enjoying the fact of interacting, in other social networks I have spent enough time without reward in return, so it seems to me a great opportunity to be on hive.

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@bozz is a great guy who I talk to a lot.

I am happy the post has been useful. I would not worry too much about when you vote for now as it will make little difference. Just vote on posts you enjoy. You can vote for comments, but they may not earn enough to pay out.

Your witness votes last forever until you change them. Just see what they do that you think needs encouragement.

Have fun on Hive!

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Thank you for your answer, I will follow your instructions, it is a pleasure to follow you!

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I don't claim to be an expert, but I do have experience here and I try to pass that on so people don't make the mistakes I did. Success does not come overnight, so enjoy the journey.

!BEER

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What you mention is important, I consider as long as you have knowledge in an area, experience and results, it is not necessary to be a guru, there will always be someone who wants to know what we know! Thanks!

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Some tokens can be staked to allocate them to posts you vote on.

I've unstaked all of my various tokens on hive engine as I discovered that I may have staked them incorrectly?

What happened? So I staked some waiv to waiv instead of my account.
This is what I usually do with the other tokens.

E.g. if I have Pal tokens I stake them to Pal. By staking we usually get a return on the staked tokens? Or so I thought.

When I staked the waiv to waiv it went into the waiv account with no way to unstake them?

It would help to have some clear advice on the proper staking process.


I.e. who to stake too?

Excellent post @steevc I'll share this post to the people that have been asking me about crypto and how hive works.

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I stake to myself and seem to get some rewards. Some people create a special account for each token, but I'm not that bothered.

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Yeah it's weird? Looks like I've been doing this whole staking thing wrong for 5+ years lol? 😂😂👨‍💻🤦‍♂️👍

Luckily none of it makes any difference to me either. 😊👍

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This is the best Introduction I've seen - great that it gets around both Hive Engine and the Discord communication. I missed it in January, but I'll bookmark so I can link to it if I get someone onboard.

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If there's anything missing then please let me know. I plan to keep updating it.

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I will if I come up with something... Unlikely as that is :)

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Good information here. Another possibility for keeping all information in one place is to make a collection of individual posts. You can do that if you use PeakD. The way you are doing it is just as effective and may be even more simple for new users. I'm just pointing out another option.

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Others have done that. I'm happy doing it this way for now.

!BEER

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Thank you Steve, a very enjoyable read which verified some of my assumptions and added to my knowledge of Hive.

It was a reyt rivetting read as the yocals would say.

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5 years this has been happening to me, it started here, around people that are still here. Homeland security has done nothing at all, they are not here to protect us. Dont we pay them to stop shit like this? The NSA, CIA, FBI, Police and our Government has done nothing. Just like they did with the Havana Syndrome, nothing. Patriot Act my ass. The American government is completely incompetent. The NSA should be taken over by the military and contained Immediately for investigation. I bet we can get to the sources of V2K and RNM then. https://peakd.com/gangstalking/@acousticpulses/electronic-terrorism-and-gaslighting--if-you-downvote-this-post-you-are-part-of-the-problem

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5 years this has been happening to me, it started here, around people that are still here. Homeland security has done nothing at all, they are not here to protect us. Dont we pay them to stop shit like this? The NSA, CIA, FBI, Police and our Government has done nothing. Just like they did with the Havana Syndrome, nothing. Patriot Act my ass. The American government is completely incompetent. The NSA should be taken over by the military and contained Immediately for investigation. I bet we can get to the sources of V2K and RNM then. https://peakd.com/gangstalking/@acousticpulses/electronic-terrorism-and-gaslighting--if-you-downvote-this-post-you-are-part-of-the-problem

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5 years this has been happening to me, it started here, around people that are still here. Homeland security has done nothing at all, they are not here to protect us. Dont we pay them to stop shit like this? The NSA, CIA, FBI, Police and our Government has done nothing. Just like they did with the Havana Syndrome, nothing. Patriot Act my ass. The American government is completely incompetent. The NSA should be taken over by the military and contained Immediately for investigation. I bet we can get to the sources of V2K and RNM then. https://peakd.com/gangstalking/@acousticpulses/electronic-terrorism-and-gaslighting--if-you-downvote-this-post-you-are-part-of-the-problem

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Thanks for the informative post @steevc. I was on Steem a few years back and have just returned. It's amazing how much you forget. But then again, I'm not sure I understood much more than posting and commenting back then, and that's probably what I'll stick to this time around, as that's what I enjoy the most.

I haven't posted yet on Hive, but have joined DreemPort and become an active commentator on the five posts I get a day from that site. I'll probably have to read your post a few times before it all truly sinks in. Lol! There seems to be a lot for me still to learn. 😀

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There is a lot to learn, but you can get by with a few basics. Hive is growing all the time.

Have fun!

!BEER

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This was a fantastic post Steve. It took me time to sit down and grok Hive, but your post made my life very simple. I am sure there is a lot of questions that will pop up in my head as I start living in this ecosystem, but my thanks to you for starting me off on this journey.
Ta mate!
Cheers!!!

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I have seen a lot of people rush into Hive and make the wrong impression. It's worth taking your time. It's all about people and you have to find ways to connect. It's standard to do an intro post so others know what you are about. Shoot me any questions you have.

!BEER (something else to check out)

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Very nice introduction. Thanks for that. I used to be active on #Steemit a long time ago and finally managed to create an account here as well. Things seem to have changed quite a bit and I'll need some time to get used to the changes.

I signed up via @peakd. This option is free but doesn't seem to be listed on https://signup.hive.io/. Are there any disadvantages associated with that way of creating new account?

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Could you not access your old account on Hive? It should have migrated across with equivalent funds. Hive has a lot more going on with the various dapps. We have microblogging in various forms.

I have not used a lot of the account creation methods as I can create them with RCs. I would hope others have done tutorials on the alternatives.

Have fun.

!BEER

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You're right. I could have done that. But I wanted to start from scratch again to see how the experience for new users is.

So far, I have to admit that the initial user experience is horrible if you sign up via @peakd and run out of resource credits after a few clicks and then have to wait two days to be able to interact again with people. 😁

This is very frustrating for newbies or is there anything obvious I'm missing here? I understand that resource credits are related to the funds in ones wallet but penalizing engagements of new users still seems counter-intuitive to me.

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There has to be something like this or people would create lots of accounts to spam. I have delegated to you, so you can be more active. There are various projects that will delegate to newbies. Some of those look out for people signing up to offer help.

We can now delegate RCs instead of HP for accounts that do not need voting power.

Did you recover the funds of your old Hive account?

!PIZZA

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Thank you so much for delegating RCs. That's very much appreciated. 🙏 I didn't attempt yet to save any funds from my old account but there wasn't much on it anyways...

I see that many things have changed indeed. It's a bit like #Mastodon: Cozy but not too newbie-friendly. ;)

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Each platform has its own flavour. I find a lot of Masto people to be very hostile to crypto, but that may be based on lack of knowledge and general FUD. We know it's not all scams. I still see potential in Hive and I've got a lot of friends here, so it's worth my time.

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I agree completely. I wrote an article about this some time ago but so far nobody has bothered to address my arguments in any way, shape or form 😉.

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I expect not many people saw your post, but discovery on Hive is lacking.

I skimmed the article your were answering and your document. There are lots of dimensions to the arguments about web3, as you covered:

  • Environmental. Not such an issue for Hive
  • Technical. I think Hive can handle a lot of transactions, but there will be limits.
  • Security. Either we let someone else have ultimate control of our accounts or we take responsibility. For the latter it helps to have some ways to recover it if you get 'p0wned'.
  • Scams. It can be hard to know if the people behind a blockchain have good intentions, but that can also apply to corporate platforms. You may not always have ways to chase them through the legal system.
  • Political. The freedom of blockchain can attract 'alternative' beliefs and some will be put off by that. The Fediverse seems full of open source believers who can have fixed views on how things should be.
  • etc etc

Some people are never going to accept that crypto/web3 is a solution to anything, but I think it has a place for those who accept its limitations. Personally I have been put off corporate platforms by things like Google shutting them down and the descent of Twtr.

I think Hive answers a few of the criticisms and is the best solution I have found to many of the general social network issues.

I will say that I was a fan of Web3.0 semantic technologies and played with some of them. I saw a talk by someone about that at a blockchain conference a few years back, so it may still be actively developed.

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Very well written. There's nothing to add from my side and I completely agree. Nothing is perfect and Hive certainly isn't a substitute for any of the big social networks. But it can be an interesting addition if you handle its limitations with care.

Thanks a loot for your reblog. 👍

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