Write up in Yahoo Finance related to the recent HIVE/STEEM happenings

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The FREE PRESS continues to roll on...

One of the main positives out of all this drama surrounding HIVE and STEEM is that they got a ton of free press.

Steem actually has gotten more free press and more people talking about it than at any other point in its 4 year history.

And that is saying something considering it was one of the most valuable projects in all of crypto when it first launched back in 2016.

With the recent steemit.com acquisition by Justin Sun and the subsequent chain split, steem has never been more talked about.

And if we have learned nothing from Donald Trump over the last 4 years, getting people to talk about you is the most important thing, whether it's good news or bad news they are talking about is less important, just get em to talk about you.

Well, steem has done that in spades over the last month.

The latest free press comes for both HIVE and STEEM comes in the form of a lengthy write up seen in Yahoo Finance.

The write up in its entirety can be seen below...

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It’s been a week since the community that drove the Steem blockchain largely broke off to form Hive, and the market action so far has been on the side of the dissidents.

Hive tokens are trading at $0.321 versus steem at $0.168, according to CoinGecko at the time of this writing. The upstart is almost twice as valuable as the original blockchain.

“This is a true show of how a community can’t be bought,” Dan Hensley, a major holder of steem, and now hive, told CoinDesk.

Related: Steem Fork Faces Legal Threat From Mining Firm Over ‘Hive’ Name

To very quickly recap this saga: Steem is a public blockchain largely launched by Steemit, the company, which ran the user interface that made it known as a blockchain for bloggers. Steemit owned enough steem tokens to influence governance, but it never exercised them. Then, following long-term financial stress, the company sold to Justin Sun’s Tron Foundation, which began to make moves to use those tokens to change how Steem worked. A group of developers opted to hard fork the blockchain and create new interfaces for it rather than continue to wrestle with Sun, which led to the blockchain now known as Hive.

“Justin Sun promised to pump our bags and we chose the hard unknown route. And for our price to be above steem from the get-go is a testament to the community,” Hensley said.

The Tron Foundation did not respond to a request for comment from CoinDesk and has not responded to multiple requests throughout the reporting of this story.

Contentious split
When Hive split, it copied the blockchain so that all the content published on Steem would belong again to Hive users, with the exception of the balances that had been controlled by the now-Sun-controlled Steemit Inc. and its so-called “ninja-mined stake.”

Related: Steem Hard Forks Today Over Fears of Justin Sun Power Grab

Meanwhile, a lot of the major pillars of the community are moving over to Hive, and major holders of steem tokens have begun making moves to exit their positions.

“While it’s very entertaining to see Hive trade so much higher than Steem, I wouldn’t give it too much weight until there’s more time for it to play out,” crypto trader Brian Krogsgard told CoinDesk via email. “I presume the Steem 3X from March 18th was related to the snapshot. Whoever got left holding that after it came down could become motivated sellers of Hive if it stays elevated.”

Exits on either side won’t happen as suddenly as they could on other blockchains, however, because many Steem believers have had their tokens staked as “steem power.” It takes 13 weeks to fully unstake tokens that have been staked. They open up in weekly tranches. Airdropped Hive will also be staked.

Hensley said his first tranche is being liberated today and he plans to unload thousands of dollars worth of steem onto the market and will continue to do so until it’s gone.

Steem (and now Hive) operate using the delegated proof-of-stake (DPoS) consensus model, where a relatively small number of nodes have outside power over what happens on the blockchain. The fork has led to some particularly blockchainy quirks. For example, any tokens that were staked on Steem are now staked on Hive as well.

The upshot of this is that crypto exchange Binance, for example, is not able to move all of its token holdings yet. It decided to support the hard fork by allocating the hive airdrop to its users, despite having initially backed the Tron Foundation in its bid to sway Steem governance.

Steemit running scared?
Steemit is behaving defensively.

The official Steemit channel on the website acknowledged that it had started censoring posts that had encouragied Steemit users to exit for for Hive.

The Steemit post sought to defend the company’s actions, stating:

“Would any commercial website support a post that encourages all users to migrate to another one? No. That would not be in the best interest of the community and the Steem ecosystem.”

Several members of the Steem community have since asked CoinDesk to flag the censorship, with many posts having disappeared from the site. As one longtime Steem user noted on Twitter, Steemit’s terms of service have been updated with the following:

“Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, you agree that you will not: … Use our services to promote third-party platforms or to promote each other without our written permission.”

Hensley noted that some alternatives for content makers are already up and running, including PeakD, Hive Blog and 3speak. Because Hive’s genesis ported old content over to the new blockchain, existing Steemit posts should be there on Hive user interfaces.

“I think with the community exodus many people are ‘powering down’ and selling steem as fast as they can, which puts a lot of sell pressure,” Roeland Lanparty, a long-time witness on Steem who shut down his node right after the hard fork, told CoinDesk in an email.

Lanparty says users are now using BlockTrades to trade their steem for more hive tokens.

“I started a full power-down early last week and have already sold my first 1/13th of stake (not financial advice),” he wrote.

(Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/splinter-cryptocurrency-hive-outperforms-justin-215211335.html)

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All publicity is good publicity!

Stay informed my friends.

-Doc



9 comments
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All we need to continue doing is to keep responding to all STEEM related posts, but only on the HIVE blockchain. That will cause some "lockdown" on the STEEM blockchain press...

Also, one of the major drivers of survival of STEEM is Steem-Engine still being active. If that one would have migrated from the start, STEEM would be mostly inactive. Most users using STEEM have probably only reasons to transact there, due Steem-Engine. So, once that player moves... that's it. My view!

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I'm feeling really caught in the middle. I have been posting for 2.5 years to a ghost town on steemit and feel like hive will turn into much the same thing lol. It will take a ton of work for hive to gain some mass appeal. Im thinking about dumping some of my liquid hive but dont know how. Blocktrades doesn't five the price advertised on coingecko. I also wonder if I should sell my liquid steem but the price seems crazy low. However I fee that it will go to zero.

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I've been posting four years to Steem and now have migrated over to Hive. I see no ghost town, but a strong vibrant community that can weather big storms. Will it ever be bigger than Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, ect.? Who knows. Will go away any time soon? Definitely no.

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Go home Justin Sun you're drunk!

$rewarding 100%

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It's good to see the initial momentum here from the community, but there is still a loooooong way to go. Referencing your price point, it is a very misguided statement saying that Hive has double the value steem does. There is no liquid market to sell Hive right now and the volume is almost nothing. Right now it seems that most people on the Hive chain are just ecstatic at this new chain, lets wait a little while and see what the actual results are. A large portion of Hive is still owned by a very few elite, so I'm not sure how much different this chain will become as the type of governance is only slightly more decentralized than Steem

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It's true, despite being one of the best blockchain projects, Steemit didn't have the consideration it deserved. Only the acquisition of Sun has made much talk about blockchain social networks.

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Hello @jasonshick,

I agree with you. We should wait until the euphoria of the hive users cools down after the fork. The oligarchs of HIVE are hyping the price of HIVE with their posts. My advice as a former trader: Never buy coins that are heavily promoted! Most of the time these are pump and dumps.

I will wait until the deposits and withdrawals on binance and huobi are open again. Because these exchanges are the one with the main volume. Then we will see the real price discovery and development!

I hope that both coins will perform good in longterm.

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We now need a plan to keep Hive in the news after everyone bores of Justin Sun's stupidity.

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