HOLOCHAIN

>Great, I'm sure that will be speedy as hell

If people come, the infrastructure will come too, just give it time

Don't you see how big this can be? We could build fucking communities that the users will host, so no more bullshit of moot being held by the FBI or something like that

You people are on Jow Forums, the first on the line to benefit from something like this, free speech heaven

Even more impressive will be proposing them to IEEE, having them accepted, and THEN having ISPs support this new decentralised-by-design Internet which Fortune 500 and government spying agencies will do ANYTHING to prevent.

I already told you that Jow Forums won't work for this, because it's design to be anonymous. The privacy layer you described won't work because, again, the Internet is centralised by design. Tor and I2P make it difficult to trace people, but not impossible. And they're slow as fuck!
This is already possible with Ethereum smart contracts anyway, it's just not scalable.

>Said every extinct industry since the invention of the internet

No.
It's a waste of time to even read your shill shit.

The Internet gave companies and governments far more power. Everything has changed since the Internet was introduced, it's not so easy anymore.

I understand your hype, but it really is as simple as wires and servers. You're always going to need more of them, and they're going to consolidate eventually, and that means centralization

This is just another layer adding bloat to the internet

Tor makes almost impossible, don't lie to yourself that it's just hard, I can't even wrap my head of how you need to watch both nodes to see if they make some sort of 'equal bump' on the network to see if they match and then maybe go from there, it takes so much time and money

If you can't see how this can benifit everyone specially in this days of pc bullshit, you're blind with hate for crypto (I get it, I hate it too)

You really believe that in 10 years the internet will be more centralized than it is today?

I get your point, but the difference here is that there is not one blockchain, if something becomes centralized in the hands of the few, just fork it and if people agree with you they will come too, it's hard to get this agent centric stuff

>Tor makes almost impossible
It's not just vulnerable to traffic analysis. It's also vulnerable to Sybil attacks, among countless software vulnerabilities, and even cryptography vulnerabilities.
>You really believe that in 10 years the internet will be more centralized than it is today?
Yes, because normies don't give a shit about centralisation, and honestly, neither do I.