Would you pay for good little pieces of data? Would you like to get paid for creating good little pieces of data? My answer to both is YES, and I bet yours is too. I will be reaching out to everyone I know because
Brett Veinotte has inspired me. We all share information all the time, and sometimes we thank each other for it. If we set it up well, as I think Brett has done, we even, sometimes, pay each other for it. I have, in fact, paid Brett a few times because of all the great information he has provided to me and everyone else who might benefit from it.
The goal of this blog post, I hope, will be met in one of the next few paragraphs. It will be a few sentences that will catch your eye and uncork your mind. You will look forward to sitting at your computer, or on your phone, just as you are now, reading and writing. A seed will be planted in your subconscious driving you to research and brainstorm how you might benefit from or encourage the input of others.
One of my favorite things to do is respond to comments on the Internet. You can browse
my comments on Disqus or
what I've written on Quora to see what I have to say. In my experience, most other people don't comment very much, if at all. It makes me sad. Most people are good, and that goodness would show up in comments if they were to make them. Do you comment on the Internet much?
Of course, our foolishness also shows up if we are lazy when we write comments. Because school teaches us to, we might parrot a claim we read somewhere but which we never bothered to examine, and a response might come back providing us with strong evidence that the claim is wrong. That hurts because we have presented the claim as our own.
If you do examine my comments on Disqus, you'll see my strategies to avoid that pain. Most folks who comment a lot follow such strategies, and they tend to improve critical thinking and communications skills. Either you already know this, or else, since I've (hopefully) planted a seed, you will come to know it soon, and that will make you a great contributor to my "think tank game."
I will soon announce a date for the commencement of the "think tank game." If all goes well, it will go on for a few days or, if it goes really well, indefinitely. During that time, you'll visit
memeracing.net every now and then to answer or ask questions and maybe invest a few dollars worth of bitcoin. If you write something good, you'll get an email asking you to visit the site and check out what six other people had to say in the same context. You'll put these six blurbs, along with your own, in order by quality. Perhaps you will put yours first, even if you think someone else's was better, or perhaps you'll be more honest. Either way, you and those six other people will combine your judgements to find the best of the seven things, and bitcoin will be redistributed as encouragement.
That's what I have to offer. Well, one of the things I have to offer. I look forward to your
suggestions and ideas.
I have some more background information for those who decided to keep reading this far. Many people, once they understand what
memeracing.net is trying to do, say that it's a great idea. The problem is that a "great idea" is only great until it's old, which takes a few days or weeks. After that, it's either useful or forgotten. Memeracing.net has been forgotten by many people who recognized its value. One might say they are just waiting for it to become useful. I'm pretty sure that the usefulness will come from the density of traffic, so I wanted to get a lot of people on board for a kind of event on memeracing.
Do you think I should identify some particular topic for this "think tank game" event? I do. The link above ("suggestions and ideas") goes to a page where you can enter whatever topic you think would work well. One of the answers already has about $30 backing it, but it isn't the one I think is best.
Thanks for reading, and I look forward to comments as well as input on
memeracing.net.
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