I am sorry, i have read all the posts I can find and i am still not sure I understand how the refund works at all.
If someone is not able to post for a period of time or is thinking about leaving the platform, and doesn't want their SBI shares to expire, how are they able to get the refund if they don't have any posts to be upvoted at the accelerated value? How much is one share worth when refunded in terms of upvote value? And surely the person would lose a proportion of the refund to the curation? I don't think I have understood this right at all.
Is it possible for someone to sell their shares instead of getting an upvote? And if so, does @steembasicincome buy them, or would they need to sell them to another user?
Thank you
This post covers these questions:
https://steemit.com/busy/@steembasicincome/sbi-refund-policy-redux
Incidentally, SBI subscription does not expire. Pending upvote value continues growing until you return. We do have some plans to eventually cap that at 100 days of value, but that is not currently under development.
I am sure it does but I had read it and still didn't understand, I appreciate that is just me and sorry for bothering you. I think I have misunderstood what steembasicincome is at its core and for some reason thought it was an actual share in a community version of universal basic. Its sad about early supporters being seen as having taken too much already, I didn't realise there was that feeling here. I will get someone else to read these posts and see if they can help me figure it out the material change aspect. I suspect rereading it, it doesn't matter how you would refund hypothetically because when it comes to the calculation people have had the initial value back in upvotes, and cos it was never a share that had its own value, requesting a refund is just requesting not to be part of the system, but I will find someone to help me figure it out. I had seen a spreadsheet of upvotes where people were removed after 30 days no posting and suspect I have just confused myself by only catching posts here and there and not getting the full picture, but I will figure it out. Thank you for the link.
The spreadsheet with people removed after 30 days was part of our old system, and they weren't actually removed, just paused (and reinstated after a couple of posts). That was because of a limitation in manual processing, and that limitation was removed with the release of our new system in December. We don't 'pause' anybody now. Pending vote value keeps growing until they post.
We don't think that early supporters took too much. It's intended to be a lifetime basic support, and early versus late shouldn't make a difference. In fact, when we deployed our new system, we calculated what everyone's value would have been with the new calculations and started everyone that had under-performed projections with catch-up balances.
The issues with the refund policy are around liquidity. Everything we receive from enrollments, author rewards, curation rewards, etc. is used to attain target SP levels that allow for a lifetime of sustainable support. That means we can't just refund everyone on demand - the STEEM is either locked up in SP or spent on delegations.
Enrollment is a commitment, so the refund policy is intentionally strict. The best way to manage that is to factor in upvotes already received when considering what refund potentially could/should be delivered.
Your original enrollment is long enough ago that you qualify under the 'material change' clause for all of your enrollments before December 6, 2018. If you did not already attain 200% ROI over the duration of your enrollment, you could receive some refund of your enrollment amounts. In either case you might do better by finding somebody willing to pay you for units and request them to be transferred.