The Steem Basic Income refund policy is narrowly defined. In effect, a refund window opens when there has been material change (such as the complete revamp of upvoting rewards when we released automation) and only units enrolled before that refund window opens are subject to refund on request. Full information is included in this post: https://steemit.com/busy/@steembasicincome/sbi-refund-policy-redux
SBI is a subscription service and new enrollment funds are quickly spent on increased delegation to deliver the upvotes that are subscribed for with the enrollment. We are exploring eventual tokenization options (similar to @tipu's TPU tokens), but the regulatory environment is relatively uncertain still.
In our view, any tokens we might issue are not sufficiently decentralized and making them tradable/marketable on an exchange would make them unregistered securities tokens and opens the door to potential legal repercussions.
Our social objectives preclude us from becoming a security (deliberately or unintentionally) as that would restrict investment in the US to only the wealthiest individuals. We have structured things carefully as a subscription service and done everything in our power to make it clear that it's a subscription service, not an equity or security.
There would still be recourse if we took the money and ran (undelivered subscription value, fraudulent behavior, etc. and there are many Steemians that have my actual email or phone number and could provide it in case legal action needed brought against us.
My drivers license says Joseph Savage on it, and I have nothing to hide.
The Steem Basic Income refund policy is narrowly defined. In effect, a refund window opens when there has been material change (such as the complete revamp of upvoting rewards when we released automation) and only units enrolled before that refund window opens are subject to refund on request. Full information is included in this post: https://steemit.com/busy/@steembasicincome/sbi-refund-policy-redux
SBI is a subscription service and new enrollment funds are quickly spent on increased delegation to deliver the upvotes that are subscribed for with the enrollment. We are exploring eventual tokenization options (similar to @tipu's TPU tokens), but the regulatory environment is relatively uncertain still.
In our view, any tokens we might issue are not sufficiently decentralized and making them tradable/marketable on an exchange would make them unregistered securities tokens and opens the door to potential legal repercussions.
Our social objectives preclude us from becoming a security (deliberately or unintentionally) as that would restrict investment in the US to only the wealthiest individuals. We have structured things carefully as a subscription service and done everything in our power to make it clear that it's a subscription service, not an equity or security.
There would still be recourse if we took the money and ran (undelivered subscription value, fraudulent behavior, etc. and there are many Steemians that have my actual email or phone number and could provide it in case legal action needed brought against us.
My drivers license says Joseph Savage on it, and I have nothing to hide.
Thank you @josephsavage.