RE: Evolving The Internet! Decenternet's Publicly Owned, Decentralized Web Apps To Replace Google, Youtube, Uber & Ebay?
Thanks for bringing this to our attention! Wondering what blockchain they plan to use/model after. Currently sounds hugely ambitious, more ambitious than may be possible (I don't know anything about the team they currently have but I'm guessing most of the best minds are already working on their own already publicized projects that don't appear to be mentioned here).
Potential threat/weakness: "the proprietary Proof-of-Reliability protocol". Why is it proprietary in what should be open source software?
What does Proof-of-Reliability mean? "It works reliably, there is your proof"?
Also wondering who their lead architects and project managers are, or if that is a big question mark. Onboarding these types of people are paramount to the organization and execution of such an ambitious project. While copying already successful app models and substituting out centralized data servers for decentralized may sound quick and easy, I know from experience it is not. I'd be much more confident in the project if they had some programmatic way to suck down functionality and mirror it into their own system while releasing it into the decentralized (and unprosecutable) architecture.
There is another white paper that contains more details that requires an NDA agreement. However, while that does answer a lot of questions - there are still many more answers yet to be disclosed.
I'm not sure how the proprietary aspects mix with the open source - maybe the code will be open source but cannot legally be duplicated elsewhere?
Proof of reliability refers to equations that determine the performance of each node in terms of bandwidth and storage - a bit like 'uptime' is calculated for traditional web host servers.
You can see some of their team here.
There certainly are a lot of people on the team.
Thanks for explaining proof of reliability.
I'll check to see if I can glean anything else from the post.
There was some confusion over what they will allow to be published publicly from the Anuvys white paper, so I temporarily removed some info from this post - but I have put it back now after they clarified the situation. So you can now learn a lot more about the D-Apps from this post.