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>> No.25909572 [View]
File: 59 KB, 819x615, vitalish.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
25909572

>>25906846
Lol, even if he won by cheating, Biden won. you have to be delusional to think Trump is going to keep the office for another four years. Kleros came to the correct decision just like Vitalik says, despite being held by a bunch of coping, Trump-supporting retards.

>> No.21883938 [View]
File: 59 KB, 819x615, 1582764345.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
21883938

>>21883290
>yes I'm sure plenty of women and children would love to get in a car with random strangers who could be serial rapists or drunkards
>uber won't work, people won't trust an app they just downloaded on their phones to drive them around safely

I'm sorry anon, if you think this is just about pretending to be judges and jurrors you failed the IQ test.
The whole point of Kleros is that you don't have to trust the individuals involved to trust the system. When you dispute a sale on Amazon, who do you think resolves your dispute, a grad student studying Aristotle, or one random pajeet working for minimum wage? And yet you trust that pajeet, because you trust Amazon. But what if you didn't have to trust Amazon?

My mom sells custom jewelry online. Custom jewelry can be expensive, but not expensive enough that the Feds would get involved if something went wrong, and it is often shipped internationally anyway. The problem is that sellers invest a significant amount of time and materials in each piece. They need a platform that won't just side with the customer. And customers need a platform that isn't just going to cater to coveted designers. Both would prefer to deal directly with each other without paying a potentially untrustworthy platform to act as a middle-man.
This is a real world problem that Kleros could actually solve. Imagine if every time you bought something online, from any random website or private seller you could count on the same dispute resolution service that eBay uses to resolve any issues? Most customers aren't ever going to know how it works. They're just going to know that they're using an impartial, third-party app in case something goes wrong.
The gig economy is going to transform the dispute resolution industry like ride-sharing killed taxi companies, and I think Kleros is going to do it.

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