$GFIN is basically the governance token of the Goldfish ecosystem. While $GGBR is the stablecoin backed by real physical gold (each token represents a fraction of a troy ounce), $GFIN is what actually gives us the power to decide where the project goes.
With it in your hands, you can vote on important stuff like:
*how high the fees will be.
*where the treasury money goes.
*new partnerships.
*the future roadmap
*changes in the collateral ratio.
*and a bunch of other things.
With it in your hands, you can vote on important stuff like:how high the fees will be
where the treasury money goes
new partnerships
the future roadmap
changes in the collateral ratio
and a bunch of other things.
@goldfishggbr
a lot of people look at @quipnetwork and immediately focus on the technology
but the more interesting part might be the market design behind it
in many networks, growth creates friction
more activity usually means:
β higher demand
β limited capacity
β rising costs
β reduced efficiency
@quipnetwork is attempting a different model
when demand increases, the network becomes more attractive for additional compute providers
new providers expand available resources
expanded resources improve service quality
better performance attracts more users
growth reinforces growth
if this mechanism works at scale, every participant has a reason to support the network's expansion
β operators contribute compute and earn rewards
β validators strengthen security and participate in staking
β builders gain access to infrastructure
β organizations obtain computational resources
the incentives are connected
and that alignment may end up being more valuable than the hardware itself
many projects are competing to process more transactions
@quipnetwork is pursuing something different
building a marketplace for computation
and the long-term moat could come from the network effects that emerge around it.