I understand you're a supporter of the project and you're initial intentions are not negative so I'm going to take the time to r

18 Aug 2022, 13:16
I understand you're a supporter of the project and you're initial intentions are not negative so I'm going to take the time to respond to you and provide as much clarity so that you can see that what you're typing is actually incorrect. And after this, we're really going to start implementing a zero tolerance policy. You keep saying that there's nothing to show, but you keep forgetting that there are a lot of testnet products and a mainnet explorer visible and currently live directly on the website. In fact, you can go play around with these functionalities and actually launch at testnet token contract. You can go send transactions from one wallet to another, you can also verify the validators that are on both the testnet and mainnet, and more. Have you actually done any of this and have launch a token contract to see what is possible so far? This is not "nothing to show" and in fact showcases what we have been working on over the last year or so especially after the team has decided to migrate from tenderment to substrate and have pushed out those tech releases accordingly. When it comes to marketing, Please refer to my answer above as well in my previous messages. We are doing organic and authentic engagements and are doing planning for the upcoming tech releases. We're also doing some internal protocols so we can have a standard across the team when we hire more people. Because without strict protocols things become disorganized and we want to resolve that. On top of that internally we are also having many calls and conversations around or upcoming launches so the priority surrounds that and how we can sync to make a successful release to have people run and validate alongside the team. Please take into account we are very small market cap project, with a team size of 23 people, and in the development and planning process and, I have to be quite frank and quite blunt with you, when it comes to marketing I am more than happy to take feedback from the community because I value all of your opinions. But I run the marketing department and I know exactly what I'm doing So please just let us all do our jobs. When it comes to the GitHub, That will come in time. We understand that the community wants this immediately but the core team doesn't see it this way. So to answer your question again around this, it will come in time. I'm sorry if that's not the answer you're looking for but that's what it's going to be. Moving forward when it comes to repetitive questions and specifically towards misinformation, we are going to be implementing stricter policies That will begin with a warning, a mute and then a permanent removal. The way we respond to questions is what we have answers for. Sometimes I feel like people ask questions over and over again and we provide the answers again but right now that's all we have In terms of communications. I hope I was able to answer and provide you further clarity around why we answer the questions the way we do.