STEEM DIGITAL ASSET REPORT
STEEM DIGITAL ASSET REPORT:
STEEM Review And Investment Grade
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Investment Grade
Fundamental Factors
Introduction
Steem is a blockchain that targets the social media sector and enables users to monetize their content. The blockchain is best known for the flagship application Steemit.com, a blogging website that surpassed 1M users in May of 2018. Since then, its popularity has been declining due to the abuse of its reward distribution system and the overall market downtrend.
The entity behind Steam, Steemit Inc. has also been facing funding problems and had to lay off almost 70% of its employees, due to the steep drop in cryptocurrency prices.
However, the technology behind the project is still generating interest amongst developers. Besides Steemit, the project hosts over 100 applications on its blockchain and plans the release of the Smart Media Tokens (SMT) platform, which will enable publishers to launch tokens on the Steem blockchain and monetize their content.
Nevertheless, at present, the future success of the project is questionable as it faces many problems and stiff market competition, which are threatening its long-term development.
Market Opportunity
Steem is a social blockchain where developers can create various dApps as alternatives to existing social networks. The project targets the social media market, which is dominated by giants like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, etc. The size of the social media market is expected to grow to $39 billion by the end of 2019.
In 2019, it is also estimated that there will be around 2.77 billion social media users around the globe, up from 2.46 billion in 2017, the number of users is forecasted to grow at around 3% annually.
Steem has already developed various social networking apps on its platform, like Steemit (analog of Medium and Reddit), Steepshot (analog of Instagram), and DTube (analog of YouTube). While Steem as a layer 1 blockchain faces competition mainly from other blockchain networks, its most popular dApps are competing with products that are currently dominating the social media market.
The major competitors to Steem in the blockchain industry are Ethereum, Tron, and EOS, which remain the most popular choices for dApp developers.
Compared to Ethereuem, Steem provides higher scalability and free transactions, which makes it a better fit for content-driven dApps.
Consider Sapien Network, a social media platform built on Ethereum that is analogous to Steemit. The latter has more advanced technology and a client base of over 1 million users. Sapien only has about 5,656 users and is limited by Ethereum throughput capabilities. The narrative is consistent for other Ethereum based social media projects.
However, the two other major rivals, EOS and Tron, have much more active ecosystems. These blockchains are similar to Steem from a technology perspective, but have more dApps, more transactions per day, and wider communities. Currently Steem dApps are more popular than the EOS (ONO) and Tron (TronChat) alternatives, but due to the rapidly expanding user bases of the respective networks, they will become more prevalent in the marketspace.
Our conversations with projects building dApps on the Steem blockchain revealed that startups are attracted to the platform because it has a lower entry barrier for developers than many of its competitors.
Web developers who are comfortable with Javascript and Python can make an easy transition to working on Steem dApps.
The competitiveness of Steem dApps relative to their centralized alternatives is very low. The main features that differentiate Steem’s applications from its traditional analogs are content being saved on the blockchain and crypto rewards for content creation. However, the rewards content creators can currently obtain on Steem’s social application cannot compare to the advertising revenue available to them on YouTube, Instagram or others.
The situation has been different with Steemit.com, where popular authors could expect to get paid, as opposed to receiving nothing posting on Medium or Reddit. However, the fall of cryptocurrency prices and flaws in Steemit reward distribution led to authors starting to leave the platform, decreasing the overall quality of the content.
For the most part, Steem’s most popular applications are trying to disrupt markets that are already established and monopolized by a few players. At the same time, these applications are not offering anything new, besides the rewards, which are not enough to attract a large user base. If we compare the activity of these social applications with the activity of well-known social networks, Steem is far behind. Due to the competitors’ network effects, it is highly unlikely that current Steem dApps will ever receive the same recognition.
From the market opportunity perspective, at its current state Steem will not be able to sustain competition from the already established social networks and will most likely continue to lose positions to its blockchain rivals.
Underlying Technology
Steem is a scalable blockchain protocol with a fast and feeless digital token (STEEM). Its creators wanted to make a blockchain that would be suitable for micro-payments and would allow such use cases as tipping an author. The blockchain adopted a DPoS consensus algorithm according to which 21 witnesses (nodes) are selected to create blocks every 3 seconds. The block production is done in rounds, and each round lasts 63 seconds (or 21 blocks).
In total, there are over 100 nodes, but only the top-21 participate in the consensus, 20 out of 21 witnesses (full-time witnesses) are selected by approval voting and 1 witness (backup witness) rotates through a list of witnesses outside of the top 20.
Witnesses participate in block creation and approve hard forks. Steem hard forks take effect if at least 67% of the active witnesses have upgraded to the latest update. This procedure ensures that there is a single persistent chain after a fork. It also makes the update mechanism convenient for developers. As a result, the Steem blockchain has already successfully forked 20 times.
Although Steem has developed a good mechanism to decentralize the network with its witnesses, centralization still appears when it comes to core developers team.
In 2018, the whole blockchain simply stopped, and only the developers could roll down a patch for witnesses to fix the issue. The main team has all the power to implement the necessary fixes, but it also represents a central point of failure.
The team behind Steem tried to develop technical features that would enhance the user experience:
Native Name System – user name is used as the wallet address. This is much more convenient than using long public keys.
Hierarchical Private Key Structure – there are three private keys: Posting, Active and Owner. The first allows the user to post, comment, edit, vote, and follow other accounts. The second one is used to transfer funds, power up/down transactions, vote for witnesses, reset the posting key, place market orders on the internal decentralized exchange. The owner key is the most powerful, because it can change the other private keys and prove ownership during an account recovery. This hierarchical private keys structure increases the security of using wallets.
Stolen Account Recovery – if a user’s account is compromised, it is possible to change private keys using the Owner key.
Steem is also planning an important release of Smart Media Tokens technology. SMT – is a token issuance protocol (like ERC-20) which enables any website, company or content library across the Internet to facilitate fundraising and integrate tokens into its interface (more detailed information is available here). The launch of this protocol was planned for March but has been postponed. Nevertheless, if fully implemented it will positively affect the adoption of Steem blockchain.
The Steem blockchain can handle a large number of transactions per second almost instantly, which puts it among the most technologically advanced blockchains.
The activity of the main repository in its GitHub has dropped significantly in the last two months, while other repositories are in an active state. Developers are currently focused on optimizing the blockchain (DevOps solutions, reduction of Staging and Testing nodes, pruning, etc.). This will decrease the costs of running full Steem nodes which should lower the adoption barrier for application developers and exchanges.
Developers are also working on improving Consender, the open source software that powers steemit.com, which should reduce its maintaining costs.
From the technological point, the Steem blockchain solves the problems it was meant to solve. Although the network is dependent on the developer team and even experienced a shutdown, it still has good throughput capabilities, which attracts dApps creators and drives adoption.
Ecosystem Development
Steem is a social media blockchain that utilizes the DPoS consensus algorithm. Its network is supported by two types of nodes (witnesses):
- Top-20 witnesses – store the whole blockchain, create blocks and confirm transactions.
- 21st witness rotates through a list of witnesses outside of the top 20, and can also participate in the consensus, if chosen in a certain round. The higher the rank of the witness, the higher the probability of it being part of the consensus.
- All other witnesses – store the whole blockchain and maintain its functionality.
However, the potential witness candidates need to own powerful and reliable servers, have technical experience, and convince the community that they can become good node operators. In fact, for witnesses, marketing plays an important role, since they have to promote themselves in order to get votes from the community. Witnesses use different marketing strategies, some even offer to spend 80% of the block reward to advertise Steem on Facebook, YouTube, and Google every day.
Any user can vote for up to 30 witnesses at any time. These votes can be added or canceled at any time. The ranking for witnesses plays an important role. A witness at rank 25 will be producing more blocks per hour than a witness at rank 50, which will directly affect its profitability. Witnesses are paid proportionally to how high they are in the rank. Current, top-20 witness pay is about $3,800 per month (approximately) based on the current feed price. Such a structure incentivizes a free market competition among node operators, which in general is beneficial for the network.
The Steem network is highly centralized. The project has had a questionable launch in 2016 with the network being allegedly rigged to ensure that founders had a major stake in token supply.
This led to a situation where most of the coins were accumulated in the hands of a small number of people, which is not reflected on the STEEM rich list. According to steemdb.com, the top-10 wallets hold 25.7% of coins (exchange wallets – 22.7%), and the top-100 wallets – 29.2%, which shows a relatively low level of centralization.
Oh wow, another vote for the staker thing dominated by insiders who started with an inside advantage and, worse than that, cheated their way there.
I’ve put the whole picture together now and it doesn’t paint a pretty picture. You have done far worse than free trade ever did. Let me explain it to our audience.
Dear reader: please continue to the end, it gets worse with every sentence.
Let me start from the beginning: Dev, first you have the shittiest shitcoin launch in history, having all your miners fired up from the beginning.
Not only do you not have a pool or windows wallets, but you don’t even have build instructions. You even have to be an advanced git user to insert the external repositories in the right place to build. You need a special boost that isn’t included in the most common and supported linux distros, like Ubuntu 14.04. In short, you gave yourself a huge advantage.
Then you started cheating. The first cheat were your incorrect example mining commands that left out key characters, like single quoting the double quoted witness name. It’s a detail, but very hard to figure out why the parser is failing. Then you have a shitty nonce selection where if the same key is mining from two different machines it will produce double work and get booted. You knew of this but no miner did. That doesn’t make you smart, it makes you a cheater because you were raping the coin the whole time.
To prove that you were raping it to the exclusion of everyone else, anyone can go read the original thread where you acknowledge that when your miners went down, no one else was mining. You made it impossible to mine for anyone else who didn’t have insider’s knowledge of the coin.
That doesn’t make you smarter than your average coward, because anyone can set a booby trap. It makes you someone who is too dumb to figure out how to win by being smart.
Now here’s where it gets bad. For the second night in a row your miners crashed. I actually anticipated that because dumbfucks usually make the same mistake more than once. So I had 40 cores going when you went to bed. I brought in nearly every block that night and when you woke up you saw what happened and decided to do a relaunch.
You failed at cheating and the only way to win at it was to cheat some more with a relaunch. Of course I lost all my coins, but you had to do it to guarantee yourself an insurmountable insider advantage when it came to voting yourself a staker.
But only after mining with about $200 day for 3 days do you spring this thing about insider’s selecting the stakers. Maybe, being a complete idiot, you think that we should read the code and put $200.00 a day on this coin like you. But no one has time to read the code of every shitcoin that comes along. No one can do it. Again, you aren’t smart for having insider knowledge and taking advantage of it. You are basically an idiot who has to cheat because you can’t cheat so well.
And, dear reader, this is the story of the beginning of this coin. You have a dev who has cheated at every step, cheats when they fuck up cheating, then cheats some more.Bitcointalk thread on Steem launch (2016)
However, the STEEM rich list is not showcasing the real situation. The Steem blockchain has complicated token economics. It operates on three tokens: STEEM, STEEM Power (SP), and STEEM Dollar. Users can voluntarily obtain STEEM Power, by locking-up STEEM tokens in the system. The more STEEM Power a user has, the more influence they have in the system, which is expressed when voting for witnesses or for content that is posted on the blockchain.
Currently, around 40% of STEEM Power is concentrated in 100 accounts. It’s also possible that many of them are duplicates, making the system highly dependent on a small number of people. Such a concentration of SP has produced a lot of problems for Steem’s main application Steemit, a blogging platform where users get paid for creating and curating content. The payment is received from newly issued tokens, and 75% of the new tokens are distributed among content creators and curators. The content rating is based on the upvotes received from holders of STEEM Power. The more upvotes from large STEEM Power holders an article receives, the more money is distributed to its author.
As a result, STEEM Power holders are not incentivized to be interested in the quality of the content, they are participating in the ecosystem simply to receive the reward, killing the whole point behind the platform.
Centralization of STEEM Power is also supported by bots. Any user can simply pay directly to the bot owner and receive an upvote for his article. The upvote from the bot is usually worth less than the reward the user would receive from Steem. It appears that the platform has been overrun with people who are there to make money and don’t care about the quality of the content.
Looking at Steemit.com’s trending page, readers can find either sponsored or low quality articles. Moreover, the platform has been criticized for having a poor user experience, plagiarized content and censorship. In fact, the content that users are posting is saved on the Steem blockchain, but it is not necessarily posted on Steemit. com, the website has its Terms of Service for what is acceptable and what is not. It is understandable, that in order to comply with regulations, Steemit has to have an editorial policy. Nevertheless, it contradicts the non-censorable notion of the blockchain.
The overall Steemit statistics shows that the number of authors and posts has decreased dramatically since January 2018. Although Steemit was able to build a large community around itself, its long-term prospects are highly questionable due to loss of interest from users.
The entity that supports Steem ecosystem development is Steemit Inc. It is a privately held company based in New York that officially launched Steem and Steemit in 2016. However, the company has been under serious pressure because of the fall in cryptocurrency prices and in Q4 2018 announced that it has been forced to lay off close to 70% of the team. This is concerning since without financial and human resources the company will not be able to solve its current problems and expand its user base and ecosystem.
The team has not been active in terms of partnership development. In 2017, Steem Inc. announced a partnership with the Global Blockchain Technologies Corp, according to which both companies signed a non-binding agreement to create a joint venture and establish $20 mln Steem Fund that would support startups building solutions on the Steem blockchain. However, after the announcement, there was no more information on the progress of this initiative, and during our conversation with the team, it was confirmed that the team decided not to move forward with it.
In general, Steem lacks good partnerships, which means it is not prioritizing business development, which is a negative sign for the ecosystem.
Although most of the factors above negatively affected ecosystem development in 2018, there are also some positive developments expected in 2019.
The company is planning the release of the Smart Media Tokens (SMT) platform, which will allow companies to create their own tokens. Tokens can be used to raise funds via an ‘Initial Coin Offering’ (ICO) or can be distributed via posting and upvoting rewards. SMT will allow publishers to issue their own tokens and integrate Steemit. com functionality on their websites. This will increase the demand for STEEM since users will have to acquire it to use the blockchain. However, it is still unknown whether the tool will be popular among companies, and how these tokens will be valued by different readers. More over, the project has been announced in 2017 and is still under development. The team planned the release of the mainnet in March 2019, but it has been delayed, since the team is working on cutting down the cost of running the chain.
From the community perspective, compared to its blockchain rivals, Steem is far behind in terms of social media followers. However, the number of on-chain operations (to not be confused with on-chain transactions) is quite high, indicating that the established community is very active and is using the ecosystem.
From the ecosystem perspective, Steem developed products that are used by a large community. Still, these products are facing serious problems and losing their user-base. Moreover, further developments of the platform would most likely continue to be slow since the team is currently more focused on cutting costs, rather than expanding the ecosystem.
Token Economics
Steem blockchain utilizes a triple token economy model and has no fees to support its ecosystem.
STEEM is a liquid unit of account on the Steem blockchain, which can be bought or sold on exchanges and transferred to other users.
STEEM Power indicates how much influence a user holds on the system. To power up STEEM Power, users can convert their STEEM to STEEM Power by pressing a few buttons in the wallet. However, in order to convert STEEM power back to STEEM users would have to wait 13 weeks to receive the full amount, since the tokens will be unlocked at a rate of 1/13th per week. STEEM Power tokens are not tradable, they are only used within the blockchain (upvoting the content, voting for witnesses, etc).
STEEM Dollar is used to encourage and reward social application users. When a post receives a payout, the user obtains a reward in the form of 50% STEEM Dollars and 50% STEEM Power. Steem Dollar is a stable-coin-like currency pegged to the dollar, with the price maintained around $1.00. The coin can be redeemed at any time for STEEM, but the processing time takes around 3 days. Steem Dollar is also freely traded on several exchanges, which creates problems with maintaining the exchange rate.
Although currently its rate is around $1, its price has been fluctuating from $0.8 in August 2017 to $12 in December 2017. Witnesses maintain the price stability. If the price of SBD is less than $1, traders will have an incentive to buy it and redeem it for STEEM worth $1, which will drive SBD price up. However, if the price of SBD goes above $1, the process becomes harder since the only way to increase the supply is through posting.
Witnesses can also alter the interest rate of STEEM Dollar, making it equal to 0% with the SBD price being higher than $1. Presumably this should decrease the incentive to hold SBD.
Newly issued tokens are spread amongst content creators, curators, users, and node holders. The blockchain is only issuing new STEEM Power or SBD (no STEEM):
- 75% of new tokens are distributed among content creators and curators (50% SBD and 50% STEEM Power);
- 15% of new tokens are distributed among the STEEM Power holders;
- 10% of new tokens are distributed to witnesses;
Token inflation is the driver of this distribution. When Steem launched, initial inflation was 100% a year, and 90% of generated tokens went to existing STEEM Power owners, creating a large voting power inequality, with a small number of accounts holding the majority of the voting power, thus centralizing the network.
The current inflation rate is around 8.54%, which will constantly decrease until the annual inflation rate reaches 0.5% (~ mid-2037). The overall inflation rate is higher if we compare Steem to its competitors. However, low inflation with the current STEEM prices would hurt the Steem ecosystem even more, since the authors’ rewards would be lower.
As an example of how Steem works, consider Steemit.com. There are many articles on Steemit uploaded by different authors, and users have the ability to upvote them. However, not all upvotes are equal. The more STEEM Power a user has, the more their upvote is worth. Currently, according to the upvote calculator, an account with 1,000,000 STEEM Power can produce an upvote that would grant the author up to $30, while an account with 50,000 STEEM Power can produce an upvote worth only up to $1.54.
Users are free to make multiple upvotes. But after each upvote the user loses 2% of the current voting power (STEEM Power). The voting power recovers at a constant rate that equals to 20% per day.
The problem such setup generates is that it encourages unethical behavior from users. Large STEEM Power owners have the incentive to upvote their own articles or sell the upvotes and receive rewards.
The fact that STEEM Power can be delegated also produced automated services that offer users to invest their STEEM Power, concentrating it in the hands of a small number of people. This resulted in the community being more incentivized to make money rather than work on the quality of the content.
Although in the beginning Steem was thought to be a platform that would be community driven and would encourage authors to publish quality content, the flaws in its token economy encouraged user behavior that was detrimental to the quality of content and led to an alternative development course.
Core Team
Ned Scott – Founder and Executive Chairman. He is also the ICO Advisor at Matchpool. Before launching the Steem blockchain, Ned Scott worked as a Financial Analyst at Gellert Global Group.
Elizabeth Powell – Managing Director. She graduated from Texas A&M University with a BA in Journalism. Elizabeth has wide experience in marketing, business development and communications.
David Jefferys – Business Development at Steemit Inc. He graduated from Canisius College with a BS in Accounting. He has 10+ years of experience in business development and worked for New Era Cap, ShoptoCook Inc., Pyramid Brokerage Company.
Steemit Inc. was founded in 2016 by Dan Larimer and Ned Scott. However, Dan left the project in 2017 and started the well-known EOS. There were no corporate conflicts, but Dan wanted to create “something bigger” than Steem.
Following the departure, Steem peaked in January 2018 and begun slipping down during the entirety of the year. Steemit Inc. reported that it laid off 70% of its employees. According to our sources, the team was reduced from around 50 people to 10. The decision was caused by a 96% decrease of the STEEM price, which led to a significant loss of the company’s finances.
The announcement of the staff layoff at the end of 2018 left community dissatisfied with the way the project was running. Two major problems identified with Steem Inc were “planning and the other is the delivery”. There were calls for the CEO to step down. To assuage concerns, Elizabeth Powell was appointed as a Managing Director at the start of 2019, to help move the project forward.
As a result, the project found a new direction (cost reduction, advertisements, etc.), which was positively perceived by the community. Our conversations confirmed excitement within the community regarding the progress the project has made over the last few months.
Nevertheless, despite having a good idea, the project was unable to get mainstream success which it was aiming for. An unclear strategy and poor decision making during the downtrend of the cryptocurrency market forced the company to rethink its priorities and outline a new direction for the project.
Although the team is taking steps to get out of the crisis, the success of their new strategy is not guaranteed, given the fact that the old strategy proved to be unsuccessful.
Roadmap Progress
Facing many issues in 2018, the company proposed a new strategy that it would implement in 2019.
Steemit.com – the company is working on improving Consender, open source software that powers steemit.com. The company bears a large cost maintaining it, and while it was justifiable during the bull market, currently it is not.
Lowering Node Costs – the company aims to lower the cost of operating the nodes, so it would be less expensive for the 3rd parties to run their own full nodes. This should also increase profits for witnesses.
Advertisements – the company plans to integrate advertisement into steemit.com in order to generate revenue to pay for front end back-end infrastructure necessary to power steemit.com and the overall project.
Real Solutions – the project wants to improve its economic sustainability by developing a workable business model that generates revenue needed to support the growing ecosystem.
The company will also focus on implementing Version 1 of Smart Media Tokens (SMT) platform and RockDB, the solution that would help to store Steem data more efficiently.
The company has developed an anti-crisis plan. However, as every plan of such nature, it focuses more on saving what project already has, rather than new developments and ecosystem expansion. The project also did not provide any clear dates for the much anticipated SMT platform, so it is not clear when Version 1 will be released.
Overall, the project is working on solving short-term problems, while its long-term mission still remains quite vague, which raises questions about its long-term sustainability.
Token Performance
STEEM is in the top-45 coins by market capitalization and it is in the top-59 coins by trading volume (24H).
STEEM price increased significantly a few months after the Steem blockchain launch, pushing it into the third place by market capitalization after Bitcoin and Ethereum. Steem’s ATH occurred in January 2018 reaching $8.57 during the last peak of the cryptocurrency market. Since then the price has suffered a significant drop of 96%, while prices of its competitors have diminished a little less: Ethereum – 91%, Tron – 93%, EOS – 85%.
The main trading pairs are STEEM/BTC (48%) and STEEM/KRW (40%), which are mostly traded on top exchanges such as Binance, Bithumb, and Upbit. The coin is quite liquid.
STEEM trading volume is significantly lower than that of its competitors. Also, changes in trading volume among all cryptocurrencies have the same downward trend since January 2018.
STEEM price fluctuations lie within a range from -5% to + 8% on average. The same behavior is observed among its competitors. Essentially, STEEM is following the market.
Given the fact that Steem was a number 3 project in 2016 on Coinmarketcap.com, its current 45th place is discouraging. Users and cryptocurrency speculators are losing interest in the project, which is reflected on its price and overall ranking.
Conclusion
Initially Steem as a blockchain was built with a clear use case and by introducing Steemit, achieved good results. The platform attracted authors that could start receiving cryptocurrency for their works, generating good profits for some during the bull run. The platform was also successful in attracting outside developers to build on Steem.
However, after the market turned red, some of the issues that were neglected when the cryptocurrency prices were high started to hinder the project’s development. STEEM Power centralization led to a decrease in the quality of the content, and authors started to leave Steemit. In addition, the company that supports the development behind the project has faced financial problems and had to lay off nearly 70% of its staff, shifting the team’s focus to cost reduction.
The current prospects of Steem are questionable. Therefore, due to the above risks, it is graded with C.
The author(s) of this report is/are invested in the following coins: Bitcoin.