The narrative of HBD
Yesterday, as I was talking about Hive to a bunch of new people and onboarding more users to our beloved platform, an idea began sprouting inside my head. Usually, when I talk about HBD and its ties to the US dollar, I try not to get too technical, too boring—and I think we don’t really have to.
Yes, some of us love to talk about how the stabilization of a token can be accomplished. It was @edicted who first said this, so I’ll give him credit, but the best explanation for how HBD works is that HBD outsources its instability to Hive. A clever and realistic way of putting it, but this might only be half the truth, especially if the token gains mass adoption.
Perceived Cost
A necessary tangent is needed to make my point, I fear. There’s a market dynamic we barely touch upon, but one that is very much present in the way prices are determined for goods: perceived cost.
When the price of something is too far off from the perceived cost, most people don’t bite.
Not to get too much into the psychology of sales, but it might be enough to say: people buy expensive things not because they cost more, but because the perceived value is greater than the price. What they can access by paying the price feels more than fair.
In a market like the one I live in, for example, a soda costing more than 50 cents is not very tempting to most people. After all, the perceived cost does not allow for too much markup.
To put it plainly: the gain has to be worth it.
HBD as a Narrative
In a recent video that @starkerz and @theycallmedan made, one of the key takeaways was Dan’s insistence that the dollar should be a human right. Access to the dollar, to be precise. My first reaction was to reject that notion, but it took only a few seconds to understand what he meant, and two more to agree.
The rewriting of what should be a human right has me thinking about the value we assign to them—the value attached to every item on that list: the right to life, liberty, security. I’m preaching to the choir here.
So where am I going with this?
Well, it’s so simple I don’t know why I never thought of it before: the most stabilizing force HBD can have—and I’ll submit, will have—is not code, but narrative.
If more and more people are willing to trade directly 1 HBD for 1 dollar, back and forth, that is ten times more resilient and more real than any algo or “real-world” asset backing the token.
An Emancipated Society
Is one that weaves its own narratives, understands its rights plainly, and does not need outside permission to do things.
Many times on this very blog I’ve talked about the peaceful revolution I would love to see, and I can’t think of anything more revolutionary than us re-writing the book on value-for-value.
Conclusion
So it very well may be that HBD is the oldest non-KYC stable token on Web3. It also may be that most of the stable tokens out there are doomed to fail, since they rely on trust in institutions to begin with—the same institutions that failed us over and over.
An emancipated society understands that narratives are narratives, and it can write its own story.
HBD may have a great mechanism backing it, but it has something greater: the ability to weave a different narrative, and to change minds.
MenO
Spanish Translation
Ayer, mientras hablaba de Hive con un grupo de personas nuevas y ayudaba a más usuarios a unirse a nuestra querida plataforma, una idea comenzó a germinar en mi cabeza. Normalmente, cuando explico HBD y su vínculo con el dólar estadounidense, trato de no ponerme demasiado técnico ni aburrido—y creo que realmente no es necesario hacerlo.
Sí, a algunos de nosotros nos encanta hablar de cómo se puede lograr la estabilización de un token. Fue @edicted quien lo dijo primero, así que le doy crédito, pero la mejor explicación de cómo funciona HBD es que HBD externaliza su inestabilidad a Hive. Una manera ingeniosa y realista de expresarlo, pero quizás solo sea media verdad, especialmente si el token llega a una adopción masiva.
Costo percibido
Me temo que necesito un desvío para hacer mi punto. Hay una dinámica de mercado de la que apenas hablamos, pero que está muy presente en la manera en que se determinan los precios de los bienes: el costo percibido.
Cuando el precio de algo está demasiado lejos del costo percibido, la mayoría de la gente simplemente no compra.
Sin entrar demasiado en la psicología de las ventas, basta con decir: la gente compra cosas caras no porque cuesten más, sino porque el valor percibido es mayor que el precio. Lo que pueden acceder al pagar ese precio se siente más que justo.
En un mercado como en el que yo vivo, por ejemplo, una gaseosa que cueste más de 50 centavos no resulta muy atractiva para la mayoría. Al fin y al cabo, el costo percibido no permite mucho margen.
Dicho de manera simple: la ganancia tiene que valer la pena.
HBD como Narrativa
En un video reciente que hicieron @starkerz y @theycallmedan, una de las ideas principales fue la insistencia de Dan en que el acceso al dólar debería ser un derecho humano. Acceso al dólar, para ser precisos. Mi primera reacción fue rechazar esa noción, pero bastaron unos segundos para entender lo que quería decir, y dos más para estar de acuerdo.
La reescritura de lo que debería ser un derecho humano me puso a pensar en el valor que asignamos a ellos—el valor que cargamos sobre cada ítem de esa lista: el derecho a la vida, a la libertad, a la seguridad. Aquí estoy predicando a los ya convencidos.
¿Y entonces a dónde voy con esto?
Bueno, es tan simple que no sé por qué nunca lo pensé antes: la fuerza más estabilizadora que HBD puede tener—y me atrevo a decir, tendrá—no es el código, sino la narrativa.
Si cada vez más personas están dispuestas a intercambiar directamente 1 HBD por 1 dólar, de ida y vuelta, eso es diez veces más resiliente y real que cualquier algoritmo o activo “del mundo real” respaldando el token.
Una Sociedad Emancipada
Es aquella que teje sus propias narrativas, que entiende claramente sus derechos, y que no necesita permiso externo para hacer las cosas.
Muchas veces en este mismo blog he hablado de la revolución pacífica que me encantaría ver, y no puedo pensar en nada más revolucionario que nosotros reescribiendo el libro sobre el valor-por-valor.
Conclusión
Muy bien podría ser que HBD sea el token estable más antiguo sin KYC en Web3. También podría ser que la mayoría de los tokens estables que existen estén destinados a fracasar, ya que dependen de la confianza en instituciones desde el principio—las mismas instituciones que nos han fallado una y otra vez.
Una sociedad emancipada entiende que las narrativas son narrativas, y que puede escribir su propia historia.
HBD puede tener un gran mecanismo que lo respalde, pero tiene algo aún mayor: la capacidad de tejer una narrativa diferente, y de cambiar mentes.
MenO
Great stuff. I recently wrote a post summarizing my understanding of HBD (since I'm very new to this), so your post is a great change of perspective into the more philosophical/marketing aspects of HBD. Maybe the name isn't ideal for the intended purpose, but that's a different story.
One thing I'm not sure of, however, is if creating the notion of "1 HBD equals 1 USD" in offline retail transactions is the most efficient way of reaching widespread adoption, but it's definitely not going to hurt
I don't think we should lead with that pitch, so to speak, but its the inevitable stop when mass adoption happens. I get your angle tho.
Your reply is upvoted by @topcomment; a manual curation service that rewards meaningful and engaging comments.
More Info - Support us! - Reports - Discord Channel
https://x.com/jewellery_all/status/1958243331206791478
I don’t usually dive into the technical side of tokens, but the idea that HBD’s strength comes from the story people believe in makes sense. It’s kind of like how trends catch on in our generation—not just because of what something is, but because of the meaning we attach to it.
very simple yet effective way to lay it out...
I like that you made an easy comprehension of HBD. It is also true that story or narrative behind it is very important not just the code. When more and more people get to know and use HBD it is likely to become more powerful. Thank you very much to share this ideas.
While crypto (as a whole) may have wandered a bit off-course from its original ideals as an alternative monetary system, stablecoins — and HBD, in particular, because it's the most decentralized of them — have a real chance of beinging at least an element of that back into the picture.
Because Hive has an actual community, the idea of a peer-to-peer marketplace centered around HBD (as eBay was, before it became yet another corporate/private equity clown show) stands a real chance of becoming something. And because we do operate without KYC, we have a new narrative to tell...
=^..^=
On that note... I used to live of selling on ebay. I would not touch that thing with a 10 foot pole these days.
Same here! Ebay in the early days was very very good to us, selling collctibles.