DEEPER DIVE

Do you expect to be able to provide anonymity/privacy even in a controlled region like China?

Yes we do, that’s one of the main use cases we thought about when designing the Force Network.

Even in a region where the internet is completely controlled, users of Force can remain hidden, and have ways to ‘hop’ out of the region to access information elsewhere.

What kind of resistance do you expect to meet from existing powers (eg. governments) and how do you plan towards this?

Force’s ability to wrap traffic in different, custom protocols is the main feature that will keep users safe.

If they can’t tell you’re using Force, they can’t punish users.

After development, Force will be completely decentralized. We don’t expect hostile entities to react until well after it is too late for them to do anything and the Force network is already in use and accessible.

Force is also incorporated in cryptocurrency-friendly Malta and has strong legal protections while still in development.

Force Network is incorporated in the go-to crypto haven of Malta

How much of current supply is held by the Force team or affiliates?

Very little.

I only own what I purchased before writing the whitepaper (not even close to 1 masternode).

After the swap, we will reward Force volunteers with tokens based on their contributions. It’s our belief that holding stake in Force will motivate the best (and continuing) work.

The company also holds a small development fund of Force tokens.

How will the ‘automated pricing’ work?

This is a complicated topic that will deal with how hop node usage is priced. Nothing is set in stone yet and will take more investigation/experimentation. This development will happen after the release of the Minimum Viable Product.