Well we are still quite far from even the 10K, so why the concern?Beyond 10K BTC will allow for a larger staff, a lot more marketing but most importantly fully funded LP (Liquidity Provider) nodes to provide central exchange level spreads for the native DEX. This is strictly not needed for Komodo, but the DEX will be enabled for all the dPoW assetchain coins so it does relate.If the investors want to fully fund a native DEX ecosystem, they are able to. The Komodo run LP nodes would then be able to earn some margin on the volumes so it would end up generating revenues. Ideally, Komodo funds will be able to earn income and we can pay all the costs from such income. In that case, instead of 10 years of funding, it is fully funded indefinitely.I prefer to let the market decide if what is wanted is the minimal Komodo, or the medium Komodo or the monster Komodo.

Using that logic, everybody that has a job is raising money every month. I put the NXT assets (other than SuperNET) in the category similar to working at a job. The amount of money raised was comparable to working at a job, so it should be compared to having a job instead of an ICO. So yes, I have worked in crypto for a while and was paid for it. I have never denied this.But if you want to count my raising thousands of dollars in the same category as multi-million dollar ICO, I guess you can do that if you just ignore the 100x difference and count pennies as dollars.

I have not denied that I raised funds from NXT assets, however other than SuperNET they were not done as an ICO and the scale is orders of magnitude smaller. If you raise funds from private investors, that is funds but it is not an ICO. Maybe that is your confusion? You seem to be considering any funds raised via any means as an ICO. So if I get a bounty for doing some work, is that an ICO? If I get paid for doing coding, is that an ICO? If I invest in an ICO and make money did I do an ICO?

You sold shares(assets) in something. Thats a bit different than a Job. For sure the amounts where not that high as the Supernet ICO for example but is that making any differenced to the people which bought into that? No it doesnt.NxtVenture for example.. everyone can form his own opinion.Edit:Ah yeah... good to know what you think about critizism.

Using that logic, everybody that has a job is raising money every month. I put the NXT assets (other than SuperNET) in the category similar to working at a job. The amount of money raised was comparable to working at a job, so it should be compared to having a job instead of an ICO. So yes, I have worked in crypto for a while and was paid for it. I have never denied this. But if you want to count my raising thousands of dollars in the same category as multi-million dollar ICO, I guess you can do that if you just ignore the 100x difference and count pennies as dollars.

Funds have already been raised under the existing terms. Changing anything significant like the cap is not anything I would be comfortable with as while it might make you happy, it will surely create many complaints. In any case the max is just a max and we are not likely to achieve it, so there is likely little difference.you can always wait until the end and if it is still below 10K, then put in more.

Using that logic, everybody that has a job is raising money every month. I put the NXT assets (other than SuperNET) in the category similar to working at a job. The amount of money raised was comparable to working at a job, so it should be compared to having a job instead of an ICO. So yes, I have worked in crypto for a while and was paid for it. I have never denied this.But if you want to count my raising thousands of dollars in the same category as multi-million dollar ICO, I guess you can do that if you just ignore the 100x difference and count pennies as dollars.

I have not denied that I raised funds from NXT assets, however other than SuperNET they were not done as an ICO and the scale is orders of magnitude smaller. If you raise funds from private investors, that is funds but it is not an ICO. Maybe that is your confusion? You seem to be considering any funds raised via any means as an ICO. So if I get a bounty for doing some work, is that an ICO? If I get paid for doing coding, is that an ICO? If I invest in an ICO and make money did I do an ICO?

Remind me when the NXTventure ICO was held? You cant because it wasnt. A trading market in NXTventure was created and people traded it in the aftermarket. So people bought and sold it from asset exchange market. The vast majority of the trading volume was done by other people. I did do some occasional trades, but only as a normal investor.this is quite different from an ICO, are you aware of the difference?It was created as a vehicle to distribute other assets and when NXT AE was viable, it was doing fine. It is not my fault NXT dropped 80% in value and also decided to abandon assets in the switch to ARDR.

Using that logic, everybody that has a job is raising money every month. I put the NXT assets (other than SuperNET) in the category similar to working at a job. The amount of money raised was comparable to working at a job, so it should be compared to having a job instead of an ICO. So yes, I have worked in crypto for a while and was paid for it. I have never denied this. But if you want to count my raising thousands of dollars in the same category as multi-million dollar ICO, I guess you can do that if you just ignore the 100x difference and count pennies as dollars.

Funds have already been raised under the existing terms. Changing anything significant like the cap is not anything I would be comfortable with as while it might make you happy, it will surely create many complaints. In any case the max is just a max and we are not likely to achieve it, so there is likely little difference.you can always wait until the end and if it is still below 10K, then put in more.

Using that logic, everybody that has a job is raising money every month. I put the NXT assets (other than SuperNET) in the category similar to working at a job. The amount of money raised was comparable to working at a job, so it should be compared to having a job instead of an ICO. So yes, I have worked in crypto for a while and was paid for it. I have never denied this.But if you want to count my raising thousands of dollars in the same category as multi-million dollar ICO, I guess you can do that if you just ignore the 100x difference and count pennies as dollars.

I have not denied that I raised funds from NXT assets, however other than SuperNET they were not done as an ICO and the scale is orders of magnitude smaller. If you raise funds from private investors, that is funds but it is not an ICO. Maybe that is your confusion? You seem to be considering any funds raised via any means as an ICO. So if I get a bounty for doing some work, is that an ICO? If I get paid for doing coding, is that an ICO? If I invest in an ICO and make money did I do an ICO?