PNK is marketed as "right to work" token, but has anyone actually calculated much jurors actually get paid? Take for instance the reward for Case 302 which stands at 35 ETH. This reward gets split amongst all 500 jurors, giving a grand total of 0.07 ETH paid to each juror who votes coherently. At today's prices that is $18. Jurors must stake thousands of dollars worth of PNK to make $18. $18 which won't even cover the gas fees of staking your PNK and then sending the rewards back to your wallet. Does that really seem like such a good deal to you?
I see your point, but since most cases are highly unambiguous, there will only be a small number of losers, and they are punished for voting retardedly. I don't see much of a problem here, especially since that ETH will probably be worth much more in the future
Jacob Ward
This is good, jurors should not be paid much, otherwise it becomes uneconomical to make court cases with it. If there isn't enough demand for the product then that's much worse than jurors not being compensated a lot. Kleros is better for simpler things otherwise you can just get a real judge.
Carter Green
>all the staked PNK Please stop spreading false information. Only a small portion of PNK get redistributed. In fact, jurors who don't vote correctly get slashed $36. So they are risking more than the potential reward.
Ian Sanchez
How is that a flaw? The platform has a limited number of users and cases. Adoption is the next phase. Which major crypto has tokenomics that are working as they are supposed to? Chainlink node operators are being entirely subsidized by the CL team.
Imagine we reach a point where each juror is drawn for 1 or 2 cases every day.
Aaron Jenkins
Jury has ruled that OP is once again a lying faggot