Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Create new words and definitions on SLictionary with our Quick Start Guide - CoinGeek - Dictionary

Looking up words in the dictionary is sooo last century. Making up your own words on Urban Dictionary is so last decade. It’s 2021 and we have Bitcoin back again—why not make up your own words, and get paid if they catch on? SLictionary lets you do all that, and we’re about to show you how.

SLictionary (the name means “self-learning dictionary”) works on the principle that language is a living thing, evolving over time and with new words added by the communities that use them.

“We’re burning all the inefficient, lazily-conceived dictionary skeuomorphic saddlebags”, says SLictionary’s homepage. As well as Bitcoin payments, it also utilizes gamification, pictures, videos and sound as much as possible to aid pronunciation and memory retention. The community participates by voting on the most popular words, definitions and the most well-constructed arguments for why they should become part of our daily lives.

On SLictionary you can play different roles. There are “Knowledge-Seekers,” “Word$miths,” and “Word Barons.”

It also uses a micropayment structure, similar to that on social networks like Twetch or Relica, where users pay tiny amounts to use the service, and creators earn from the proceeds. Users need to have a Money Button account to use the platform.

Such payments are only possible on Bitcoin SV (BSV). Since Bitcoin’s original protocol rules were reinstated in January 2020, and the (later-added) limitations on transaction block sizes were removed, Bitcoin is once again able to create whole new economies based on fast, small (even tiny) payments. Pay US$0.01 to search, which gets you the full meaning/s of the word you’re looking for as well as the right to vote on which parts you like best.

It all happens instantly, and with fees so small they’re barely noticeable, on BSV.

Knowledge Seekers can vote on the best words, best definitions for words, and even the best part of a definition. Those who created them (the Word$miths) earn a large share of those micropayments, rewarding their efforts.

Words and their definitions are “lit” when Knowledge Seekers click the lightbulb icon next to them. The more votes, the more money their creators make. For more rewards, the users called Word Barons can also sponsor bounties on content they’d like to see—win the bounty and get paid even more.

SLictionary is definitely not some hastily thrown-together project that simply adds Bitcoin to something that already exists. It’s a well thought-out system of incentives, education and entertainment that makes the most of Bitcoin technology, the way it’s supposed to work.

Watch the Quick Guide above to find out how to join in, then visit the SLictionary site to try it for yourself. Just as Bitcoin is so much more than money, SLictionary is so much more than a dictionary. It isn’t just creating a new economy with digital cash, it’s creating a whole new language, culture, and the way these things are formed.

New to Bitcoin? Check out CoinGeek’s Bitcoin for Beginners section, the ultimate resource guide to learn more about Bitcoin—as originally envisioned by Satoshi Nakamoto—and blockchain.

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