

Curation network interfaces
WTF?
“Curation Network” is a showcase of the decentralized internet where anyone can find answers to questions like: “What can you actually do in the decentranet?”, “Where can I find the best Ethereum wallet for Android?” or “Which private blockchain should I choose?”
The “Curation Network” is made up of lists sorted by rating. It’s curated because only the users decide who deserves first place and who should be removed from the ranking altogether. And they decide in a mathematically verifiable way, with no single owner and no censorship.

Why is it all so complicated?
Because we designed the interface first and foremost around the needs of blockchain app developers. The network brings them in as the first curators, since they care the most about this kind of ranking.
Developers add their app to the ranking and study its stats: daily and monthly active users, total transaction volume, and rank — the community’s rating.
It’s interesting to compare apps with each other: look for leaders by monthly user growth, by amount of money moved, or by the number of commits on GitHub.






What is this sh*t for?
It turns on curation mode. It’s for professionals: they vote to add apps to the ranking, remove them from it, or change their position.
We’ve made a complex process as simple and clear as possible for power users. This algorithm has just been invented and is not yet used to its full power anywhere else in the world. The “Curated Network” experiments with what such rankings can look like: ownerless, fully algorithmic, fair and incorruptible.


What if I randomly went to the side? I don't understaig anything!!!
For newbies, we’ve explained on a separate page what curated rankings are and why they matter.
Why do we even need all of this? They’ve invented a problem out of thin air.
The iPhone was invented 11 years ago, and now we can’t imagine life without it. Who knows, maybe in another 11 years blockchain, algorithms and independent rankings will also become a natural part of our lives. But that will be a completely different story ;)





We used Dooder images to quickly launch the site and save money.





