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marceaul

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It's the right time for my Web3 project, but I quit: lessons learned

getmeemaw.com
1 points·by marceaul·hace 2 años·0 comments

I spent 18 months building an open-source Web3 startup, but I hate crypto

getmeemaw.com
4 points·by marceaul·hace 2 años·0 comments

Show HN: Meemaw – Trustless and grandma-friendly wallet as a service

github.com
29 points·by marceaul·hace 2 años·12 comments

Show HN: Meemaw – Deploy an MPC wallet for your users in a few lines of code

github.com
2 points·by marceaul·hace 2 años·0 comments

comments

marceaul
·hace 2 años·discuss
Hey RileyJames, Thanks a lot for your message! Any chance we could plan a short remote coffee chat? I would love to learn about that use case :) my email address is in my profile.
marceaul
·hace 2 años·discuss
Hey wheelerwj,

Thanks for your question, this is completely valid.

I think there are two axis to this :

1. Typical wallets, as in end-user “tools”, are B2C in essence and most crypto users are used to not pay a penny for a wallet. Meemaw is a “wallet-as-a-service”, meaning that it helps companies deploy wallets for their users. It’s a B2B service. I think you got that but just wanted to make extra sure. For a company with the right use case, having a way for mainstream users to own digital assets without struggling to understand how this all works is really valuable. Think banks letting their users own some crypto, Starbucks with their loyalty program, Reddit with their NFTs, etc.

2. Why now? Well, to be honest, it’s just because I did not find any alternative that I trusted for the long term, when building that first project I mentioned. I was really looking for an open-source and easily self-hostable project to give me the confidence that, worst case scenario, I could make it work even if company XYZ disappears or raises their prices or removes features... I probably felt the same as you do. I ended up building what is now Meemaw, trying to find ways to make it more resilient for everyone involved: if Meemaw disappears, companies using it should not be at risk; if those companies disappear, their users should not be at risk. It’s never perfect of course, but I think Meemaw will be vastly superior on that front.

I hope this was clear enough, let me know if it wasn't :)
marceaul
·hace 2 años·discuss
Hey Atotalnoob, thank you very much! Those are completely valid points, thanks for your feedback.
marceaul
·hace 2 años·discuss
Hey Derek, thanks for your message. Well, as far as I understand, there are at least two massive differences:

- Gridlock is a wallet for end-users directly. Meemaw is a so-called "wallet-as-a-service", allowing developers to deploy wallets for their users, within their app. The experience is for each developer to define.

- Meemaw is open-source and designed to reduce risks on many counts: going from cloud to self-hosting and vice versa will be super easy, there will be open-sourced tools for end users to recover their wallet even if the company (whether Meemaw or developers using it) goes down, etc

Happy to discuss further if you feel like I misunderstood what Gridlock does!