pull down to refresh
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @josh OP 16 Jan \ parent \ on: Can we make 2-of-3 Multisigs a better user experience? bitcoin
A good consumer product does not require human onboarding.
The consumer downloads the app, and the rest should be seamless and intuitive to follow, walking the user through the onboarding process step by step in a way that does not require outside human intervention.
You’re correct that this application could tell the user to send funds to an address, and then once received, to transfer those funds to a multisig output. But that’s not intuitively how a vault should work. It shouldn’t require a special application to move funds into, with an intermediate location before they can be moved.
The consumer is taught that funds are stored at addresses. This is analogous to bank accounts and easy for the consumer to pick up. Why break that analogy if we don’t need to?
A good consumer product does not require human onboarding
Literally all consumer products require human onboarding. Even the phone your grandma is using required human onboarding
The consumer downloads the app
Someone showed her how to download apps, she didn't get it on her own
the rest should be seamless and intuitive
Learning to use a phone wasn't seamless and intuitive. Neither was opening her first bank account. Neither was learning to clean a home, or do a job, or manage an office, or brush her teeth. Many things are worth doing even though they are not seamless and intuitive to learn, and you make mistakes along the way. Bitcoin is like that.
Expecting bitcoin to surpass all other consumer goods before you'll recommend it to someone seems silly and unnecessary. If there is some aspect that isn't seamless and intuitive, that's fine, that's life. Teach your grandmother. If she can open a bank account, she can move money to an intermediate address. It's not hard, and it's only scary the first time.