I now regret the time, effort and money I threw away chasing awards and contesting. At the time, it seemed the only thing to do. Now I recognise those "599 0123 73" exchanges for what they were, lost opportunities to have a decent QSO and maybe make a new friend. Doing exactly the same thing a million times over, faster and faster, isn't progress, it's stagnation.
When I returned to the bands after a too-long QRT I hooked up with LOTW and EQSL: they were completely new to me and it felt like "the digital future". I'm going to quit LOTW before even having used it because I've now had time to think about it and I've decided the idea of having bank-level security with global coverage simply to confirm contacts made following a hobby is hilarious overkill. (-And maybe a little creepy)
I think I'll keep on with EQSL because I read somewhere that it was less secure than LOTW and could be manipulated by cheats. That's more acceptable to me: a confirmation system which depends on the honour of those participating. There will always be cheats. There will always be those who walk into a store and buy a black belt rather than earn it. They only cheat themselves: in the final analysis it's only a hobby, it isn't all that important, is it?
I want to communicate by radio on a human rather than on an industrial scale. I don't really care if a contact is confirmed or not, it's unimportant. A long time ago hams were real pioneers and their precious qsl cards served as proof to a disbelieving world that they had achieved something significant. The world has changed, Joe Public is more accepting; a cheap mobile phone can make global calls, as can computers. Joe Public will not be impressed by an award certificate. Now we live in a world where an unattended computer-driven rig could possibly achieve the same award automatically over a weekend! How impressive is that?
Good luck with developing your decentralised GPG-QSL exchange. I'm unlikely to use it, but good luck anyway.
Vic /an old, worn out, beat-up sad excuse for a ham.....