Ryan Grim
@ryangrim
Folks here are helping me narrow down what I don’t like about crypto. I see the argument that it is a way to freely move currency even in the face of authoritarian governments. I guess on the one hand, I just don’t believe that governments can’t find a way to crack down on it. All the crying from crypto folks about the tyrannical SEC suggests governments still do matter. But more importantly, I think it’s a much better use of time and energy to organize and fight to stop those authoritarian governments from existing in the first place. I see so many brilliant people spending so much time on this thing that is literally separate from reality (it’s right there in the name crypto) when that energy could be put to more fruitful use. Anyway, no final conclusions, just some evolving thoughts.
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Ben
@benersing
It’s no longer only about freely moving currency without the government. That was use case #1. It’s about an entirely re-engineered tech stack for the internet that embeds ownership rights and permissibility at the protocol level. From that will continue to emerge new use cases. “Life After Google” by George Gilder crypto pilled me a while back. “Read Write Own” by @cdixon.eth is excellent and recently published so more up to date.
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