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The Crypto Story Where it came from, what it all means, and why it still matters

138 pointsby michaelgrosner2over 2 years ago

7 comments

z3c0over 2 years ago
I&#x27;m not finished reading it, but I have to say that this is one of the best write-ups on cryptocurrency I have ever seen. It isn&#x27;t reductionist, narrow-minded, or deliberately tuning out people&#x27;s needs and concerns purely because they don&#x27;t share them (like most skeptics of the scene.) Nor is it full of meaningless idealistic fluff, like you see from the scenes worst evangelists.<p>This is an extremely nuanced matter, and it always has been. It&#x27;s just nice to see a narrative that is expansive enough to account for that, for once. Especially here on HN.
nzover 2 years ago
Finally a comprehensive write-up about the crypto-space that involves careful reasoned analysis of the interests and motivations of the participants in the crypto-space. Addresses some favorite questions like the nature of money and property -- and how most of it is imaginary (like most things about the human experience).<p>The first section talks about property-records as being kept in a database, and it also talks about villages maintaining &quot;in-memory&quot; property records (in a pre-literate time). A cool method that humans have developed for durable record-keeping are Rai-stones.<p>Here are some of my note on those, in case we have any anthropology nerds lurking:<p>Rai Stones are variously-sized -- 3.5 centimeters to 3.6 meters in height -- circular, stone disks with engravings. They are used as currency, decoration, jewelry by the Yapese people of the Yap islands in micronesia. Because some of them are gigantic and weight a few thousand kilograms, they are difficult to transport. To facilitate easier transactions, the Yapese maintain a ledger -- via oral-tradition -- of who owns which fraction of which Rai Stone, not unlike a blockchain.<p>An interesting case of the use of the ledger to establish ownership over a stone, is when one of these massive stones was being transported by a ship, and the ship sunk into the middle of the pacific. It was never seen again, by any other human being -- it might not have even survived as a single piece -- yet, its ownership is still recorded in the ledger.<p>In principle, if all of the stones disappeared from the face of the earth, the oral ledger would still contain a list of who owns what.<p>Crypto-currencies can be considered as digital Rai Stones -- the value is in the ledger not the actual artifacts.<p>Ref: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;interlock-network&#x2F;knowledgebase-public&#x2F;blob&#x2F;main&#x2F;what&#x2F;rai-stones.md" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;github.com&#x2F;interlock-network&#x2F;knowledgebase-public&#x2F;bl...</a>
acconradover 2 years ago
This is a big deal because it’s only the second time in the publication’s history to do a cover-to-cover story on a topic (since one about code).<p>I’m not fully through it but I will say it starts a bit rough and suspect but he does a great job of clarifying points and providing accurate details on the basics of cryptography, blockchains, and the rise of digital currency.
colinmhayesover 2 years ago
Levine&#x27;s continuing analysis of the twitter fiasco has also been a life saver trying to wade through the bs spun by seemingly all parties orbiting the deal.
czottmannover 2 years ago
Link to the archived version: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;l74fG" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.ph&#x2F;l74fG</a>
TimJRobinsonover 2 years ago
Amazing article. I&#x27;m deep in the crypto space and agree with everything in it. Does a good job explaining the good, bad, and ugly parts of the industry.
prvitover 2 years ago
Matt Levine is really killing it here, nice to read a feature length piece from him.