Lex Fridman Podcast - #173 – Nic Carter: Bitcoin Core Values, Layered Scaling, and Blocksize Debates
Episode Date: April 1, 2021Nic Carter is a financial researcher, investor, writer, and podcaster on topics of decentralized finance. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - The Information: https://theinform...ation.com/lex to get 75% off first month - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - Four Sigmatic: https://foursigmatic.com/lex and use code LexPod to get up to 60% off - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium EPISODE LINKS: Nic's Twitter: https://twitter.com/nic__carter Nic's Website: https://niccarter.info/ Nic's Blog: https://medium.com/@nic__carter Nic's Podcast: https://onthebrink-podcast.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (13:05) - Can humans fully understand reality? (15:34) - The dollar system (21:44) - Bitcoin (23:19) - Opendime (27:22) - Core values of Bitcoin (35:51) - Who is Satoshi Nakamoto? (41:39) - How Bitcoin works (50:02) - Bitcoin blocksize wars (1:02:27) - Layered scaling of Bitcoin (1:07:25) - Lightning network (1:10:25) - Schnorr/Taproot update to Bitcoin (1:15:17) - Criticisms of Bitcoin (1:25:04) - Bitcoin failure modes (1:33:07) - Bitcoin vs Ethereum (1:37:03) - Vitalik Buterin (1:39:56) - Creative destruction (1:44:51) - Future of Bitcoin (1:48:38) - Tesla, Elon Musk, and Dogecoin (1:56:44) - NFTs (2:04:00) - Bitcoin maximalism (2:10:37) - On writing (2:16:37) - Writing a book on Bitcoin (2:21:07) - Bitcoin resources (2:23:57) - Book recommendations (2:25:56) - Advice for young people (2:29:13) - Meaning of life
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Nick Carter, who is a partner at Castle Island Ventures,
co-founder of CoinMetrics.io and previously a crypto asset research analyst at Fidelity
Investments.
He's a prominent writer, speaker, and podcaster on topics around decentralized finance and
especially Bitcoin.
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This conversation with Nick Carter is part of a series of episodes on cryptocurrency that
is a small journey of exploration I'm on because I find decentralized finance and especially
Bitcoin fascinating, technically and philosophically,
especially because it may be the very mechanism that achieves a global decentralization of power,
giving more sovereignty to the individual and making our systems more resilient to corruption,
manipulation, and in general to the darker size of human nature.
Please let me also address something
for a few minutes that happened recently
that's been weighing heavy on me.
If you find me annoying to listen to,
please skip to the actual conversation with Nick.
I had a recent podcast episode with Anthony Pompliano
where we spoke about Bitcoin and life in general
for three hours.
I was curious, inspired, positive, or at
least I tried to be as I usually do. Someone clipped out out of context, a short segment
of me mumbling something about having a PhD. And I started getting mocked online because
that made it convenient for people to mock me for being yet another quote unquote expert who
learns about Bitcoin and thinks he knows everything.
I almost never mentioned that I have a PhD except to make fun of myself as I was doing or
least trying to do in the full context of the conversation.
I brought up grad school as a random example of one of the many journeys I've taken that
was hard
but where the destination was in itself not very useful.
I was saying I enjoy exploring with a curious mind and I'm willing to be patient, to learn,
to listen, to humble myself with knowledge for the sake of knowledge itself.
grad school was an example of that.
The PhD means nothing, at least to me. I never call
myself an expert or at least try not to because that would be dumb because I know how little
I know. I'm not an influencer or a thought leader or whatever else silly self aggrandizing
label people put on their LinkedIn. I tried to be the opposite of what I was mocked for.
I tried to think deeply about the world to look for the beautiful ideas and the minds of others and to be inspired by them.
I wanted to say all this because psychologically, it struck a bit of a blow.
It made me realize that even when I approach things with love, I may be mocked, I may be derided, I may
be taken out of context or even lied about.
But the growing platform is this sadly only increasing.
I now have learned that there's people who are waiting for my missteps so they can point
the finger, laugh, and say, see, I told you so, that guy's a joke, he's a fraud.
As a fellow human being, the knowledge of this is painful.
Yes, I know people tell me to toughen up, and my life has been about strengthening my mind
in the face of my limits, but I refuse to not be fragile, and wear my heart on my sleeve.
It's who I am.
In some sense, this is the immune system of the internet, but let us be careful not to destroy
the good ones in the process.
The Bitcoin community had to endure many years of attacks
from quote unquote experts and also fraudulent cryptocurrency
efforts that scam people out of their money.
This created a powerful immune system
that fought the attackers and the scammers.
I understand this, and I also understand that one of the beautiful aspects of Bitcoin
is its community of humans is decentralized.
But some small part of this community has come to enjoy the us versus them battles, sometimes
for the sake of the battle in itself.
This happens in political discourse as well.
I understand this, but
to my limited mind, it sounds like groupthink, which has powerful defense mechanisms against
bad ideas, but has dangerous consequences, if taken too far, as in many periods of human
history that I often talk about, where the us versus them thinking has led to the suffering
of many.
Again, I understand the value of this as many Bitcoin as explained to me, but it's not
the way I, as a sovereign individual, choose to walk in this life.
By the way, none of this podcast should be treated as financial advice.
Before Nick kindly gifted me with a hundred100 worth of Bitcoin in hardware form.
I didn't own any.
I'll probably buy some Bitcoin on cash app, Coinbase and other platforms and also transfer
to a hardware wallet just to learn how to do it.
But other than that, I don't necessarily make wise investment decisions.
Money is not a motivation for me personally.
I try to avoid it actually.
I'm grateful for every day I'm alive no matter how much money is in my bank account.
For long stretches of my life that number was very close to zero.
And I was always fortunate to be free and happy.
So I encourage you to listen to people much smarter than me for actual good financial advice.
Here, I'm just exploring ideas.
And as if this has not already gone on too long,
let me please make another comment on the style of discourse
among some Bitcoin maximalists on platforms like Twitter,
that in my humble view, I may be wrong,
but I believe is not conducive to the nuanced empathetic exchange of ideas
I very much look for
and enjoy. Again I appreciate their style of discourse I think I understand the
value of it but it's not my thing so I don't want to engage in it. I want to hear
the quiet voices in the room. I look for people to inspire each other and when we
disagree I look for this agreement that is grounded in respect and empathy. I
think that mockery and derision destroys the possibility of those nuanced conversations.
It drives away the quiet, thoughtful, empathetic voices, and I try to give those voices space to be heard,
to shine, to exchange ideas whether we agree or disagree.
So, if I happen to block you on Twitter, I block you with love. Honestly, I will
never speak poor-live you or even think poor-live you. I would love to hang out in person,
give you a big ol' hug, and talk about life over some beers. If you see or hear me say something
stupid, which I'm sure I do often, or something you disagree with, and you still respect
me as a human being, please show your love as I always do to you, but also send me some
links to blogs, books, videos, podcasts, where people describe why my stated idea may be
totally wrong.
I love this kind of long form disagreement.
I humble myself every day by reading books and blogs by people much
smarter than me. Sometimes it strengthens my ideas, sometimes it totally changes
them, but I always learn. This is a too long way of saying that I'm here trying to
walk with grace and with an open mind, a bit of patience, and always love. If I make mistakes, company's some slack like you, I'm only human allegedly.
As usual, I'll do a few minutes of As Now. I try to make
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast, and here is my conversation with Nick Carter. What philosopher or philosophical idea had a big impact in your life, not just in the
space of cryptocurrency, but in general?
Oh, so we're going now.
We're going right in.
We're going.
Because you majored philosophy.
I did.
I majored in philosophy.
I didn't know what to do with my life, and my parents said, do whatever you find interesting.
It's like, okay, philosophy, great. Find that interesting. Yeah. And it
had way more of an impact on my career actually than I thought it might, you know,
typically I guess, be the philosophy going to a lot of finance. So it sort of makes
sense. But their number of philosophers are really admire. The bay, one of my favorites would be Descartes,
probably the notion of skepticism.
It's sort of a rabbit hole,
it's kind of hard to pull yourself out of it.
Basically the brain in the vat theory,
pulling yourself out of that.
But yeah, I really like epistemology.
Questioning what it is to have knowledge.
So Descartes was one of my gateways to that.
Do you think everything is noble? Like, we humans can know fully the objective reality.
Oh, definitely not. No, I mean, I've, reality is very much processed through your own, you know,
subjective lens. So how much do you think do we understand about this world? Because a lot of your ideas,
a lot of things we might talk about today are kind of trying to figure out human civilization,
how humans, how human behavior works at scale, all those kinds of things. That kind of assumes that
we have it or we're able to somehow figure most of it out.
So in your sort of, when you step way back,
how much of it have we really figured out?
Well, I think that's the conceit of economics
is thinking that you can model human behavior
and these unbelievably complex systems.
And then I think that's the modern critique
of economics like the sort of tilapian, is that you can't have true knowledge, and they're much less predictable than we think they are.
And, you know, we behave according to our accumulated assumptions, and we're using tiny sort of data sets,
trained on the last 50-100 years, and they turn out to be horribly a skew.
And that's when we have our grace ones and our black swans.
I'm much more on the sort of reality
is much less noble than we think side of things.
But it is nice to have very concrete things like Bitcoin,
that's for sure.
So you think most of it is shaky ground,
but there's some things,
there's islands of sturdiness.
Bitcoin is one of them.
That's a good way to put it.
Yeah, I mean, look at the dollar system, not to pivot this into the dollar right away,
but the dollar is like shaky ground.
It's the most.
It's the dollar.
Who truly understands the dollar system?
I mean, the totality of it, the euro dollar system, the way that monetary policy interacts with the economy is monetary
issuance inflationary, what's the relationship between unemployment and inflation? Even policy
makers don't understand these things, economists don't seem to understand them. What is inflation,
how do you define inflation? None of these things are really known or knowable.
So a lot of people kind of make a claim that there's a lot of manipulation possible
with the dollar, with those currencies.
If you couple that with the fact that people don't understand it
and yet there's claims that being manipulated
by centralized power, how do you bring those two ideas together?
If no one understands that how can you manipulate it?
I think we'll be doing an understanding of the long-term consequences of our structures.
So the Feds mandate to target unemployment and study exchange rates or low inflation.
What we don't understand is, what is the result of doing that continuously for 40 years?
What we don't understand is okay, what is the result of doing that continuously for 40 years?
What is the net effect of that?
What is the consequence of the long-term accumulation of that and you know basement interest rates? What is the net effect of that on society?
We might understand there's much short short term
Features of the system, but I think it's the longer term features. We don't understand
Do you think there's like malevolent people
with people that don't have good intent in central banks like in the system?
You know
when you have centralized power and you forms
It's susceptible to somebody hacking the system taking the power and
it's susceptible to somebody hacking the system, taking the power, and in the shadows, this is where conspiracy theories come in, right? In the shadows, be able to, you know, act
out things that have a lot of negative impacts on a large percent of the population in self-ingredi
self-interest. Do you think that's people like that? Do you think fundamentally most people are good,
even those associated with the sort of central banking?
I mean, I don't villainize those people.
I think everyone is the hero of their own story, right?
So they all believe that their force
are good in the world you have to.
Are there any true villains?
I don't think so.
I think they get socialized into a
world where they believe their particular skills and their mandate is, you know, what they should be
doing. I think they might be presumptuous or arrogant in some cases. And, you know, I think it's more of a systemic issue where you have a small handful of very homogenous
types of people with PhDs from the same institutions that are brought up in the same cultural
context that set policy and wield a tremendous amount of control over society.
And I think they have this notion that you can tinker society, you can play with
a few key variables in tinker society into a state that is desirable or good. And that's
what they're trying to do. And I think the consequences of that can be pretty bad. But
no, I don't think it's born out of mellveluence.
There's an interesting idea. I think Michael Mal is brought up as a test whether you're on the left or the right.
The question he asks, which is, do you think some people are better than others?
If you say yes, he claims you're on the right. If you start answering, if you start like saying a lot of things
like answering. If you start like saying a lot of things like you're on the left. So if you start
explaining yourself while it's getting, yeah, it's a good term for it. I was really, so in this, in
this test, I suppose I would be on the left because I'm uncomfortable with the idea that some people
are better than others as a basic feeling, as a starting point in
the way you think about the world, because as we're talking about everybody's a hero of their own
story, when you start to think some people are better than others, as a starting axiom, it's like a slippery slope to where you think you're way better than others.
And then you start to like basically, it's okay to take advantage of a large percent of
the population for the greater good.
Totally.
And then you go into Stalin mode and Hitler mode, where it's okay to murder a large part
out of the population for the greater good.
So it's like, it's this very dangerous
slippery slope in my mind.
So I tried to not, yeah,
I was always uncomfortable with that kind of test
or even that kind of thought.
And yes, the same applies and suppose in government
and central banking is if you think some people
better than others, applying your idea
what is good can have large-scale, detrimental effects.
Of course.
Yeah.
I'm glad you didn't pose me the question.
I mean, I think it may be the left-right axiom isn't the disjunction isn't the way I would
sort of put it, but, you know, but to me it's just, if you reason
in a consequentialist way, that lends itself to authoritarianism whereby you think you
can shape society and only you can shape society in a positive direction according to your
specific objectives.
So let's step onto the land of sturdiness that is Bitcoin.
What is Bitcoin and in your view, what are the principles, the philosophical foundations
of Bitcoin?
Well, Bitcoin, the term I think refers to two things specifically.
So one is the protocol for conveying value
through communications channel. So just a set of rules that we collectively opt into
in order to transact online or just add a distance. And then the other thing is the name
of the asset, the sort of monetary unit, which circulates within the system. And that always confused
people a lot because it's like, well, you got uppercase, Bitcoin, lowercase, Bitcoin,
why didn't Satoshi just give them different names? Like in Ethereum, you've got Ethereum
the system and then Ether, although people don't really talk about Ether very much, but
they, you know, chose to distinguish them in Bitcoin for whatever reason they're not distinct.
So the two big coins got coming all the time in the explanations.
Did you find that's a problem that confuses things?
I mean, what's really a distinction between the protocol and the currency?
Well, they are sometimes distinguished practically.
Like you can transact with Bitcoin outside of the Bitcoin
protocol, for instance.
So you can transact with Bitcoin on Ethereum.
Or I have Bitcoin on an open dime here.
This would be a Bitcoin transaction.
It wouldn't settle on the Bitcoin network.
Do you mind explaining what you have on the table before us?
Yeah, so I'll brought you some presents.
That's awesome.
This isn't a bribe. This is just a proof of concept.
Okay.
So this is basically a Bitcoin bearer instrument.
So I put a hundred bucks of Bitcoin on here.
And to spend it, you have to basically physically destroy part of the device.
You have to poke a hole and, um poke a hole and poke off one of the little
transistors on this.
So it can only be spent once.
And you can't extract the private key from this device.
So the private key was generated on device.
So it stays on the device.
So what it means without breaking off a small part. So this basically is a way to physically instantiate Bitcoin.
So it's kind of cold.
Yeah, effectively.
So here, this one's limited edition, it's orange.
Oh, so what is it called again?
Open dime.
The point is if you wanted to settle a Bitcoin transaction instantly, the kind of the
same way that a cash transaction is instant final settlement, right?
You would do it with a device like this.
So if I was buying a house from here, you know, you might prefer to do it with a physical
bearer instrument, as opposed to waiting for a confirmation on the
Bitcoin blockchain. So the moment I hand that over to you goes in your possession, you're
the owner. There's no way for me to have retained the private key. Like I could have created
a Bitcoin paper wallet and given that to you, but you have no assurance that I didn't
copy down that, you know, the key elsewhere. So this solves that problem. So this is a physical instantiation of the Bitcoin transaction outside the Bitcoin
protocol.
That's right.
So this is the transacting the currency outside of the protocol.
So it's analog Bitcoin, we're running it analog, which I was like, because Bitcoin is
this immaterial thing.
And so it's nice to have physical totems.
How much does it cost to manufacture this, you know, like 15 bucks or something?
I, so this is just kind of a, almost like a philosophical statement versus something
that's scalable for, for use.
Like, you know, the point of Bitcoin is to be in the digital space, right?
But this shows like Bitcoin can be anywhere.
It's useful for gifts.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know if it would be a suitable foundation for a physical
Bitcoin economy.
In theory, these would be like cash like instruments that you could use to
transact.
Well, I just mean post box ellipse.
Yeah, yeah.
But you still need, you still need to plug it into your laptop to actually verify that there's coins on there
So you still need the internet
So I have to take your word for how much money is on here. No, I mean you can you can plug in a lot of
And check yeah, but to transact to extract Bitcoin from this I need to break
Yeah, you've to poke a hole through the little hole and that renders it spendable
radically.
So, you know, that's protection against you spending it and then representing that it's
still loaded.
That's a cool.
Yeah.
So the other thing I brought you are basically dice, 12 sided.
They don't have any Bitcoin on them. So they just have a bunch of different critiques of Bitcoin on each side.
We'll go through them then. This is awesome. I don't know if we have time to do all 11 because there's one with my funds
logo on it. But it's just basically a tongue-in-cheek joke that the critiques of Bitcoin are so formal-aic at this point that you can just put them on dice.
It's silly.
Well, some of them might be topics for interesting conversations.
Oh, yeah, versus arrange the conversation that way you can roll the dice and see
what you got.
All right.
But first, the philosophical foundation is a Bitcoin.
How do you see Bitcoin outside of just a basic protocol and a basic currency?
It seems to be, like you said, it seems like 30 ground.
So what do you mean by that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's not just any protocol for moving value around.
It's not just any currency.
It's got specific rules and values that are embedded in it.
And this is an important point.
The Bitcoin is the encoding of certain values, which are often misunderstood or not acknowledged
necessarily.
And so it's sort of impregnated with values.
And what they are specifically is a topical debate. And there have been civil wars
fought over the values inherent in Bitcoin. You know, one of them was should Bitcoin be
this cheap, scalable, the base layer, low fee payments system with the emphasis on PDP
payments, or should it be more of this like gold, like digital commodity that would eventually settle infrequently
and mainly between institutions, right?
So that's fundamentally a conflict of visions, right?
But the, so keep in mind that this is just one man's opinion,
I don't speak for Bitcoin, right?
So I would say the key, the key number one value that's embedded in Bitcoin is the notion of
non-discretionary monetary policy. So algorithmic monetary policy as opposed to human-based monetary
policy. Satoshi was very clear about that. Bitcoin is an alternative to modern central banking,
where you have constant tweaking, constant intervention, which Satoshi felt leads to credit bubbles and so on.
So Bitcoin proposes a completely nondiscretionary monetary policy,
sort of decays over time, 50% of the coins,
we're shooting the first four years,
and then the next 25% in the next four years,
then 12 and a half percent in the next four years,
until you get to 21 million units.
None of those numbers really matter.
It could have been 25 million units,
and it could have been a more aggressive slope or a more gradual slope.
What matters is that this schedule was proposed,
even before the code was public,
the schedule was proposed,
and then we all collectively agree to stick to it.
And that is kind of a first for monetary system. I mean, gold kind of has that property, right?
Because the supply of gold above ground only really increases at one to two percent a year.
So it's sort of inhuman, which is a good feature, right? You don't want to give humans that much control over it.
Bitcoin is a much more, you know, fistidious approach to that. It really is super concrete about what the supply schedule is and the fact crucially that it can't change. So
we can't have a bailout of debtors. It was literally a lot of people, let's say a lot of people
had debts denominated in Bitcoin, and we needed loose a
accommodative monetary policy to bail them out.
That's not possible.
We couldn't have a Jubilee denominated in Bitcoin because the social contract that we've
all bought into and committed to is that it's not discretionary.
That's one of the first things. And I think ultimately
that comes back to basically a strong respect for property rights, because if we were to
have unanticipated inflation, let's say, you know, really charismatic leader somehow
commandeered Bitcoin and convinced everyone that we should have 30 million units and not
21 million, that would basically be delutive on everybody
that held Bitcoin and had opted into the 21 million set
of coins, an additional 9 million,
unanticipated would have a delutive effect on everyone else,
and that would be a covert way of effectively
stealing their purchasing power through inflation.
Is that possible? That kind of thing.
I mean, what's the mechanism of Bitcoin that resists that kind of charismatic leader?
Well, we've had people that have had a lot of influence in Bitcoin in the past and they've
tried to make changes to the protocol, not as dramatic as that.
But Bitcoiners have generally resisted those individuals institutions and they, you know,
big corners have a good track record of sort of staying true to those core values.
So that, you know, you mentioned values and like sticking to the monetary thing,
but there's bigger values. There's almost like psychological values there and still didn't Bitcoin.
You make a point that Bitcoin for many is a vessel, quote, for their expectations, hopes
and dreams.
Can the Bitcoin protocol support this kind of complexity of the human condition?
So like, there's ideas of freedom that seem to be spoken about.
There's sort of ideas of, I mean, even love.
Some people kind of use it as a meme, like Bitcoin is love or something like that.
Mostly to troll me because I talk about love all the time.
But these bigger ideas than just the exchange
of currencies. Yeah, I mean, Bitcoin itself is very simple, I would say, like ultimately, it doesn't,
you know, pretend to do very much. It really just settles transactions. But people do superimpose their own views on it for sure.
And Bitcoin's qualities give rise
to these perceptions of it having censorship resistance
or giving you transactional freedom
or a measure of transactional privacy.
So because anyone can operate a node
and join the consensus process,
and because mining is a competitive free market process,
that means that it's likely that you can't be censored by the miners.
So that means you have transactional freedom.
So you have these computer science technical features of the system
that cause it to have these political qualities, which is
it's very hard or impossible to censor a specific individual.
So it's interesting to see that flow, but so that's one of the core values for sure is the censorship resistance.
Then you have the fact that it's a cryptographic-based system, and
you can hold value in your brain by memorizing 12 words, for instance.
That gives it seizure resistance, which is again a political concept. If you wanted to
desert your jurisdiction with your wealth intact in your brain, that cryptographic feature of the system, the fact that it's built on public key cryptography, and that you can encode a Bitcoin private key in 12 words, that gives it this political
salience that you know you can, you're now empowered relative to a dustbot basically.
Yeah, I mean there's so many beautiful concepts behind cryptocurrency, behind Bitcoin that stand for sort of freedom,
some of the basic things at the founding of this country. The one thing I don't like personally
behind Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies that money is involved and it's like people's life saving,
sometimes are involved. So there is naturally a kind of fear, a self-preservation, like instinctual,
kind of dogmatic thing that comes in, where you're not the best of human nature. You
stop being a George Washington and you lose touch of the like foundational principles, which
I think are beautiful, just like the founding principles of this country.
So that's just like, so I like staying on the level
of like the philosophy versus the level of like,
all my money is invested in Bitcoin.
And that becomes very tricky territory
to have principle discussions yeah about ideas
well interesting tension i try to stay balanced despite being very exposed to
big coin so
let me ask the ridiculous question just in case
who's the to shinakamoto
we don't we don't know it's probably not me because
i was um like seventeen when sentintoshima and Bitcoin 16 so unlikely and also not really
programmer. So there's a lot of theories but honestly it's one of the greatest mysteries
of all time because even Bitcoiners that have been around since day one really you know
people that were around before
Bay Corn came out, they're on the mailing list,
they were active in the Cipherpunk community.
You ask them and they sincerely will not know,
and they may not even have a good guess
as to who Satoshi is.
Is it important to know, or is it like actually important
not to know?
Do you think that's a feature of bug that you, we don't know?
Some people don't like the uncertainty, especially you know, folks on Wall Street, they really
want to know. And if you read the coinbase S1, their disclosure, pre IPO, that's a risk
factor, that's a tosy could come back. So the risk management crowd wants to know because
they want to know if maybe Satoshi had undesirable
political opinions or something that would forever taint the project.
Do you think they were just trolling with that risk, with Satoshi's identity being a risk
factor?
Was there an actual meeting in a discussion of that being a risk factor?
I think in the risk factor sections of the prospectuses, it's really just the lawyers doing a total
brand dump to cover absolutely everything that's
I think so. So it's just lawyers. It's not like,
you know, it's like, I think Elon was somewhere in the legal
documents for SpaceX mentioned that like,
earth governments have no jurisdiction on Mars,
like they threw that in there.
And it feels like, yeah, that could be lawyers, but it could also just be Elon trolling.
Yeah. So I wonder if the Coinbase folks trolling or if it's lawyers. I hope it's the trolling,
not the lawyers. The Coinbase leadership, they're not as big trolls as Elon is, but I mean,
it's a risk for sure
from their perspective because let's say as to who she returned, it doesn't seem likely
and let's say they decided to spend all their coins, which also seems very unlikely.
That's rumored to be or estimates have it at 1 to 1.2 million Bitcoin, which is like 50, 60 billion dollars worth. So some people
consider that to be a risk. You think it's, you know, this is almost like a topic of leadership.
It doesn't feel like anybody, anyone person speaks for Bitcoin. There's not even like prominent
There's not even prominent figures. You have for Ethereum, you have Vitalik Buterin.
There's a lot of top minds talking about it yourself, but it's not one or two.
Do you think again, is that a feature or bug. Do you think for a big going to effectively have a role in society that
is as large or larger than the dollar? There needs to be like leadership that represents
it, almost like democratic kind of thing.
Well, that's a real counterintuitive point because most big corners, including myself, would
say, no, the lack of leadership is a great quality to have.
Because if you have a charismatic leader and a foundation or corporation that controls it,
maybe they can control the features of the protocol and maybe they can expropriate holders of the coin or you know, building an endowment that pays them off and gives them privileged access to
the units of the coin, for instance. So, you know, we call people that have privileged
access to the money spigot Cantalon Insiders, which is there is this economist that pointed
out that, as, you know, I think Richard Cantalon, that has money in terms of the economy has an uneven flow.
Right.
So you see this in last decade or so before that too, the consequence of money printing
in this country is people that own financial assets made a lot of money and people that
didn't, didn't.
So you see that Cantalon insider, Cantalon outsider effect.
And it's the same with the cryptocurrency.
In many other alternative cryptocurrencies
that do have these corporate entities
or these leaders and CEOs,
they're able to make specific decisions
regarding the protocol and the currency of the asset,
the benefit themselves, the cronies, et cetera.
And that's not a good feature to have.
I mean, it does grant you the ability to orchestrate decisions
in a faster and more efficient way.
But long-term, what you're trying to optimize for,
if you're creating a money, is monetary credibility and soundness.
So you don't really want it changing all that often.
And you don't want to have the appearance of, you know, these
elites that are engaging in rent seeking or anything like that. So there's definitely
people that are influential in Bitcoin, there's court developers that people listen to because
I would say of meritocracy largely and they're sort of self-appointed high-prize to the protocol.
I write a lot about Bitcoin, people listen to me, but it's a completely free market of ideas, right?
I don't have any authority within Bitcoin whatsoever. I'm just a scribbler, you know?
You use the scribbler?
It's a scribbler.
So was Aristotle, the Socrates, and Nietzsche.
Okay. At the high level, technically, how does Bitcoin work? Is there interesting things you could say?
Like what are miners, what are nodes, full nodes, what are blocks, what's proof of work?
Is there a nice way to wrap up a clean explanation of the protocol?
Oh man, that could be another five hours.
Is there interesting, because I'd love to talk to you about block size wars and sort of the, the, the politics
of psychology, the principles around that, but sort of building up to that would be nice
to talk about how the thing works.
That's fair.
I mean, and the block size wars are really fascinating discussion of how governance,
debates, intersect with technical features.
how governance debates intersect with technical features.
So I guess we can, yeah, so basically at the highest possible level, Bitcoin is a globally shared,
it's really a replicated ledger that any participant
that wants to be an equal peer on that ledger,
they want to maintain that ledger and they
want to stay up to date with the global state of the ledger.
And really any monetary system is just a ledger with a physical cash.
We benefit from the physical instantiation of the money.
So the physics is the ledger.
The physics is the ledger, right?
Same with gold, right? You can't just produce new units of gold. So we trust that gold atoms are
hard to create. Although not impossible, right? You could fire a bunch of protons that
whatever is the adjacent metal and create gold atoms would be expensive. And the same with
dollars, you know, we trust that it's hard
to counterfeit a dollar.
So we trust the physical analog world
to help maintain the state of that ledger
with digital money, like the money in your bank account,
your checking account.
We basically trust our institutions or banking
institutions to keep a faithful record.
And then ultimately, we trust the central bank to administer that system.
So there's kind of a handful of nodes.
In Bitcoin, we trust that the economic incentives of the system are carefully poised, basically.
So we trust that the free market and mining competition will lead to the miners assembling transactions
into blocks in a faithful
and correct way, and that we are going to converge on a global state of the ledger continuously,
which updates every 10 minutes or so with some variance.
And then the miners aren't the sole entities that control the system to really participate
if you are merchant and you're accepting Bitcoin,
you really want to run your own full node and check the whole history of transactions.
It's sort of something like, I want to say five to six hundred million transactions that have
ever occurred on Bitcoin. So full node contains all the transactions ever transacted on the Bitcoin
blockchain. And that's, I saw it's like 200 gigs or something like
that. Like 350 something like that. It's doable on a regular consumer laptop. And that
is going to be really key later on in the discussion. But so, you know, that's really the
ultimate trust models. First of all, we trusted the miners that assemble transactions into
blocks. And they are the arch that assemble transactions into blocks and they
are the archivists, they inscribe those transactions onto the ledger, and they have an economic incentive
to behave correctly because they're getting paid in no units of Bitcoin.
That's part of it, but then really you are also, you're not fully trusting them.
You're actually, if you want to run a node, you replay every single transaction in the
history of Bitcoin from the beginning to the current day and you arrive at the present
state that way.
So you don't really have to trust too many people or entities.
You can validate the correctness of that all the rules have been followed, that all the
bitcoins that were created were done so in the valid way that the inflation rate
was adhered to and that there's no covert inflation, you know, that if you're spending 50 units
of Bitcoin, you had that Bitcoin to spend in the first place. So it sort of delicately poised
between node operators who engage in this validity checking, kind of anti-count
of fitting checking, and then also the miners, which are an industrial entity, and they
basically produce block space and assemble transactions in a box.
And everybody, so the miners are incentivized to not mess with the system because they're
getting value from the system. So if they mess with it, it's going to decrease the value of their physical work investment.
Yeah.
So they have to incur real physical cost to produce a block, right?
So right now, you get 6.25 Bitcoin's in a block at a minimum and then maybe some fees as
well.
How hard is it to produce a block now?
Well, challenging.
I mean, you need, so 6.25 BTC and a BTC worth $55,000 or so.
So it's probably going to cost you about that amount to produce it because it's a free
market competition and miners have very thin margins. So it's like if I auction off a dollar,
you would pay up to 99 cents to buy that dollar for me.
Exactly what happens with miners.
They're basically competing for the right
to obtain new units of money.
So logically speaking, they would pay up to the value
of that money in order to earn it.
And for people not familiar, the process of mining is solving a difficult cryptographic
problem. That's a computational problem.
Well, I would say it's not like people sometimes
represented it's like a really challenging puzzle.
Like the individual puzzle is very simple.
Like you can do it with pen and paper if you wanted, you know, like shot 256.
It's just that
you're searching through the big mathematical space to find the needle in the haystack.
You're just doing lots of iterations of a simple puzzle.
That's just brute force. Hence, like, the stability of the whole idea of the proof of work.
If it was a, if there was a shortcut, it wouldn't, it wouldn't work.
Exactly. So let's hope nobody solves Sean 256.
Yeah, there's a lot of discussions
in from the quantum computing space,
but everybody I talk to all my colleagues
and that work from quantum computers say this
were quite a way, quite a long way away
from that being an issue in a cryptography
and certainly in issue in competency.
That should have been one of the sides on these dice.
Should have been quantum.
Quantum, because I don't think it is.
I forgot to put it on this edition.
People should check us,
Scott Ernst, and he, uh,
there's a lot of people that are kind of, um,
selling quantum snake oil.
Uh, so you should be very careful. I think it is
a really exciting space that might change the world in the next decade or a hundred, a couple
hundred years, especially for simulating quantum mechanical systems. But in quantum machine
learning, people should check out TensorFlow Quantum. It's a nice way to sort of educate yourself about the space.
And actually, if you're pragmatically minded to,
through software engineering, explore how you simulate quantum circuits,
how you run machine learning on those quantum circuits,
the main point that Scott makes, got Aaronson,
people should check out his blog too, is that like,
there's not yet a single machine learning application that doesn't do almost as well
in a classical computer.
So it doesn't, like, yes, the dream is somehow quantum computers will change the nature
of artificial intelligence, but there's yet to be an actual
algorithm that, or a problem set, or a data set, where that would be the case.
So skepticism is good in this space.
Anyway, that said, so you kind of explained how Bitcoin works.
You also wrote a blog post recently giving a shout out to the new book,
The Block Size Wars. What is a block size? What are the block size wars? It's history, it's importance,
it's philosophical foundations. Yeah, I mean, Bitcoin at this point, we have our own
civil wars. If you're wondering about how politically intense it gets.
It's currently not hot, it's cold. Oh yeah, we're in a datant right now.
There's no tanks or missiles, at least not yet, hopefully.
It can get a little violent, I guess. I think one of the Bitcoin court developers or one of the participants in the war got swatted at one point.
What swatted means?
When someone does a fake phone call saying that you're holding someone hostage at your
house and the SWAT team goes, it's pretty scary.
Wow.
Internet warfare tactic.
Yeah.
But the block size war, I would say, effectively ended.
Although we're definitely going to have more civil wars
in Bitcoin for sure. But basically the core argument was a technical one on its surface but a very
deep political one at its core. The technical question is how many megabytes should be in each
successive block? So Satoshi basically installed a limit of one megabyte per block.
So we should backtrack.
There was no limit in the beginning.
And it seems like Satoshi, what is this, 2000?
The war started in what, 2017, something like that.
I don't know in the 15.
15 was when the battle crimes began.
What was the first battle in the civil war?
But sort of Satoshi, I don't know if you can comment it on it.
Like why does Satoshi set the limit to one megabyte, all of a sudden, almost secretively.
And in the beginning, there was no limit whatsoever.
Yeah, I mean, we can get into and people have spent thousands of hours pouring over Satoshi's
writings to find, you know, which side Satoshi was on, and you can find, like, any textual
exegesis, you can find evidence for either side, right?
But yeah, I mean, effectively when Bitcoin was launched, there was a block size, because
if you made a block over a certain size with the first edition of the code, it would have crashed nodes.
But then, yeah, in 2010, Satoshi added the one megabyte limit in a covert way with no
comments or anything.
And that's stock, basically.
And then Bitcoin blocks filled up.
And people that had been socialized into this vision of Bitcoin as an
effectively free transactional network like YPAT transaction fee. If you're not at congestion,
if the block isn't full, the miner will mine your transaction for free, right?
People that had been brought up in that status quo from 2009 to kind of 2015, they noticed the black started to fill up
and they're like, okay, well, let's just remove this arbitrary limit, right? What could possibly
be the harm? And then a whole other faction said, no, you need to cap the data through
put of the system because if you increase it, it's going to be highly exclusionary and ultimately regular
folks are not going to be able to run a full node.
So there's a fixed number, there's a fixed frequency of blocks.
So if you want to increase the number of transactions per second, you want to increase the size
of the block.
So huge blocks allow you to shove in a lot of transactions.
Right. Small blocks don't. So that's what you mean like constraining the block. So huge blocks allow you to shove in a lot of transactions. Right. Small blocks
don't. So that's what you mean like constraining the system. So what's the benefit of a small
block size where transactions when you can squeeze in only a small number of transactions
and what's the benefit of a huge block size where you can squeeze in a lot of transactions?
Well, it really comes down to the way
you think about the system.
So a lot of people wanted Bitcoin to be visa scale.
So to have blocks sufficiently large
that you could accommodate a visa level scale of transactions.
So which is many orders of magnitude more transactions.
That's right.
I mean, preposterously larger in terms of data throughput. Then, you know,
Bitcoin offers up or at least it used to 144 megabytes of space per day and your average transactions
350 bytes. So, you know, you could add a push to 400,000 transactions a day, which is not many.
So, if you wanted to get to visa scale, you'd have to increase
blocks obnoxiously large. The small blockers claimed that this would overwhelm the ability
of any regular person to ingest that data and stay current at the state of the ledger
to re-play all those transactions to ensure that the protocol rules were valid. So basically, the small blocker contention
is that you eliminate the trustlessness of the system
by pushing a ton of data through the system
because only one or two industrial heavy duty nodes
would ever be able to run the protocol at that point.
So by the way, in the civil war,
the two sides, as your, is your calling them the small
blocker and the big blocker sides.
And so that takes us back to the, the thing that you mentioned that a regular computer
could be a node.
And with the big, with big blocks, that's no longer going to be the case.
So just the number of
transactions is going to blow up the size of the blockchain that every full node
has to store. And so then as opposed to a regular mom and pop type of node, you're
going to have to have data centers. So they're going to have to be owned by large
organizations. It's going to have to be very few of them.
And that's how you centralize the control over this whole operation. So the big blocker.
Yes, it allows you to be visa and do a huge number of transactions, but it becomes centralized. And then the small blocker is
you cannot actually do kind of merchant style transactions, but you get
the decentralized benefit.
Well, I don't even think the big blog approach would allow you to be visa, frankly, because
there's effectively one node of the visa network, right?
So you don't really need to maintain this peer-to-peer architecture at all.
And the amount of data you'd have to push through
to network to reach visa scales
are really preposterous amount.
I mean, and we have now evidence for what happens
when you try and scale up as a blockchain
and do 10 million transactions a day,
which is still not visa scale, right?
I've seen what it's like to operate those nodes
and it's not pretty.
So there are totally genuine computer science,
physical limits because it's a broadcast network.
Everyone has to be aware of every transaction.
And that model, which gives you the trustlessness,
the nice guarantees where everyone's equal
appear on the network, everyone has audited the full history of the transactions. That model falls apart under stress.
So the small block of vision is that
ultimately
you would scale in a layered approach
with the base layer transactions being settlement style transactions and you know payments happening at the other layers basically.
settlement style transactions and you know payments happening at the other layers basically.
Is that university agreed upon or like to large degree agreed upon that the small blockers of one in this debate? Well, where would you put the current state of affairs? There was a wave of
competing Bitcoin implementations in starting in 2015 with Bitcoin XT. Actually, Gavin Anderson, who
was the guy that Satoshi handed the reins to when Satoshi left Gavin supported this large
block proposal. And so that didn't achieve consensus. And then there was Bitcoin unlimited.
And then later on, there was a genuine hard fork
where the large blockers couldn't push
through their proposals on Bitcoin itself,
so they just created a competing version of Bitcoin.
So by the way, maybe you can comment on,
but sort of hard fork versus a soft fork,
a hard fork is when it's not no longer compatible.
What's the right way to put it?
They can't operate on the same blockchain. They compatible, what's the right way to put it? They can't operate
on the same blockchain. They say, we're the same protocol.
Yeah, so there's a few ways to define them, and it's pretty against controversial as
well, but one way to define it as a hard fork is a expansion of protocol rules, and the
soft fork is a shrinking of protocol rules. It's an interesting way to fight it's not very intuitive so I don't like that way.
Another way is that a hard fork is backwards incompatible whereas softwork is in theory
backwards compatible.
So in August 2017, basically the large blockers had had enough and they said, we're going to hard fork Bitcoin,
we're going to create a clone, an alternative version of Bitcoin, which has a shared history
as Bitcoin itself, but you completely fork it and you create a new future.
But everybody that had a balance on Bitcoin at the time also had a balance on the alternative coin Bitcoin cash.
And so that was really, that's what's called Bitcoin cash is the hard fork.
That was one of them.
There were more actually.
I mean, what the heck is Bitcoin Satoshi Satoshi's vision BSV Bitcoin SV.
So this is all talking about increasing the max the limit of the block size more and
more and more.
Yeah, that was one of the changes they wanted to push through.
But BSV was a fork of Bitcoin cash.
So hard fork of Bitcoin.
Yeah.
So and so now there's multiple big blocker block chains floating around.
It's like, what are your thoughts about them?
Well, I was a popular scientific.
Are they popular?
I mean, if you look at the metrics, they're not.
And they, they don't trade,
they think each trade below 1% of the value of Bitcoin itself. So measuring popularity is like how much
they actually oh value of value frequency of trade. Oh, no, no, I mean, they do like a fair number
of transactions, but there's no way to know that that is genuine or just contrived. So, ultimately, the true measure, I think, in my mind, is just where the market
prices these protocols relative to Bitcoin. Because that's like a prediction market.
If Bitcoin cash was being priced at 50% of Bitcoin, you could say the market has given it a 50%
chance of unsealing Bitcoin, right? But both Bitcoin,
cash and Bitcoin SV, which was a hard work from Bitcoin, cash itself, are well, I believe,
at this point, well below 1% of the value of Bitcoin.
And in the, in like the ranking of different corporate currencies, what is the Bitcoin
Ethereum? Is Ethereum in value?
Yes, number two.
And the Bitcoin cash is the one that it's in the top five, right?
It's just a fast drop off.
You know, I haven't checked lately, but I think it's reached kind of morbidity.
It doesn't really have much traction.
The blocks aren't full, so the whole value proposition was, you know, we will get all this
merchant adoption.
If we increase the block size, that just didn't materialize. In my view,
they deflawed vision of how adoption works and what blockchain should optimize for.
Maybe you get a Bitcoin cash supporter on the show that give you a different answer.
But yeah, full disclosure, you know, I have my sympathies and I think the small blockers
won that skirmish for sure.
So at this time, there's no merchant adoption and so on.
So it's kind of, it's visioned the whole reason for existence, at least for now, has
been materialized.
And so that's an indication as possible that, well, it's a sign that perhaps that's the
wrong way to accomplish the scalability.
Well, you know, first of all, I think the layered scaling model is definitely, definitely
correct. I mean, that's absolutely the way these things have to work, given the constraints
of blockchains. What is the layered scaling model? It's really how all payment system scale,
blockchain or otherwise. And I think a lot of people don't understand
this is that there is no equivalent to scaling of the base layer in the regular payment space.
That totally doesn't happen. All of them are built on layers. So Visa is like the fifth layer
in the payment stack that ultimately depends on these utility scale settlement systems like Fedwire, chips, ACH, basically interbank
settlement systems.
So you've got these slow moving but high assurance settlement systems.
Fedwire is probably the number one, you know, like when you send a wire that's using the
Fedwire system typically.
On top of that, you know, you have banks and then you have payment processors. And
then you build up these layers and layers and layers. And then you have these fast payments,
you know, Venmo Paypal, Credit Debit, Visa, you name it. Those payments are not final
when they occur. Credit card transaction will not be final for 90 to 120 days. So, you've decoupled the payment, the financial message, and the settlement.
Those are distinct concepts. And the settlement happens on a deferred basis.
So, that's how you get scalability.
As you have lots and lots of messages, but that they don't settle for a long time.
They might settle on a net basis, on an end of day basis.
But so that's really how it works.
And then you've fed wire where you average transactions
in the millions of dollars,
and there's only a few hundred thousand transactions a day
that's sort of an interbank settlement network.
So that's my vision for how I think Bitcoin will develop, too.
Bitcoin itself on the base layer is the slow moving,
high assurance, final settlement network,
where if you're sending money to the other side
of the globe to someone you don't trust
where you want that payment to be final
in a short period of time,
and both counterparties know it's final,
then you would use that.
But if you wanted to buy coffee,
you could do it on a second layer. Lightning
would be one way. There's a bunch of side chains now, or you could use a more centralized
solution if you wanted. It's kind of a profound idea that in the
space of transactions, when you buy in coffee or buying anything really from merchant or
exchanging goods and all those kinds of things, that most of the time,
like basic honest behavior, human behavior, which it does appear that most of our society
is based in the fact that we're all, most of us are honest, is like stuff is not going
to go wrong when you do this transaction.
And you only need need the base layer.
There's Bitcoin, I forget the terms you use for the credit card version, but you need
that just to verify, just to resolve any disagreements or shady shit.
That's a really rare occurrence. So it's okay for that to be handled
in a small block debate, handled at a rate that's much, much lower than the rate of the transactions.
That's a really interesting idea that when we spend money, we didn't actually exchange the money
most of the time. Yeah, most of the time you're not getting final settlement when you do a transaction.
And oftentimes that causes there are there's pluses and minuses on the plus side of huge
efficiency.
If you use a credit network like visa, but that it's in the name credit, right?
Visa is extending you credit, right?
They're kind of guaranteeing your reputation to the merchant
But fraud happens all the time right there's always fraud
Because you have this reversibility, right?
And so you can you know engage in fraud against the merchant
If you have a final settlement, there's no possibility for fraud
So that's one reason merchants kind of like accepting Bitcoin because once you receive an inbound Bitcoin
payment and you deliver some good or service
You know that payment can't be reversed
But frankly most of the transactions we you know undertake on a daily basis
Do not require the strong assurances of final settlement
There's one exception, which is physical cash with physical cash or with
the open nine cash like product, you actually are getting final settlement.
But online, most online banking transactions, most P to P,
digital wallet transactions in the dollar system, they're not really
final at all.
while it transactions in the dollar system, they're not really fine at all.
You mentioned lightning, lightning network.
What is it?
What are your thoughts on it?
And what are your thoughts about any kind of alternatives?
So lightning is one potential payment solution
built on top of Bitcoin, where you have different assurances,
different transactional assurances,
but ultimately it's very proximate to the base layer, so if something goes wrong, you can always
basically settle to the base layer. Just layer two. Yeah, layer two, you could say. And basically,
the intuition is it's kind of like opening a bar tab. So you go to the bar and you might drink a
dozen beers over the course of the night, maybe half a dozen. And well, I guess nobody go to the bar and you might drink a dozen beers over the course of the night, maybe
half a dozen.
And well I guess nobody goes to the bar these days, but let's say you did.
You open a tab and at the end of the night you settle up once.
You're not necessarily paying each time you get another beer.
So it's the same idea.
You're opening a channel, an ongoing relationship
with your counterparty.
And so lightning has you open a channel with a counterparty
and you're sort of sending back and forth
these cryptographic commitments saying,
I agree to send you some Bitcoin,
but you don't necessarily settle
each time you make a transaction.
So you do hundreds of thousands of transactions
in a channel.
The other thing lightning proposes is saying, okay, well,
now that we have channels established,
what if we interlocked a number of channels together?
So if you and I have a channel,
and you know me and my buddy have a channel,
my buddy can now pay you,
because you have a relationship through me, basically.
And so lightning is this network, this overlay network
that sits on top of Bitcoin
and allows people to transact in a much faster and less frictional way without the need for
Bitcoin's kind of slow periodic settlement, assuming that everything sort of goes well.
Do you see any downsides to this? Like have you seen flaws in the whole system from the security perspective from a scaling perspective?
Any of that or is it is lightning working well?
It works. I've I use it when I initially sold those dice. I sold them online. I was one of the first
merchants to use lightning back in the day. The first edition of the dice.
So people could buy these dice somewhere?
Well, they used to be able to have it made a new edition recently.
They're very scarce and very special.
They're like physical NFTs.
They're just kind of decent.
Yeah.
I mean, the flaw with lightning is really that you, you know, and this can be remediated
in a number of ways, but you have to sort of pre-fund these channels.
So it's a weird concept to have to inject liquidity into a channel
in order to accept a payment.
You know, so I'm sure those user experience problems can be solved,
but it's still in a state of relative immaturity.
So we'll see.
In terms of other ideas that are side chains,
there's soft forks of Bitcoin.
You've mentioned something about Shnor and Taproot.
What are your thoughts about this update to Bitcoin?
And in terms of its promise to improve privacy and scaling, so on.
And what other things are you interested excited about in terms of the development of Bitcoin?
Well, Shnor and Taproot, that's the first new protocol upgrade since
Segwit in 2017, which was what laid the groundwork for lightning to be developed
basically.
And Shunor Toprude is really the first protocol change in three, almost four years
now. So it's, we're very excited about it.
What, I mean, is there something interesting to say technically about what are the things
that's actually going to improve and maybe on the politics side bringing a protocol change
on Bitcoin, what's that actually involved?
Yeah, I mean, it's a huge deal because the last time we tried to make a change to the
protocol, we had whole civil war over it.
And it was incredibly difficult to get SegWit activated in 2017.
And it took all this Bricksmanship and threats and all these campaigns.
And it was this whole thing.
Luckily, I think things have quieted down in those much more consensus that
Snort-Taprude is a good change to Bitcoin and everyone generally supports it.
But, everyone kind of has PTSD over the last time when we tried to change Bitcoin.
And so, we're sort of really dithering over how we actually want to implement it.
So, it's taking forever because we're trying to set the protocol for how do you
change Bitcoin itself?
And that all of our assumptions went out the window last time. So we're trying to reset and decide
What is a legitimate way to institute a changed Bitcoin?
So that's actually the big question right now. It's not should we implement these changes?
We basically all agree that we should it's a matter question, what's the valid way to implement new changes to Bitcoin?
What's the way that is scalable in a long term and will last and people will consider
credible?
Even if this one isn't controversial at all.
So that's where we're at.
We're basically debating over how do we implement this change that we all want.
To get a feeling of how slow Bitcoin governance is and how deliberate it is, everybody
collectively wants the change, but we haven't fully agreed on how we're going to put it into
Bitcoin. So it's a classic sort of Bitcoin situation. But what it is is, I mean, Shnor
isn't alternative signature scheme. I think it was encumbered by a patent. And it had only
just been unencumbered once the Toshikritid Bitcoin, I believe. It's
a better signature scheme than elliptic curves, which is what, than ECDSA, which is what Bitcoin
uses. And so it's been long enough that we now trust it, you know, kind of in cryptography.
It's meant to be lundy, you know, it's sort of, you want to test it over time and then
it's considered safe to use.
So, Shnor has been around for long enough that we've decided to rip out ECDSA and insert
Shnor, which is just a different signature scheme, which is more efficient.
And it has better properties like if you want to do a multi-signature transaction where
many people collectively sign in order to permission a spend. That would be
more efficient in a bite sense than ECDSA, for instance. So it's pretty incremental. And then
Taproot is all about having transactional conditions that are sort of whitheld from final entry onto the blockchain.
So it's kind of a way to have more private conditional transactions on Bitcoin.
So both of them, I would say, are incremental changes.
Is this an over exaggeration that's not to approve my improved privacy and scaling, which is
at the high level of things that people mention. Is that just like a dramatic way of trying
to frame what's fundamentally an incremental improvement?
Yes, but incremental is the word, right? We're not going to get an order of magnitude enhancement
to either privacy or scaling, but we will get a considerable enhancement. But privacy and scaling are actually two sides of the same coin, because you get more
transactional privacy by removing data from the ledger, so that there's less metadata
for people to surveil and analyze, and that's also a new scale by compressing and being
really space efficient with transactions.
And the more parsimonious you are,
the more economically dense each bite
that everyone has to retain on the ledger is.
And so those are very closely allied concepts.
So do you mind if we go through some potential criticisms
of Bitcoin?
Totally.
I spent the last five years, you know, tackling these
every day. So the days the same.
Those two are the same. Yeah, there are three additions. Let's
those go. Okay. Go with the dice. What do we got? Silk road
was that me road classic classic situation. So I mean, that
was the dark net marketplace set up by Ross Albrecht in the early days
of Bitcoin.
That's one of the first killer apps for Bitcoin was being the payments network behind
this dark net marketplace.
And you know, where you'd go to buy drugs and things.
And so that became associated with Bitcoin.
If you remember, the press coverage from back then, but over time, that faded and it became less of a critique.
But so like the critique is that Bitcoin is something you would use for illegal activity,
for drugs, for crimes, all those kinds of things, as opposed to the fact that you kind of
legitimate transactions in the merchant transactions.
And today, Bitcoin settles $10 billion a day and the vast vast majority of it is completely
legitimate.
It's just a useful alternative system.
But back then, a huge fraction of all Bitcoin transactions were related to the basically
illicit marketplaces.
And if you're just tuning in, this incredible tall-sided die has 11 common criticisms of
Bitcoin that Nick, yeah, in a genius way, but together, maybe you could do a couple more.
Oh, so it was Satoshi something, Satoshi coins.
Satoshi coins, we touched on that early in the episode.
What if Satoshi returns and sells all of their coins.
So we don't know for sure how many coins Satoshi actually mined or produced because there's a
degree of probabilistic analysis that you would do. There's a few thousand blocks that were mined
by what we think is a single entity in sort of 2009.
And so if you add them all up, you get two about a million. So people think that Satoshi
mined a million coins and then they're worried that Satoshi would return and market sell all the coins.
That's crushing the price of Bitcoin. So looking at some of these no CEO at the quick time. We see we've already hit on
the dice. No merchants that that's no one to talk about that. Yeah.
There's a scalability one and I think that one is addressed the idea that you're mentioning
with the block size debates and the lightning network that by adding extra layers on top, you can achieve scalability.
That's my vision, that's my theory.
You can do it in a permission list and a permissioned way.
Coinbase is a big Bitcoin exchange.
They provide scalability.
They're a financial institution.
You can settle up internally on their own database,
and then periodically settle to Bitcoin.
They do something like the lighting network internally,
something like this, some kind of mechanism.
Honestly, I'm not sure exactly how it works.
They might have that built in,
but just generally speaking,
institutional scaling is a model for scaling, right?
Where you could have banks holding Bitcoin and the issue notes against Bitcoin and those
are your payments and then the base layer is the settlement layer.
I think that's what you're getting with the boiling oceans.
Is this like the impact on weather?
I think it's on the environment.
So, that is the concern that people have
in terms of the proof of work requires
that there's a lot of computational resources
that being used and that requires a lot of energy
and some large percentage of the world's energies
used to mine Bitcoin,
what's, how would you respond to that criticism?
Yeah, I mean, that's been the loudest critique
of Bitcoin this year, in the process this year, really.
Yeah, so, I mean, it's not like a new criticism,
but Bitcoin is consuming more energy than ever.
So, as the price rises, the electricity consumption rises.
And so, we've heard renewed
you know, belly aching over this for sure. I mean, it's
if you don't believe that Bitcoin is useful, then you're inclined to think that all the energy
consumption is a waste. So that's you know, it's something that's sort of unrebuttable if you
fundamentally contest the validity of the
Bitcoin system.
So, if Bitcoin is like a thing that will take over, it will become like the main mechanism
of financial transactions or transactions period in the world, then you say, well, the
cost of energy used is actually quite low, well, it's just the benefit of provides. If you think it's not going to be, if it's just a volatile,
weighted to make a little money in the short term,
then you see the energy use is really wasteful.
It's totally spurious. Yeah.
So, so then there's no really response, I suppose.
That's so I can totally, you know, get into the details of Bitcoin's energy mix and
things like that, but that's at a high level what the debate is. It's this normative question.
Like, does Bitcoin have an entitlement to consume many of the world's resources? And that's actually
where the debate should end much of the time, because a lot of people fundamentally dispute the validity or usefulness of Bitcoin
as a system.
And so, of course, they're going to consider the energy usage illegitimate.
Now, there's a lot of mitigating factors if you think the Bitcoin is a potentially useful
system, which is Bitcoin consumes energy in a very peculiar way, which virtually no other industry does,
which is that Bitcoin is a geography independent buyer of energy, which is not how we humans
typically consume energy, like we need energy to be produced near to population centers,
and we need it to be produced at the corresponding to the peaks and troughs of our consumption,
because we have to 100% match the demand and the supply at all times. Otherwise, we have blackouts.
So, Bitcoin doesn't care about any of that. It just buys energy on a constant basis.
And so, it's indifferent to where it's being produced.
And so the consequence of all that is that
Bitcoin will buy energy that's otherwise being wasted,
basically.
So it will buy so-called stranded energy assets
that would not make it to a population center.
And in fact, most energy produced
is ultimately does not sort of make it to, you know, your socket in your wall.
And so this is why so much Bitcoin is mine in China, for instance. It's not because, you know,
Chinese industrialists had a special affinity for Bitcoin. It's because the Chinese grid had a
massive overblownance of energy, and particularly in four provinces, situ on
Yunnan, Inamongolia, and Zengjiang.
So in those four provinces, those are all pretty distant from major population centers.
So because of that, you can't really transport the energy that easily.
So huge amounts of energy are curtailed or basically wasted and all these provinces.
And so miners set up shop there because they could mine Bitcoin with the excess energy.
They could monetize this thing that otherwise was going to go to waste.
So there's things like that which I think mitigate the reality Bitcoin is not really rival
with our consumption of electricity.
It's not depriving anyone of electricity. It's
mostly these stranded assets that are going into supporting the Bitcoin network.
So maybe let's do a last one since you mentioned China. This is China control. So so much
mining is happening in China. How do we not, how do we prevent nation states from controlling much of Bitcoin?
Yeah, that's the flip side of a large portion of the blocks being mined in China due to this energy feature
which I discussed, which is that there's a lot of Chinese miners for sure.
Now, the question ultimately is what degree of control doors have over the Bitcoin system? Right.
And that was part of the block size debate.
I mean, the miners, when we implemented subgraded witness in 2017, the miners just didn't
want to do it.
Eventually, the users, the regular folks running nodes, rebelled and basically said, look,
we're going to implement this whether or not you do it.
And it was a threat to the value of Bitcoin because if this threat had gone through,
it could have split Bitcoin and it would have been really messy. So the miners sort of capitulated.
So I think the current consensus is that miners do not have unilateral control over Bitcoin.
And the governance is more poised between people that run nodes,
developers and miners, it's sort of a triumvirate, or neither of them has, you know, total control.
So that's my current model for controlling Bitcoin.
I think if you asked a miner, they would tell you they didn't feel that they had sort
of unilateral control over Bitcoin either. Almost as a thought experiment.
Can I ask you to think about if some of your predictions, some of your analysis, some
of your understanding of Bitcoin is wrong in the following sense, where it will not have
the impact that you have a vision for it, that you will not have the scale of impact, and perhaps
in terms of value, you will go to zero, to something very low, and other cryptocurrency,
or other financial systems will overtake it.
What would be the reason for that in your mind?
Why might you be wrong?
If you look back at it in the future, what did you not understand about Bitcoin that will result in that?
Yeah, that's a great question.
I think for that to happen, one of two things would have to obtain one of two things that
would have to happen. For Bitcoin to just be irrelevant, basically. Either central banks totally clean up their act and you know stop
engaging in rampant money printing which I don't expect that to happen anytime
soon. I mean it looks like we're normalizing this new regime of inflation
you know pro-inflation just to remediate the the debt issues we have. So that
would be one thing that would make Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, much less relevant
as if everyone becomes totally assured of the soundness of sovereign currencies, basically,
namely the dollar, like the dollar being the main one.
It seems like we're going in completely opposite direction, with most people seem to be noticing
the stirrings of inflation in society.
I mean, you might have noticed that too. with most people seem to be noticing the stirrings of inflation in society.
I mean, you might have noticed that too.
It's showing up in commodity prices, lumber prices,
and food, obviously, in financial assets,
and it'll show up and consumer prices generally soon.
But so that would be one way for Bitcoin to basically become irrelevant.
Because it's a dialectical thing.
Bitcoin is held in opposition to the established monetary regime.
So if they completely reform themselves and the dollar becomes super sound once again,
and the Fed stops tinkering the way they constantly do, then we wouldn't need cryptocurrency as much. The other thing would be if a completely
superior design for a new sort of state independent monetary system emerged, but it's really hard
to even imagine how that would come to emerge. And there's good reasons to think that Bitcoin, the conditions of its launch were extremely
favorable and hard to replicate.
Can you speak to some of those conditions?
Why is the unique timing wise moment for Bitcoin to emerge?
Yeah.
So obviously, Bitcoin was born in the depths of the financial crisis, which gives it a nice
historical element.
But that was kind of a coincidence.
Honestly, we know that Satoshi had been working on it earlier in back in 2017.
The really special thing about Bitcoin was that it was launched anonymously by an entity
that did not seek any glory or credit for what they did and apparently never monetized it at all.
So they never really moved any of their coins.
Satoshi sent one test transaction to Halfinney, who was one of the earliest big coiners.
Aside from that, as far as we know, Satoshi never spent any of their coins.
So you have this wonderful Promethean quality whereby it's almost self-sacrificial.
I mean, it's like this borderline godlike figure in terms of their restraint finds this monetary
technology and releases it to the world and pays the price they never took advantage of their
filthy lucre. You know, they never they never recognized any of the $50 billion
that they made from Bitcoin, right?
Satoshi also didn't assign themselves
any privileged access to the coins.
Satoshi could have just written in the code
I own 10% of the coins,
but they didn't.
They just mined in the open free market competition
like everyone else.
It's just that Satoshi is an early minor to support the network, accumulate a lot of coins for sure, but they didn't have
any privilege special access.
So that's one thing that's extremely special about the launch is that we had a founder
that was truly committed to the monetary protocol and didn't seek either recognition or financial
spoils and then also left.
You know, if it's a touchy left in 2010, 2011,
and hasn't really been heard from since.
It's a very George Washington move, gangster move,
where it didn't want power, and once he got power,
he let go of it.
Precisely.
That was a key actually move.
That was probably one of the most important moves
at the founding of this country.
That's right, George Washington could have been a king,
probably if he'd wanted,
and Satoshi could have been Jerome Powell,
if he'd wanted,
and Satoshi could have held on to power indefinitely,
but chose to leave.
The other thing is the Bitcoin circulated
for a long period of time from January 2009 to about July 2010
without really having a financial value.
So there weren't really any marketplaces, it didn't have a value.
And so that gave it this really great distribution among a broad set of stakeholders.
And there were no venture funds or hedge funds, you know, trying to aggressively
buy up all the supply back then. Now, when you have new cryptocurrencies launched, they're like
aggressively pre-mined and some gigantic Silicon Valley venture fund is going to own 30% of it.
And so it's sort of impossible to conceive of how that could become a global money. Because how could
and see if of how that could become a global money. Because how could a Silicon Valley investment firm
own 30% of the money supply that doesn't make sense?
That's just so oligarchical, right?
It's unbelievable.
So Bitcoin by contract is a very bottom up thing.
It was the early enthusiasts, people that were really
excited about the technology, they're the ones that obtained those early coins.
And so there was a real element of fairness and just an organic nature to its launch, which
would be incredibly hard to recapture today.
Let's say Satoshi came back and they said, okay, I made Bitcoin 2.0, I'm going to release
it.
There would be the most aggressive land grab ever
by gigantic pools of capital
to sort of get favorable allocations of the new system, right?
Can Satoshi with Bitcoin 2.0 build in a resistance mechanism
or a prevention mechanism for the land grab.
It would be hard to because if you have capital and resources, I mean, if it was a pre-for-work
chain, you'd just have people that would invest a ton of money in mining, for instance.
But most new blockchain scripted currencies are just sold basically.
They're issued in token offerings kind of thing.
So it's hard to enforce through the protocol,
the decentralization of control. Yeah, power. It'd be challenging too. And people have tried to do
air drops, you know, where they distribute coins to large number of people. Basically, it doesn't
work. Most people don't care about the air drop. So it's hard to have an equitable distribution.
I think the conditions of Bitcoin's launch were so lucky and favorable
that they're very unlikely to be replicated. So I do think it's going to be real challenged ever have a new competitor
that's as decentralized as leaderless, as dispersed, sort of distributed as Bitcoin has its credibility.
I don't know how you could overrule it on those important features.
What about Bitcoin's comparison to other current cryptocurrency?
So Bitcoin versus Ethereum, for example, why is it possible that Ethereum overtakes Bitcoin?
It's certainly possible.
I'm not ruling it out.
Ethereum leadership is sort of wise enough
to understand that they shouldn't compete with Bitcoin on those most profound qualities.
Like Ethereum doesn't really aspire to be more sound from a monetary perspective than Bitcoin.
Right? In fact, the Ethereum leadership are constantly tweaking the monetary policy.
right? In fact, the Ethereum leadership are sort of constantly tweaking the monetary policy. So they went for a completely different trade-off, right? They also don't compete to be
as decentralized from a governance perspective, right? Because there's leadership. There's
an eth foundation, there's a charismatic leader of italic, and Ethereum has this policy of hard forks.
So in Bitcoin hard forks are extremely rare.
In Ethereum, it's the default way to change things.
So, it's a much more adaptive system,
and it changes more frequently.
But that also means that it's sort of there incurring more risk
when they introduce those changes.
There's much more complexity.
So, Ethereum is smart because they sort of understood Bitcoin as the top dog when it
comes to a sound money, a digital gold type thing, and they went for all of the different trade-offs.
They wanted to be more of a platform. They wanted to have more complexity, the transactional
there. They wanted to take on more risk in terms of changing the protocol, they wanted to change
more quickly, they wanted to make the monetary policy more mutable.
So, Ethereum takes that completely different tack.
Of course, you know, I'm not ruling out that it could take over Bitcoin from a market
cap perspective.
It's just a very different system.
And I tend to think the Bitcoin is the most disruptive one
because it's the most equipped to challenge
sovereign currencies in the grand scheme.
Do you think they can coexist?
So like in the future, do you see a world where,
Ethereum captures some large percent of the market
and but nevertheless the minority.
A hundred percent, a hundred percent.
Bitcoin has already been tokenized and put onto Ethereum.
Many units of Bitcoin, I think over a billion dollars worth.
So non-unudicating co-exist, they are actually mutualistic.
So they're like two creatures that have this, you know, it's like the rhino
and like the bird, the pecs, the parasites off the rhino's back or whatever. Right. So
I don't know which is which in the analogy, but I don't know who the parasites are.
Or the alligator and the teeth cleaning fish or whatever, right? So, oh, you know, I was wondering why the alligator doesn't just eat the fish, but I guess
they're brushing its teeth, basically.
So, Ethereum is, it gives you more transactional flexibility.
There's much more experimentation happening there.
It has this whole decentralized finance element.
There's a huge number of big coins that circulate on the Ethereum protocol,
right?
Because Ethereum is open to other asset types, basically.
So I think that's actually accretive to both systems, because Ethereum gets to have this
good form of collateral Bitcoin on the system, which is good volatility characteristics.
And then it's a supply sink for Bitcoin's, which are sort of
now they're injected into this third party protocol, and that I think reduces the velocity
of Bitcoin over on.
It's probably good for the valuation.
So you see, it's quite possible.
It could be a symbiotic relationship.
That's really interesting.
I think so.
I think so.
What are your thoughts about the Vitalik buterin?
What are your thoughts about some of the other figures in the space outside of Bitcoin?
I think Vitalik made some mistakes with the theorem, ultimately.
I disagree with some of the decisions that were made along the way.
There's this infamous case of this bailout,
where 14% of ether was lost in the smart contract,
or really, this smart contract that a lot of Ethereum leadership
were sort of backing and supporting was hacked.
And then, the foundation with the Vitalik support
chose to make a change to the underlying protocol to undo the hack.
So to me, that was not the most prudent approach Granted, there was a lot of ether in there, but I think that shook the credibility of
the Ethereum system that happened back in 2016, I think.
That was one reason why I became disenchanted with Ethereum.
So basically, even if in that case, that might fix an important problem that opens the door to centralize
manipulation of the protocol in the future.
Yeah, it basically demonstrates that there's certain elites at the protocol level that
can exercise specific control over the system.
And, you know, a lot of people have lost money in hacks on Ethereum and a lot of contracts have gone
south, huge amount of value, but they didn't get a bail out.
And it was just when this specific contract called the DAO was hacked that the leadership
intervened.
And to their credit, they haven't had a significant intervention or bailout
since then. But it did normalize the practice. And I think it weakened the social contract.
So I would prefer that you sort of bite the bullet in that situation. And you accept the failure
of that contract. There'll be a ballsy move to bite that bullet. Yeah. I mean, and then you would
have had like what they thought was a malicious entity and control
a lot of coins.
I think the real reason they sort of felt that they had to undo it was because they'd
always planned to move to this proof of stake world where your political control over the
system is a function of your wealth in the system.
And they didn't want this attacker, which would
have inherited all this significant wealth to have influence over that future pervastate
version. That's sort of my theory.
Yeah, I mean, that makes sense. It kind of reminds me of the bailout of car companies.
You know, this is difficult. There's a lot of people that criticize the bailout
of these large companies, you know, but creative destruction. I mean, I was critical of the
bailouts that happened during COVID. I mean, I generally think that it's healthier for
society for bad firms that aren't making money to fail or be reorganized under the various forms of bankruptcy.
And you've saw what happens. You see the, you know, the corporate sector in Japan
in the 90s, there was just like slow motion and solvency where basically firms
weren't allowed to fail. And the Japanese corporate sector lost competitiveness
because bad firms did not fail.
And so, you know, the process of actual capitalism for the market clearing didn't occur.
So, I'm always in support of, you know, of the free market being allowed to clear
for non-profitable firms to fail.
It's complicated, man, because creative destruction seems to be in a long-term
positive, but human civilization is such that short-term pain has real
impact on people. Policy makers don't ever want to incur that short-term
pain because they have a short- term outlook and turn limits often.
But it's short term pain. Forget politicians, it sucks to lose a job for an individual.
You could say the company, creative destruction of a company means the company was inefficient
and that's going to have a ripple effect of
teaching everybody else what an efficient operation looks like, but like there's jobs
that are being lost. There's families that have to suffer because of that. I mean, that's
potential. We live in society is having a basic safety net for our world because there's a level beyond which, like if through creative destruction,
you have some percent of the population that dips below a certain level that you would
call like suffering, we don't want that.
And that's a difficult thing to live with.
Like, yes, in the long term, you want inefficiency to be destroyed and efficiency to be rewarded,
but there does seem to be a base level of quality of life that we want to uphold.
That's a difficult thing to think about.
I think about that a lot.
There's a doctor called Paul Farmer that there's like a, in Haiti or in Africa, there's a child who's dying. And as a doctor,
you want to give everything you have, all the money you have to save that one child.
But, you know, and you do, actually. But that's a very human action.
It's not an economic, it's not a rational action from a game theoretic perspective because
there's no way you can take that action for every child who is suffering.
But there's something deeply human about doing that for that one particular child.
In that same sense, creative destruction is an economic principle. But it's not necessarily that same kind of human principle and there's attention there.
I see it.
I mean, I think that's the issue with modern central banking really is that the central
bank always has an incentive to lower interest rates and they've been doing that from the
70s towards today on
this you know well 80s really on this slow march down because whenever there was
a hint of a crisis in the economy or financial asset prices started to fall
their reaction is okay well inject more capital into the economy we'll save it
but my view is that these plightive short-term measures caused the build-up of a huge amount
of fragility in the long-term.
And then the ultimate collapse is much worse than the counterfactual situation where you
raised interest rates, you took your medicine, and the economy was healthier.
And that's why people like Ray Dahlia point out that you have these long term death cycles,
and we're sort of at the end of one now, is because we couldn't take our medicine, we couldn't, you know, let interest rates clear,
we constantly wanted to ward off any, you know, difficulty and we didn't ever want to deleverage truly.
And then when the, when the debt crisis happens and it hits,
it's, you know, horrendously bad.
So do you think Bitcoin might reach a million dollars in value?
It's having a current resurgence, a crazy one in 2021
in the recent months of over 60,000000 I guess it is now. Do you think
it's possible it goes over 100,000? Do you think it's possible it goes to a million?
You can't rule anything out with Bitcoin. So I mean, I'm not, you know, one to put price
targets on it, but one way it could reach a million dollars is Bitcoin's value stays unchanged
in real terms. And dollar in the crash is dollar to appreciate.
Yeah.
Against it.
Not that I expect hyperinflation.
But yeah, I mean, like Bitcoin is worth about one-tenth, slightly under one-tenth the value
of all the gold in the world.
And gold is worth $10 trillion, $11 trillion in the aggregate.
Do I think Bitcoin can be more culturally and economically
salient than gold in two decades time? 100%. Bitcoin was unknown 12 years ago and today
100 million people worldwide own Bitcoin. So just extrapolate that. What is the level of
penetration you think we'll get? 500 million, a billion, you know, you can easily
tune these adoption curves however you like. I don't think it's done monetizing and being adopted
globally. You think it can become like the base layer for a lot of our financial operation,
like it become the main base layer for all our transactions. So even banks will use Bitcoin essentially.
And visa will use Bitcoin as the base layer.
It would actually operate very similarly
at the surface layer,
but at the base layer would all be Bitcoin.
That's precisely what I expect.
And banks and Visa are already using Bitcoin.
So Visa has embraced Bitcoin in a really big way actually. And so it's
always funny to the people saying Bitcoin has to change in a certain way so it can compete with Visa.
No, Visa adopted Bitcoin, right? PayPal adopted Bitcoin, Square adopted Bitcoin. Obviously they're
not tearing out all of their existing infrastructure, but they're totally engaging with this thing. Banks have now begun, they got the green light to provide
custody for Bitcoin for their depositors. That's the first step. Eventually, it will
have in one of two ways, either Bitcoin native financial institutions will become banks.
That's already happening. There's Bitcoin exchanges that
have gotten banking licenses, or banks themselves will start to engage with Bitcoin as a reserve asset.
It'll converge either way. That's totally happening. And yes, I mean, I don't think Bitcoin is
going to power every financial transaction. I think it will coexist alongside sovereign currencies, but
I think it will coexist alongside sovereign currencies, but I think it's a great reserve asset. It's a very powerful asset to build a financial system on top of because it's
highly, highly auditable. It's something that you can take physical delivery of very cheaply.
And those are great qualities. If you're a depositor in a bank, they can prove to you how
much Bitcoin they have. They can't really easily prove, you know, in the old system, how much gold they held on
deposit.
And you can easily conduct a run on the bank, you can hold them accountable because you
can withdraw it because, you know, making a big contraction is pretty easy at the end
of the day.
Unlike Fiat currency, it's like kind of, you can't really withdraw all your dollars from
the bank.
I mean, you sort of can, but you're not going to want to take delivery of pounds of cash
or anything like that.
So it's a good modern asset upon which to build a financial system, basically.
You measure square and Visa, sort of investing in Bitcoin.
What do you make of probably one of the higher profile big
investments in Bitcoin, which is Tesla and Elon Musk, but there's also a few billionaires like
Chimath and all of them investing. What do you make of this whole movement? Why do you think they're
doing it? I mean, Tesla is an interesting case. Why do you think Tesla is putting, um,
buying so much Bitcoin? I honestly don't know and I would love to truly know Elon's genuine thoughts on Bitcoin
Because he's kind of sending us mixed messages, honestly
With his embrace of Dogecoin, which is sort of playful
Not exactly sure what point he's trying to make there. So you were involved with Dogecoin
You mentioned offline a little bit in like in the early days early. It's like
you mentioned offline a little bit in the early days. Early is like played around with it.
What do you make of Dorshkoin?
What do you make of Elon and Doge?
What do you make of this particular meme coin?
Is it one like a legitimate cryptocurrency
or is it two like a funny internet way
of saying FU to the man?
Yeah, it's a good question. I mean, so I wasn't like a funny internet way of saying FU to the man. Yeah, it's a good question.
I mean, so I wasn't like a figure had in Dogecoin
or anything, but that was totally my introduction
to crypto was mining Dogecoin in my dorm room.
And then tipping people online in Dogecoin,
which I just thought was the funniest thing.
So I guess I was really easy to entertain back in 2013.
But it was very playful at the time. There was a culture around Dogecoin.
And the people liked it because it was in opposition to the Bitcoin culture, which was really
serious and involved lots of Austrian economics and Rothbard and Hayek and stuff like that.
So that was my introduction to cryptocurrency was because I thought the Bitcoin people were
pretty lame.
Yeah.
And they were like way too serious about all this stuff.
And I was like, okay, I'll just be a part of the Dogecoin community.
And they did all these funny publicity stunts.
They paid to send the Jamaican Bob sled team to the Olympics.
You know, like great stuff.
Like they put the Dogecoin logo on top of a NASCAR car.
Yeah.
And I just, that tickled me so much
because it's like this made up internet coin.
This was back when crypto was pretty novel
and still like kind of funny and stuff.
And that was really entertaining.
Fast forward, seven, eight years,
Dogecoin is way less entertaining now, because it's the leadership laughed the community spirit evaporated
The meme didn't persist. I mean doge itself is not really a contemporary meme, right?
I mean, it's an old meme. Although that newly fresh of the meme like doge
Haven't heard that name in a long time like where Doge is like in a hat smokiness cigarette. I mean, there's some sense where Elon is reinvigorating the
meme and it's funny because like one influential figure could do just that which just speaks
to the tension that you're talking about. Like Tessa is investing Bitcoin and yet Elon,
he also tweets about Bitcoin, but he's...
I mean, who am I to question the meme, right?
Yeah, I can't dissect internet culture
and panhandically sit here and tell you
it's an invalid meme.
If people believe in it, then it's real.
Is there a space for meme coins at this time,
like Doge or somebody else to almost like, you know, it does serve a lot of purposes,
which is like you said, it pulls in people
into this whole space of digital currency,
and digital into cryptocurrency,
allowing to explore, allowing to have fun
as opposed to taking everything very seriously.
Is there still space for that?
Yeah, yeah.
And I mean, the crypto landscape is very broad today.
So whatever, you know, cultural element you seek to find within crypto, you will find.
It was a bit different in 2013 because Bitcoin was kind of the only game in town.
There were a couple altcoins.
And so, Dogecoin made a lot of sense as a counterpart
to Bitcoin as a less serious counterpart. Today, crypto is just like gigantic cultural and economic
trend. So it's very multifaceted. Dogecoin is one of the many ways that people have to engage with
it. I think a lot of people that buy Do dogecoin based on Elon's implied guidance are going
to lose money because fundamentally there's nothing enduring about dogecoin.
It's an ancient fork of Bitcoin that's unmaintained.
It's probably at risk actually from a protocol perspective.
It's merge mind with light coin, I think.
If there was an inflation bug on Dogecoin, it's unclear who would sort of be able to remediate that.
You know, so it's not technologically very sound.
So I wouldn't recommend that anyone stores wealth in it, you know?
Yes, it's funny because cryptocurrency, like my interest in cryptocurrency, is in the exploration of technical
ideas.
But cryptocurrency is also, like in the case of Dogecoin, like for laws, at least originally,
like a meme coin, but it's also a mechanism for investment.
And so those are sometimes attention.
And it's unclear.
Sort of like, yeah, you know, the meme with dojos
has almost become to take it to, I guess,
to a dollar, trying to drive the value up to a dollar.
But, you know, implied in that is like this overlap
of the meme coin and like legitimate investment. and so you have a lot of young people I think who
Almost start getting greedy. I want to make money like as opposed to
Having fun and that becomes a different beast then because you're essentially
Making financial decisions that can have a long
lasting, like, you know, money is freedom. And if you make stupid financial decisions,
you can remove freedom from your life. And that's, it can be detrimental in that sense. So I don't,
it's difficult. I don't know what to do with that. Well, that's
a set of ideas because a lot of crypto cryptocurrency, including Bitcoin is very volatile because it's
new. So you're trying to figure out the space of like what's actually going to be a large part of,
like you speak of network effects, like what's going to take over the world. And through that process, there's going to be a lot of volatility. And if you're talking about cryptocurrency as
a investment mechanism, then it can have a real detrimental effects on people's lives.
Yeah. And that's really the challenge with operating in the crypto space, talking about
it overlaid on top of everything
that's interesting politically or culturally about it,
is the financial incentive.
Yeah.
And so, you know, it's not all fun and games
because there are literally billions
over a trillion dollars at stake now.
So if you buy Dogecoin because some influencer
on TikTok said so, yeah, you've
now made a financial decision, right? So I'm not going to scold any Dogecoin buyers or
any crypto asset buyer for that matter. But be aware that there are like billions of dollars
of really elite hedge funds that are trying to front run all of your decisions and evaluate social sentiment
things like that.
So it's a waterfall of sharks basically.
And by the way, if you're listening to this, don't take this podcast or anything I ever
say is financial advice.
That's definitely not my interest or expertise level.
Now the interest here is to explore different ideas.
Speaking of which, you've written a little bit about NFTs.
I mean, should it to hear your opinions on this space of ideas, these non-fungible tokens,
they seem to have a cultural impact currently.
But do they have a long-lasting technical, financial, or cultural impact, or is this
just a fad?
What do you think of NFTs?
Yeah, I think the current enthusiasm for NFTs and the financial metrics you see, the
growth there in that sector, is partially a function of where we are in the actual credit
cycle.
So, oftentimes, when inflationary events occur, you have
correspondence speculated of manias that occur at the same time because people intuitively feel
that the fiat currency that they hold is being debased. And so they frantically look around for places to put it. So stocks, property, commodities, and then other asset classes, NFTs, or an asset
class. And this is a case with any inflation you look at in history, you saw these corresponds
speculative, many as basically speculative episodes. So a lot of us feel that inflation
is occurring, whether it's in CPI or not,
that basically lots of dollars are being injected into the economy. We have all seen stocks
massively appreciate even as GDP contracted. And so a lot of people sort of got cotton
on to this notion that wow, it's the Fed, you know, low interest rates and Congress spends a huge amount of stimulus
dollars into the economy.
Financial assets are going to go up, so I better have exposure to all that stuff.
And so you see virtually every asset class is a wash with cash right now.
People are investing like their lives depend on it, investing, trading, whatever.
Whether it's options, volumes on Robin Hood, you know, like kind of retail
brokerages, things like that, whether it's stocks, whether it's crypto, and then other
collectibles, baseball cards, their valuations have been skyrocketing.
And so I think NFTs are part of that.
It's a new asset class.
It's basically an opportunity to invest in sort of art or collectibles, in-game items, things like that.
I think that explains a large degree of the enthusiasm, the excitement, is that it's
a novel, a classic class that people can trade, and right as these inflationary tailwinds
pick up.
Now I was for the sort of virtues of the actual technical phenomenon. NFTs are actually
not a new idea at all. So you've had NFTs, I didn't call them NFTs, but in 2016, built
on Bitcoin, for instance. So it's been around for a while. What it is is a serial code, basically
a string of data that is inserted onto a public
blockchain and then circulates as a unique token. And then the
question is, OK, well, what does that data refer to? What's the
external reference? And that has to be defined. There has to be
some entity which says, oh, yeah, this unique string refers to
like this piece of art or digital content or trading card or
whatever.
So, NFT, the concept itself is an incredibly broad idea.
It's just, well, what if we took barcodes and put them on chain so that they could be
traded and so they could circulate freely on a peer-to-peer basis and plugged into exchanges
and things like that.
So that concept is super valid, clearly has protocol market fit, right?
People are using it for a really wide array of purposes. It's completely going to exist.
May the valuations contract of NFTs in the aggregate? Definitely possible, probably likely.
But I think the notion of creating enduring collectibles or artworks that have
accompanying signatures, basically autographed art on the blockchain, that has totally been
validated. I think that won't go away.
I wonder if there's ideas like big clouds, for example, I don't know if you saw that,
if there's ideas built on top of this concept,
there's have to be an Ethereum and NFT,
it could be just the concept of non-fungible tokens,
whether those kinds of things can take hold.
And it's less about financial transactions
and more about almost like,
I don't know how to put it, but like staking identity in some way, whether it's big cloud or identity of objects, like there might be some way of connecting
physical reality and digital reality in some interesting ways.
So just the financial aspect is a way to like put some validity behind the identity.
I wonder if there's like ideas there that are yet to be discovered or ideas that yet to take hold.
Like big clouds, seems interesting, seems shady as hell, seems a little scammy.
I don't know if I like the idea that you can bet on people
Essentially right. Yeah, I think my market cap on bitclot is like $90,000 and I haven't done anything there so
Did you take did you like take like verify yourself or whatever?
I have not I think people would yell at me on Twitter if I did so
In the sun clear whether it's a scam yet or not, right? It's unclear where it's coming from.
Well, there are some details about the, you know, investors.
It's backed by some pretty big name investors.
So I probably wouldn't use the word scam to describe it, but it's got Ponzi-like dynamics,
like everything in crypto.
So there's very questionable.
And then also is using people's likeness
without their permission, which is, I think,
a legal question.
So there's open questions around it.
But our public blockchains and that sort of architecture
is that can be useful for decentralized
or alternative forms of social media.
A hundred percent, yes.
I'm super, super bullish on that idea.
Basically creating open protocols, open namespaces, ways to organize without the dependence on
a single node effectively in Silicon Valley, the Twitter node or the Facebook node.
I think it's a matter of urgency that we create,
you know, digital gathering spaces
where you have strong property rights,
you know, you have a claim on your identity,
you have a claim on your data.
And open architectures are a way to do that.
I don't know if it'll be a blockchain,
but certainly I think the general concept introduced
by blockchains is a good template for how to organize these systems. Yeah. Value freedom,
value decentralization of power, whatever the mechanism. Let me ask you about love. So there is a Bitcoin maximalist community
that
sometimes also those folks in general have a strong belief that Bitcoin is good for the world and
it's almost an ethical imperative to
to sort of help Bitcoin succeed
to sort of help Bitcoin succeed,
which I think is a member of any community, I think is beautiful to believe
in the vision of the community.
Right, there does seem to be some properties of,
what some may call toxicity or
derision and mockery and those kinds of things.
So, you know, some folks have criticized this, right?
That Bitcoin maximalism is not necessarily good for the world,
even if Bitcoin is good for the world.
What are your thoughts about this kind of approach philosophically
or practically to the spread of Bitcoin.
And is there a way that we can add more love to the world while we add more Bitcoin to the world?
That's a great question.
Bitcoin is sort of what you make of it.
So you can define your own path as you advocate for Bitcoin or don't for that matter. So my chosen approach is the
approach you see here, which I try to minimize the amount of sort of harshness or mockery
although I've been known to be me on Twitter too, you know.
What Twitter is the specific site to interrupt is a specific medium where this takes its
worst form. So I'm learning, listen, I'm actually, because of this podcast, but in general, I'm part
of different communities.
And some are full of like, unabashed love.
And some are like, when I experienced the intensity, the mockery,
I bet.
The layers of law, like the layers of not taking anything
seriously.
And I think there's power to that, there's freedom to that.
I appreciate it.
I have respect for it, but it's not my thing on Twitter.
It's just not the way I enjoy communicating on Twitter.
I retired from Twitter. I had I had a hundred thousand followers and then I retired. So I'm free now.
I don't have to tweet anymore. It's great. But I totally can see the point. I wish that
Baycoiners were gentler in their approach. Not all Baycoiners are like that. Of course, there's, you know,
50 to 100 million of them worldwide and a few tens of thousands on Twitter. So I'm not
going to claim that they're necessarily representative. The toxicity, though, is kind of a learned
habit because, uh, big coin has had so many episodes where strong, wild institutions, the dice, the dice are pretty toxic,
you could say, right?
I'm basically mocking critics of Bitcoin.
But at the same time, you're saying that the criticism has been
predictable and repeatable and all it's been
the same throughout.
Yeah, and that's a pretty, you know, dismissive thing to say,
right, that I can reduce you to an
algorithm of, you know, with the live end permutations. But, you know, the thing to remember,
I guess, is that some of the best funded companies in the Bitcoin space, the most powerful
miners, billionaires, have tried to change and co-opt an ultra bitcoin to shape it to their
liking.
And without these incredibly hard core sort of high priests of the bitcoin protocol, it
would have been hopelessly malleated in all number of ways.
And so there is a reason why someone would be incredibly protective of Bitcoin.
Does that justify immense toxicity on social media?
Probably not.
But it's a leaderless protocol.
So the whole point is that it's money for enemies.
And you know, some of the Bitcoin max ones came for me too when I made suggestions that they didn't like
But you know, I'm happy to use it the protocol because I
Know that that transaction will be final
Regardless of how odious my counterparty is or how how you know politically disfavored their opinions are
See, I mean and this is where there's, there could be disagreements, but I, I think you
have to think about what's effective as a defense mechanism of strong ideas.
And I personally think that like kindness and thoughtfulness and like is much more effective because it lets the idea shine as opposed to the personality
of the individual humans overriding it.
But there's debates on this.
I mean, I take your side on that.
I think a patient and careful approach is the way to go.
Now do all critics deserve good faith engagement.
Right. No, I would say. A lot of critics
of Bitcoin operate in extreme bad faith. And the reason why is because we're not just talking about
technical questions. In fact, most of this conversation is not about technical. It's been political.
Because Bitcoin is an intensely political idea. And so a lot of people are predisposed to totally hate it and to wish,
you know, death on Bitcoiners. I mean, there was a professor at GW. I saw earlier this week that
was musing about getting all the big corners on a boat and sinking it. It's like, and what other
context would a, you know, upstanding professor muse about mass murder? But in the context of Bitcoin, it's sort of okay,
within his peers, because you're talking about something that most people don't like.
It's a concept that's alien to them that doesn't jive with the way they see the world.
Because it's so pitched from a political perspective, there's a lot of critics as well as defenders that operate in bad faith, I would say. But that's the nature of the beast. It's because
we're proposing a very disruptive thing. And there are people that would be disrupted
by it.
You wrote all blog posts titled Unwriting. You're, I think, an excellent writer. So let me ask, what does it take to be a good writer?
What does it take to write some of the blog posts you've written, sort of condense set of
ideas in your head, the mess that's probably in your head and putting down on paper in
a way that's, uh that communicates the idea clearly and
powerfully. So that was basically the point of the blog post is that being an impressive
writer is different from being an effective writer. So I think the answer to your question
is humility, basically. So I think if you let pride and vanity seep into your writing, then you risk creating
a very noisy signal, creating a very inefficient channel for communicating literal, neural arrangements
from your brain to someone else's brain.
And that's what I think about when I write.
It's like, wow, I have the power to at scale change the literal physical composition of people's brains, right? To rewire them.
Yeah. If I make an idea that's so persuasive, that's so sticky, if I coin a phrase that is so
pithy, then I can alter their brain. That's crazy. I mean, you're letting someone reach into your head and like,
mess with it a little bit. That's unbelievable. And that's like a super power. And if you could do that
to 100,000 people at once, how powerful is that, right? And you mentioned Descartes. I think
therefore I am, that's like literally rewired millions of brains throughout history. Right. I mean,
that's one of the most powerful like Cogado Urgo some one of the most powerful phrases ever written. And that sent a zillion philosophy
undergraduates down to rabbit hole of skepticism that some of them didn't make it out of, you know,
and they're convinced that, you know, the brain in the Vat theory is true and there's no way to
know, you know, what what our changeable experience is.
But yeah, so that's the beauty of writing.
And the thing that interferes with that is our pride,
our desire to impress people and look good to them
and chew off our vocab and stuff.
And that was the point of that piece
is that I went on this journey
where I eventually realized that I don't know if I'm any better of a writer for having realized it.
But I think that is a necessary condition. So does that mean there's a value just
striving for simplicity in the words as opposed to I, complexity. I think so for sure. And we deal
with complex topics all the time in crypto. And that's always a huge red flag for me. I mean,
if you can't explain something simply, do you understand it? You know, yeah. So if you're
talking about something that complex, if you can't find simple ways to discuss it,
my presumption is that you're actually obfuscating the truth.
And this is what Orwell railed against
with political language.
He really hated political language
because he felt that its authors were using deliberate
obfuscation and he hated euphemisms.
And I hate euphemisms too.
I much prefer fourth forced rightness and clarity of thought,
but most people when they write don't really endeavor
to be particularly clear.
They might be writing to show off their startup
or to demonstrate to people how cool they are
or how well read they are, they're displaying.
It's like a peacock style display.
What fraction of people write to actually communicate meaning?
Small fraction.
It's especially difficult because what I've detected is
something in us humans as readers assign more credibility to people that
off-uscape.
So like simple, clear communication of an idea is not like the immediate reaction is not
one where we assign credibility to the person.
Like that was brilliant.
There's a lot of people that I kind of listened to
without really understanding what the heck they're talking about,
but it sounds musical and smart,
and then I see a lot of folks assigning credibility to that person.
And it's unfortunate.
It's unfortunate that there's that tension as a reader that we
appreciate the beauty and power of like complex weaving of words without assigning as much
value to like actual communication of an idea. And I'm always skeptical in speech as well.
When someone will describe someone as articulate, I'm always immediately skeptical of the value
of what that person is saying. Because if you articulate, you can make bad ideas sound
very acceptable. Right. And Nome Chowkiz has said this before, as a way to defend the way he speaks, he said
that like he's suspicious of charismatic people because they can basically sell any kind
of idea.
He speaks in a very monotone and boring way so that whatever the value his ideas have, they
will shine through.
There's something to that. There's something to that.
I love that.
But it's a difficult journey.
It's a difficult path because then I think it's the right path
because ultimately you focus on the quality of your ideas and then in the long
term, that wins.
I agree.
Just by way of advice, is there if people are interested in Bitcoin or
cryptocurrency in your work, what are good books or resources on Bitcoin?
From you and from others that you can recommend that in your own journey helped you or you've seen help others.
Well, it's very easy. I mean, it's much easier today to make the Bitcoin journey because the quality of content is so much better than it was when I started.
I mean, when I learned about Bitcoin, there was the Bitcoin wiki and the Bitcoin stack exchange
and the subreddit and that was kind of it. And you had to just pick up everything. The economic
theory hadn't really been worked out very much. So you had to pick everything up from scratch.
The good news is that there's a huge abundance of content. And that's
actually one of Bitcoin's greatest strengths, is that people are totally inspired to write
about it. And it's almost a right of passage at this point if you're like a Bitcoin thinker
to have your book. I don't have a book yet. I would love to recommend my book. I haven't
written one. Do you think about writing a book? Yeah, I think it's my duty, 100%. Everyone that has
created a lot of Bitcoin content probably should condense it into a book to give it an enduring
status. It's interesting because you mentioned block size wars and you've written on a lot of
different topics. So you could both write a big like like, sapien-style book about big coin or cryptocurrency, right?
But you can also write a book on each, like, a specific thing.
And now that you put pressure on yourself and talking about simplicity, right?
Where do you lean on those different book journeys that you might take on? Do you have in you
eventually like a like a Bitcoin book? I mean, I tallied up the words that I wrote in the last
couple of years on Bitcoin. It's like over 100,000 words a year. So that's two novels there.
But yeah, I think I do. I think there's so much under explored space in Bitcoin.
I mean, a systematic interpretation of Satoshi's writings, for instance.
And a lot of people don't want anyone to do that because they don't want it to have
these religious overtones where you're engaging in interpretation, you know.
But that's something it should be done.
There's a lot of Bitcoin histories that haven't been written.
There was a great Bitcoin history recently published.
This is one of my recommendations is on the block size war by Jonathan Beer,
who runs probably the best research desk in the industry.
So there's huge amounts of history that has transpired, that hasn't been chronicled.
And some of the accounts are indifferent.
You know, they're often written by outsiders, you know, journalists that maybe don't fully
engage with the Bitcoin system.
But if you think the humans are interesting in this story too?
Of course, they're the most interesting thing.
You know, I mean, Bitcoin itself doesn't really change that much.
It's kind of this cold protocol that just sort of takes along.
But the characters are just fascinating.
I mean, and there's so many unbelievable characters
in the Bitcoin story, unbelievable.
Yeah, that's the cool thing about Bitcoin
and cryptocurrency and just internet is like the weirdos the brilliant weirdos
like all the people in
In the stuff that's already established or boring like economics professors are all boring, right?
But the interesting people the wild ones are are the ones that are innovating on in the crypto space which
Is you know that's where the dangerous weirdos are
and the exciting brilliant weirdos.
Well, you had to be kind of crazy to adopt Bitcoin
in the first sort of five years of its life.
So there's an adverse selection element there.
I don't know if that's an uncharitable way to put it,
but like some of Bitcoin's earliest evangelists
are not the evangelists I would
have chosen, but they're the ones that we got.
So it's the one we got, but is there resources you're basically saying just throw a dart
and most books are going to be good or is there something that's out to you?
I mean your average book is, you terrible for sure but not a Bitcoin specifically
but just in general. It depends whether you like the computer science, the economics or the history
but my recommendations would be you know obviously the Bitcoin white paper that's and Satoshi's
complimentary writings that's very important is to try to understand the intentions behind the system.
And also to understand the system without having your view colored by some third parties description of it. Most descriptions of Bitcoin are really bad. So just go to the originals,
go to the Halfinney's post, Satoshi's post on Bitcoin talk. There's a huge amount of lucidity there.
And actually most of our questions
about Bitcoin today that we have a decade later were really answered in those earliest days.
People just don't know it. The canonical economic work relating to Bitcoin, a lot of people don't
like it. I think it's fine. Would be the Bitcoin standard. Why people don't like it? I just read it. It's good. Yeah, I think it's a good description of sort of the Austrian perspective and then how it
relates to Bitcoin. There isn't that much about Bitcoin in there, but I think the point is,
once you've understood, you know, the safety and view of monetary policy, Bitcoin makes
it a ton of sense, you know, actually need to argue for it that much. So the Bitcoin standard is a good introduction to sort of the orthodox thought in Bitcoin.
There's a more recent book called Laird Money, which I liked by Nick Batia, which goes into
more depth about what I was talking about early in the conversation, the layered approach
to scaling.
And that's a really critical thing to understand.
Then technical books about Bitcoin,
I like rocking Bitcoin,
which is a very computer science heavy one.
There's a good textbook
called Bitcoin and cryptocurrency technologies
by Arvind Nuranian.
I think he's a Princeton computer science professor,
which is really good at building intuition.
Antenopoulos' books, Mastering Bitcoin are good.
Then there's simpler intuition building books
that aren't hardcore on the economics
or the protocol design.
So you have like inventing Bitcoin by Jan Pritzker,
which is good. You have Bitcoin clarity by QR-bickers. As you can tell, I have like a,
my bookshelf is like mostly Bitcoin books. Okay, well that's a good selection. And of course,
like you said, you're writing and your book that comes out this year next year.
I think I'm going to need 18 months. Okay. But most of the good Bitcoin content is just online on Medium, on Twitter.
It's a decentralized consensus kind of thing.
What about the book recommendations that you could give people love these outside of
the world of crypto that maybe had an impact on your life.
Fiction, like sci-fi, maybe technical, philosophical. Is there something you would recommend that people might read?
I really liked the three-body problem, but that's a really acne recommendation.
But it really made me think, and I liked the hard sci-fi, you know, the commitment to science and science fiction.
So I thought it was very clever. Is there one, is there something that really annoys you
in terms of the opposite of hard sci-fi? Like, it doesn't get stuff right, movies are.
I mean, I have issues when I watch, like, ostensibly sci-fi or fantasy films that are not consistent about this.
The rules for the universe that they've laid out or where there's just impossible to comprehend.
Like, Christopher Nolan's latest film.
Oh yeah.
You needed like a spreadsheet.
Ten.
Ten.
Ten.
Ten.
Yeah.
I trust that maybe he was consistent about the rules of his universe.
I just did not understand it.
Yeah. at all.
In that sense, I really probably one of my favorites is 2001 Space Odyssey.
It's so obviously it's many decades ago, but it's quite brilliant in both its consistency and the depth of thought put into like what the
technology would actually be, not in like visually, not in
kind of silly graphical ways, but in in terms of function and
its impact on humanity. So, but that takes care, that takes a lot of work,
and that takes genius, actually, which is why Kubrick is regarded for what he is.
What advice, you've taken an interesting journey through your life,
your spirituality, your philosophy major,
your spirituality, your philosophy major. You're now one of the seminal minds in the world of Bitcoin and cryptocurrency.
Who the hell knows what the next 5-10 years looks for you?
If you were to give advice to somebody young today,
making their way through life, making a career,
what kind of advice would you give?
See, the problem with advice is that in a world where so much of success is defined by luck,
and serendipity is that the advice givers often don't know why they've been successful,
right?
And so they might say, you know, it's wearing a green tie on the day of my job interview.
And so you should go out and wear green ties. And so they might just get the causality completely wrong.
Right. I mean, I'm not going to claim that I'm super successful at it. But, um,
say that's the problem is that I don't think my journey is replicable necessarily.
Who am I to give advice?
Although the one thing I will say is that the thing I did right was to become completely
obsessed with a domain I found really interesting and held promise.
If I had been really interested in magic, the gathering, I wouldn't have been able to like,
do much with that aside from building like a killer,
you know, a card pack or whatever.
And I wasn't afraid to, you know, really put myself out there
and, you know, float my thoughts online
and see how people reacted to them,
even if I said stuff that was completely erroneous or wrong
all the time, the rewards to writing and just publishing content are immense as you know, obviously.
It's the most high leverage activity, I think most young people have available to them.
And I was very lucky and I benefited from a lot of favorable coincidences, a lot of people that took a chance on me.
And if I had more time, I would sit here and name them.
But is there something you, in your actions,
that made you more open to the benefits of luck?
Sort of luck in bringing a lot of positive and negative things.
So saying you're lucky means you are able to ride the wave of whatever positive stuff luck bring brought you
Well, that's right. You have to put yourself in a position to be lucky and most people don't so you just have to get as many shots on goals possible and
You of course luck is place an undeniable role in any career path for sure
But you do have to make yourself available to it.
And you have to take a ton of chances.
But yeah, that's the problem with advice.
It's just so hard to replicate it.
So I find it illegitimate most of the time. You heard it here kids don't listen to anything
they just said exactly. Where green tide to your interviews it'll work out well. Do you think
there's a meaning of reason to any of this this existence this life? Well we we make our own meaning
for sure. I find a huge amount of meaning in what I do.
I find it beautiful.
I feel very lucky and blessed to be in line of work
that I'm in, to have your hobby and your passion
and your job just be a completely integrated thing.
So that's where I find meaning.
But you're just a bag of like cells and bacteria that
eventually dissipates, dies, and it goes into the ground and disappears back into the
universe.
I mean, that doesn't make any sense.
Well, that may be true, but I find the sublime in things like Bitcoin.
I find it incredibly inspiring to work on it.
I believe it's a hundred year plus project.
And it stirs those aesthetic emotions in you,
as I'm sure your work does.
See, find it beautiful.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And inspiring more than just beautiful.
So you have hope for human civilization
and Bitcoin as part of that hope?
Yeah, it's a very optimistic view.
And people accuse us of being pessimists and saying that we are rooting for the collapse
of civilization completely false.
Bitcoiners are wildly optimistic because they believe that you can monetize a completely
new system from scratch and compete with the strongest superpower and the military and the dollar and everything that goes with that.
That's the craziest, most ludicrously optimistic proposition imaginable.
So I think, my corners are the most optimistic people out there.
I don't think there's a better way to end it on that hopeful vision of human
civilization, Nick. I've heard a lot of amazing things about you. I was binge
watching your interviews, binge reading, your blogs, fell in love with your
work, your good dude, inspiring, brilliant. Thank you so much for wasting all your
valuable time with me today.
My absolute pleasure.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Nick Carter, and thank you to the
information, athletic greens, for sigmatic, and bling-ist. Check them out in the
description to support the spot gas. And now let me leave you with some words
about freedom and beauty from Stephen King.
Some birds are not meant to be caged, that's all.
Their feathers are too bright, their songs too sweet and wild.
So, you let them go, and when you open the cage to feed them, they somehow fly out past
you.
And the part of you that knows it was wrong to imprison them in the first place rejoices. But still, the place where you live is that much more drab and empty for their departure.
Thank you.