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No[a]. Most probably not. Unfortunately.
As the current cryptocurrency[b] crash[c] continues apace:
âCrypto collapse: Terra Luna, 3ACâs Singapore liquidation, Celsius, Voyagerâ
i can't help but wonder whether a âcryptocurrency winterâ, analogous to the famous âAI winterâ of the 1980s, is coming.
Unfortunately, however, i think it's more likely to be another short âtrough of disillusionmentâ.
Image: chart of the Gartner Hype Cycle
i write âunfortunatelyâ, _not_ because i'm fundamentally anti-cryptocurrency in principle, but because i'm _not_ fundamentally anti-cryptocurrency in principle. i think that the concept of cryptocurrency is an interesting one, with lots of potential for providing part of the infrastructure for sociopolitical decentralisation. However, the current state of the cryptocurrency world involves:
âCambridge Bitcoin Electricity Consumption Indexâ
âSide-Channel Attack Shows Vulnerabilities Of Cryptocurrency Walletsâ
âBitcoin : Vulnerability Statisticsâ
âNirvana Finance drained of $3.5 millionâ
âRegulators order Voyager to stop saying they're FDIC insuredâ
$200 million that the country absolutely couldnât spare has been put into bad infrastructure, dodgy public procurement contracts and bitcoins. Thatâs the disaster for El Salvador.
-- âYour guide to the crypto crash â Terra UST, Bitcoin and El Salvadorâ
COBAC met on 6 May 2022 to discuss cryptocurrencies with some urgency â because the Central African Republic had just declared Bitcoin to be legal tender, without warning anyone else first.
reddit thread with audio interview: âMasculinity and Blockchain with David Gerardâ
A âwinterâ which significantly cooled the cryptocurrency bubble might allow more space for the development of cryptocurrency tech and systems more oriented towards facilitating forms of exchange much more rooted in environmental sustainability, capital circulation rather than capital accumulation, and economies which prioritise support for human thriving in general over support for the Four Monopolies[f].
Or it might not. And anyway, it feels like this is probably moot: my guess is that there are yet more cryptocurrency bubbles to come in the near future.
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đˇ cryptocurrency,economics,ict,politics,sociology
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[a] Wikipedia: âBetteridge's law of headlinesâ
[b] Not âcryptoâ, which to me will always âcryptographyâ, quixotic though that may be.
[c] Amy Castor and David Gerard maintain excellent cryptocurrency-, NFT- and blockchain-focused blogs which cut through the hype:
âAttack of the 50-foot blockchainâ
[d] Of course âcrypto brosâ can't tolerate criticism of cryptocurrencies: they've bought into cryptocurrencies because they've let themselves be convinced that:
Consequently, any discussions that might diminish a bull market for cryptocurrencies are things that might actually result in crypto bros incurring very concrete losses in fiat-currency terms. Which results in phenomena like this:
I find it really interesting that the ground rules of this discussion were clearly stated at the beginning, which was that it's going to be taken as a given that crypto/blockchain is a scam and the discussion is about why men are falling for this scam; and yet you still had crypto bros trying to divert the discussion to shilling crypto.
A related reddit comment i found thought-provoking:
âI was going to comment about the gendered aspect of different schemes: Women-focused mlm's [Multi-Level Marketing schemes] seem to be attractive because they promise economic autonomy and control over one's own work while Men's schemes appeal to those who want to benefit without doing any kind of actual work.â
[e] â[A] form of fraud that lures investors and pays profits to earlier investors with funds from more recent investors. Named after Italian businessman Charles Ponzi, the scheme leads victims to believe that profits are coming from legitimate business activity (e.g., product sales or successful investments), and they remain unaware that other investors are the source of funds. A Ponzi scheme can maintain the illusion of a sustainable business as long as new investors contribute new funds, and as long as most of the investors do not demand full repayment and still believe in the non-existent assets they are purported to own.â
â Wikipedia: âPonzi schemeâ
[f] Cf. e.g.:
âBenjamin Tuckerâs Four Property Regimes and the Spirit of Capitalismâ