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kjw's avatar

I remember when people mined bitcoins in the college computer lab. Originally, you were supposed to get compensated for making the network function with bitcoins. But that is so difficult now, only people with a lot of compute power can mine anything. In other words, people that already have a lot of money. Not exactly a mechanism for redistribution.

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Michael Feng's avatar

Thank you for writing this. I just talked to someone at a crypto conference who wanted to sell NFTs to help indigenous villagers in Peru, and I was trying to explain to him why doing that would solve a problem more for investors (increasing social status, vanity) that for villagers. It's not that more money and better financial literacy wouldn't help those villagers, but that there are simpler and more direct ways to help them, i.e. increasing their access to fast internet and clean water.

Crypto's real game changer as a technology is enabling creators (of anything) to bypass middlemen in distributing their assets. Founders can now list their tokens on a decentralized exchange and bypass traditional venture capital. Artists can now list their art on an NFT marketplace and bypass auction houses like Sotheby's. Non-profits should be able to turn themselves into self-sustainable DAOs by using smart contracts to lower operating costs and tokens to boost fundraising. Not to shill, but I tried to explain this in https://fengtality.substack.com/p/what-is-the-job-of-crypto.

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