Engineers are focused on reducing its carbon footprint, ignoring the governance issues raised by the technology

When the cryptocurrency bitcoin first made its appearance in 2009, an interesting divergence of opinions about it rapidly emerged. Journalists tended to regard it as some kind of incomprehensible money-laundering scam, while computer scientists, who were largely agnostic about bitcoin’s prospects, nevertheless thought that the distributed-ledger technology (the so-called blockchain) that underpinned the currency was a Big Idea that could have far-reaching consequences.

In this conviction they were joined by legions of techno-libertarians who viewed the technology as a way of enabling economic life without the oppressive oversight of central banks and other regulatory institutions. Blockchain technology had the potential to change the way we buy and sell, interact with government and verify the authenticity of everything from property titles to organic vegetables. It combined, burbled that well-known revolutionary body Goldman Sachs, “the openness of the internet with the security of cryptography to give everyone a faster, safer way to verify key information and establish trust”. Verily, cryptography would set us free.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

ChatGPT ‘brain leap’ lets bot remember who you are and your interests as AI sparks privacy fears

A CHATGPT update means the artificially intelligent chatbot will now be able…

Why oh why don’t kids these days look hot, laments Fox News host, 58 | Arwa Mahdawi

Greg Gutfeld’s creepy rant is just the latest example of the US…

Children of same-sex parent families are less likely to be straight as adults, research claims

Children of sexual minority families are less likely to identify as straight…

TV’s Rory the Vet talks to ME & MY MONEY

The dog house: Rory Cowlam has invested in a new-build property as…