Blogs & Articles: You Can Believe The Maximalists: Bitcoin Is Seperate From Crypto đ 1 year ago
- Category: Blogs & Articles | Bitcoin Magazine: Bitcoin News, Articles, Charts, and Guides
- Author(s): Stephan Livera
- Published: 22nd September 2022 20:48
A recent column by the Financial Timesâ Jemima Kelly demonstrated some misunderstandings about Bitcoinâs decentralization and singularity.
This is an opinion editorial by Stephan Livera, host of the âStephan Livera Podcastâ and managing director of Swan Bitcoin International.
Financial Times Columnist Jemima Kelly published an article titled âDonât Believe The âMaximalists: Bitcoin Canât Be Separated From Cryptoâ earlier today and Iâd like to share some reactions from a Bitcoiner perspective. Quoted text below is all from Kellyâs article.
âIf you have ever dared to direct criticism at the world of crypto, the chances are you will have received some charming rebukes. You are likely to have been told to âhave fun staying poorâ...â
For what itâs worth, I believe the âhave fun staying poorâ meme is mostly meant in jest and not a serious statement of ill intent towards another person. Why? Because we popularly saw Bitcoiners telling Elon Musk, the richest man in the world at the time, to âhave fun staying poorâ as he backs away from his public support of Bitcoin. Clearly, this is not meant as a serious rebuke.
âBut there is another slightly more sophisticated flavour of counter-criticism finding its way into my inbox with increasing regularity these days. It usually starts with something designed to appease â some kind of agreement that crypto is immoral, a scam, or some version of a Ponzi scheme. But then it quickly changes course, to explain that none of this applies to bitcoin.â
Here is where my principal disagreement with this article lies. I and many other Bitcoiners do believe that we should draw a line of distinction between Bitcoin and âcrypto.â Bitcoin is unique in many ways:
- It has no pre-mine or âdev. taxâ to enrich the founder or founding team.
- It has a culture that actually prioritizes decentralizing the ecosystem.
- It enables cheap blockchain validation and participation (i.e., itâs relatively easy to run a fully-validating Bitcoin node), while also maintaining a robust, open, scalable, trust-minimized system.
- It has a very strong preference for soft forking and retaining backwards and forwards compatibility for those running older Bitcoin node software.
- It is continually growing in acceptance and mindshare around the world. Of course, this does wax and wane with bull and bear markets, but zoomed out, bitcoin liquidity and acceptance is only going one way: up.
Once you genuinely explore these points, you will find that only Bitcoin meets these criteria. Many altcoins regularly hard fork, which is an indicator that they have a certain level of centralization in their development and community. Other altcoins do things that simply would not be scalable if they were scaled up to the level of Bitcoin and the number of bitcoin transactions. Other altcoins do things that are more permissioned, and thus they are not an open system like Bitcoin is.
You might even argue that a specific altcoin does one specific thing better than Bitcoin does, but are any of them meaningfully making improvements on the whole? I donât think so, and thatâs why Bitcoin is rightly in a category of its own. There is also the question of whether Bitcoin should have these supposed other features or things, as this may also cause negative trade offs in one of the other worthwhile qualities of the system (robustness, decentralization, scalability, verifiability, etc.).
Kelly seems to believe that Bitcoin âarguments donât stand up,â as she takes issue with any financial incentive whatsoever. For instance:
âFirst, it doesnât matter what bitcoinâs origins were â the people who push it now have the same financial incentives as those pushing any other crypto token.â
How is this a justified attack on Bitcoin promotion? Imagine that you are an investor in a company, and you openly promoted that company without hiding the fact that you are an investor. Is there an issue with this?
Now, imagine that there are fraudulent competitors that purport to be âin the same industry.â You advocate for people to use the product of your non-fraudulent company instead. Where is the ethical issue? How would this âdisproveâ you? It simply doesnât, unless youâre clutching at straws.
Of course, Bitcoin is not a company. But in any case, the promise of Bitcoin is not that âthere were no people who got in cheaper than you,â which is an absurd and impossible standard to live up to. The promise of Bitcoin is an open, decentralized, scarce, robust, programmable monetary system with no rulers. The product does what it proverbially says on the tin and Kellyâs critique falls flat.
âSecond, bitcoin is not in fact decentralized â not only do miners group together to form âmining poolsâ but wealth is also hugely concentrated.âÂ
Kelly is not correctly summarizing the relationship between miners and pools. Miners are distinct entities from pools, and they can re-point their hash rate to a different pool quickly. And so while there may be comparatively a smaller amount of pools, individual miners can and do switch between them, as it is a brutally competitive market. See this screenshot as of September 23, 2022 from the Braiins Insights Dashboard, which shows how pools are headquartered in different countries around the world:
Also topical is the recent Poolin news, that saw the company suspend withdrawals. Given this, a lot of miners pointed their hash rate away from Poolin. Notice how Poolinâs global share of bitcoin mining hash rate has gone from 12% previously, down to around 4% at the time of writing.Â
âOn Tuesday, MicroStrategy announced that it had bought another 301 bitcoins, meaning this company alone now holds almost 0.7 per cent of the entire supply.â
Kelly claims to âsteelman the argumentâ in this article, but unfortunately, she does a poor job steelmanning on the question of bitcoin ownership. If she grasped the libertarian and cypherpunk ethos of Bitcoin, she would understand that the point is to create a monetary system without coercing people into it. So, of course given this, there will be some people who get it before others do. Those who get it will buy, earn or mine coins before others do. The fact that one company owns 0.7% of the circulating supply of bitcoin is not an issue.
So, Bitcoin remains far more decentralized than the âcryptoâ coins.
âThird, a âfirst-mover advantageâ does not always last.âÂ
Thatâs true in a general business context, however to understand why Bitcoin is distinct, we have to understand just why and how far it beats alternatives, be they fiat money, gold or altcoins. Generally, in order to displace another product, you have to come up with something ten times better. But with Bitcoin, itâs doubtful that ten times better is even possible. Here, Iâll quote my friend Gigi in his recent Twitter thread:
 The design space of money is limited, and a ten-fold improvement on the monetary properties of Bitcoin is simply not possible. You can marginally improve one thing, but only by dramatically worsening trade-offs in other ways (verifiability, scalability, robustness, accessibility).
Kelly then writes again about the incentive of Maximalists:
âThe real reason bitcoin maximalists want to separate bitcoin from the rest of crypto is to create the illusion of scarcity in a world where there is none.â
Itâs fair to say that Bitcoin Maximalists have an incentive and want to distinguish bitcoin from âcrypto.â But the real question is: Are they right? Yes, they are.
Bitcoin is rightly distinguished from altcoins, but it just takes a lot of research and reading to understand why. Unfortunately, Kelly has not done the research required and presents only a shallow surface level misunderstanding.
This is a guest post by Stephan Livera. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.