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tt ATER. 4 ABE
(https://www.aier.org)
The Blockchain and the Future of Everything
20 one GH arora an yang/) ~ Ape, 2m ousom-sacess/2
post_date=04302021) Reading Time: 7 minutes
riting, money, and ledgers, are the three basic building blocks that allowed
W humanity to progress past the days of foraging for berries and hunting wild game
to the advanced global civilization we are today. Writing allowed us to convey knowledge
and information that made it possible to cooperate and build on the findings of others.
Money allowed for the efficient allocation of scarce resources and the facilitation of trade.
Ledgers allowed alll these activities and transactions to be recorded so we could trust one
another beyond immediate friend groups. Being able to trust one another is perhaps one of
the most important facilitators of economic and social activity. When you perform a
transaction you trust that the service you’re getting is what you paid for. When you put
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your money in a bank, you trust that the bank is a y arty tp stone ATER IC,
When you use the internet you trust that your oul n't Al siverHOONC
bad actors.
(https://www.aier.org)
Being able to trust a person, a service, or a device is integral to the functioning of a complex
and evolving society. Oftentimes the progress of society is limited by barriers to expanding
trust whether it be avoiding scams, processing data, or embracing the promise of the digital
age which understandably has many worried about trusting the technology to be secure.
For this to happen, we will need to collect and process a tremendous amount of
information about everyone and everything. Giving all that power to big corporations or
governments to handle doesn’t sound like a great idea either.
That is what makes the promise of blockchain technology
(https:/ /www.investopedia.com/terms/b/blockchain.asp) so revolutionary, as it
po
revolution without assigning that power to any authority, private or public. This is the
the potential to accomplish all these requirements to facilitate trust in a digital
topic of The Truth Machine (https:/ / www.amazon.com/Truth-Machine-Blockchain-Future-
Everything /dp/1250114578), a book co-written by Michael Casey, a senior advisor at MIT
Media Lab’s Digital Currency Initiative, and Paul Vigna, a reporter at the Wall Street Journal
who specializes in cryptocurrency. The book was written in 2018, which is a true testament
to its value as its predictions about the promise of blockchain technology only continue
(https:/ / www.aier.org//article/bitcoin-continues-steady-mainstream-adoption/) to realize
themselves.
What is the Blockchain?
The authors make an insightful point about ledgers and data when they write the
following,
“The advent of the first ledger technology can be traced back to roughly 3,000 BCE, in
ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq). Of the tens of thousands of clay tablets the
Mesopotamians left behind, most are, well ledgers: records of taxes, payments, private
wealth, worker pay. The famous Code of Hammurabi - the Babylonians’ system of law
- was written on one of these ledgers, but most kings had their own rules set out as
well. The rise of ledgers matched the rise of the first large scale civilizations.”
Translation: data is king. Data is needed in everything from basic transactions at a cafe to.
running massive enterprises with countless moving parts, and is incumbent on the ability
to access data.
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The authors write, A TER | AMER:
“Money itself is intrinsically linked to the idéa of a ledger. al carrel Qh EGON gold
coins and paper money are, similarly, record GABSGCIN devices they 18) aia with
societal memory. It’s just that rather than existing as a written account of transactions,
a currency’s record-keeping function is abstracted into a token.”
The blockchain is essentially a massive decentralized electronic database that is extremely
difficult to hack and manipulate. However, it is not like a typical database like a computer
hard drive. Investopedia explains (https:// www.aier.org/staffs/ethan-yang/?
wpv_view_count=42765-TCPID57003&wpv_paged=2),
“One key difference between a typical database and a blockchain is the way the data is
s blocks,
that hold sets of information. Blocks have certain storage capacities and, when filled,
structured. A blockchain collects information together in groups, also known z
are chained onto the previously filled block, forming a chain of data known as the
“blockchain.” All new information that follows that freshly added block is compiled
into a newly formed block that will then also be added to the chain once filled.”
The blockchain can be used to perform all sorts of activities such as monetary transactions,
storing personal data, and holding contracts. The most important thing is that it is virtually
impossible to manipulate, which not only makes it extremely secure but allows people to
trust the person on the other end. The blockchain is powered by a decentralized network of
participating computers around the world, not a single entity like a tech company or a
government. Therefore, unlike contemporary examples of decentralized data like “the
cloud, which at the end of the day belongs to a single tech company like Apple or Google,
the blockchain belongs to everyone and nobody at the same time.
The Limitations of Current Technology and the Promise of
Blockchain
Being able to establish trust is essential to the conduct of a modern and enterprising
society. We swipe credit cards trusting that the money will go where it needs to go. We
sign contracts, trusting that the deals will be followed. We choose to solicit the service of a
bank, trusting that the finances are well-managed. Uncertainty and vulnerability are what
hold back progress in many areas of economic life, whether that be accessing the credit of a
potential loan recipient or signing a deal with a potentially shady actor. In the worst-case
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scenario, being deceived by someone you can’t truggles nseqt ences EE RIC,
authors give an example of some modern-day wy J havd beefy CONC
with better trust mechanisms, such as the blockchainps: YAWR@W.aicr.org)
“Lehman Brothers is often Exhibit A in the breakdown of trust in the twenty-first
century. A lion of Wall Street, the firm was revealed to be little more than a debt-
ravaged shell kept alive only by shading accounting ~ in other words the bank was
manipulating its ledgers... The crash of 2008 revealed most of what we know about
Wall Street’s confidence game at that time. It entailed a vast manipulation of ledgers.
The recorded value of the assets those ledgers were supposed to track - including
those havoc causing credit default swaps ~ turned out to be largely vapor.”
The entire crisis of 2008 was largely an issue of deception enabled by the power of large
financial institutions to lie about their asset valuations. Of course, there were policy issues
regarding government lending and oversight that created moral hazards, but at the end of
the day, deception is what set the whole system up for failure.
With blockchain technology, manipulating ledgers and altering numbers would be far
more difficult, and it may have even prevented the 2008 crash in the first place. In fact,
blockchain technology would even vastly simplify auditing and bookkeeping, freeing up
countless people to work in more productive jobs while also decreasing compliance costs.
Blockchain technology in the financial sector would also increase competition and make the
market more dynamic by allowing greater trust in newer companies. Much of the power
large corporations, particularly banks, have is that people trust them because they’ve been
around for a while. Blockchain would allow smaller and newer competitors to at least
demonstrate to consumers that they are trustworthy actors who have sound financial
practices. This doesn’t just apply to Wall Street either. One of the biggest roadblocks to the
global poor in acquiring capital and opportunities to better their lives is being able to be
trusted. If blockchain is made accessible, that could open up a new world of possibilities
when it comes to acquiring loans, owning property, creating contracts, and all the other
trust-based mechanisms that are often less available to those who live in underdeveloped
areas.
Embracing the Internet of Things
Perhaps one of the most exciting trends of the digital age is the connection of everything to
the internet. Self-driving cars, smartphones, advanced portable medical devices, smart
grids, the list goes on. Being able to have devices connected to one another across the world
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enables countless possibilities to make life easier a oductive. ThA gre Ripe”,
holding all this back is trust. Even if we develop te vail all fe B@ INET
processed by linking more things to the internet, cenpilingvelviatlateagyongst a few big
tech companies sounds like a recipe for disaster.
The authors write,
“Who is capable of and can be trusted to run a global network of billions of devices
that will tap into virtually every single thing we do on a daily basis? It’s one thing for a
private company like, say, Comcast, to offer a relatively simple service such as cable
for millions of people. But trusting a monopoly gatekeeper with all the sensitive
personal data that’s broadcast by your devices is much more problematic
Letting the government handle our data in this matter is a nonstarter as well. The current
model of centralizing all data in the hands of databases public or private is a recipe for
crippling incompetence, the erasure of privacy, regulatory stagnation, and a hacker's
dream. In order to actually make the jump to a future of endless possibilities promised by
embracing the digital age is to have a decentralized system of data processing that is
extremely difficult to compromise. Without exaggeration, this is what blockchain can
provide.
The authors pose several examples of all the wonderful technology society can safely
embrace with the widespread integration of blockchain technology and the Internet of
need-to-know-about-the-iot-right-now/). Imagine sensors that can monitor bridges for
structural weakness and immediately communicate that to the relevant actors. A
surveillance apparatus that is able to track the spread of pathogens around the world
without invading everyone's privacy. Smart ports that allow you to turn your house into a
car charging station and collect payments. Whatever entrepreneurial product you can think
of that can harness the power of being connected to other devices via the internet can now
be a reality if we are able to safely and efficiently process massive amounts of data. With
these new products comes a radically more efficient, dynamic, and collaborative future full
of exciting opportunities.
Key Takeaways
‘The Truth Machine makes it clear that the basis of all civilizational activity, whether it be
economic or social, is trust. Adam Smith articulated the famous principle that society is
most productive when individuals are left to pursue their own self-interest. However, for
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all these self-interested interactions to take KIER to tyust whoers ROC,
are interacting with. When humans existed as sm; trusting for AKAN C
was easy. In order to build the bustling global soqletypthatyaviaknteday cppyple have to
develop ways to trust strangers and institutions
Today we find ourselves on the cusp of another great technological revolution with
tremendous potential to better the lives of people around the world. However, the current
apparatus of centralized data processing and storage is not only incapable of adequately
handling the prerequisite needs of this digital society, but it might also turn it into a
dystopia. What we need is a highly decentralized and efficient infrastructure that is
impervious to manipulation. Blockchain technology seems to be the essential component to
make the digitized society of the future a foundation for empowerment and growth rather
than an Orwellian nightmare.
READ MORE (/article)
Ethan Yang (https:/ / www.aier.org/staffs/ethan-yang/)
Ethan joined AIER in 2020 as an Editorial Assistant and is a
graduate of Trinity College. He received a BA in Political Science
alongside a minor in Legal Studies and Formal Organizations.
He currently serves as Local Coordinator at Students for Liberty
and the Director of the Mark Twain Center for the Study of
Human Freedom at Trinity College.
Prior to joining ATER, he interned at organizations such as the American Legislative
Exchange Council, the Connecticut State Senate, and the Cause of Action Institute.
Ethan is currently based in Washington D.C.
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