Blockchain technology

Some Geniuses ain't they - first inflate cryptocurrencies by propaganda means (like from couple hundred $ to 20000 $) thou account owners barely profit from that surge at all - and than TAX them with real yet fiat sums... First they've printed banknotes out of thin air, than they've just typed it in some clouds - and now making others to mine it and tax them for that :perfect:

Beginnings of virtual economy in earnest - taxin' the very thin air, sorts of - i bet that even Varoufakis couldn't see this coming.... :grad:
 
Yozilla said:
Some Geniuses ain't they - first inflate cryptocurrencies by propaganda means (like from couple hundred $ to 20000 $) thou account owners barely profit from that surge at all - and than TAX them with real yet fiat sums... First they've printed banknotes out of thin air, than they've just typed it in some clouds - and now making others to mine it and tax them for that :perfect:

Beginnings of virtual economy in earnest - taxin' the very thin air, sorts of - i bet that even Varoufakis couldn't see this coming.... :grad:

Very true! Ya know, it's hard to do all of the following with conviction:

1. Pretend it's not there,
2. Ridicule it,
3. Fight it,
4. Tax it! :lol:

Well, in the end I guess it amounts to a government validation of cryptocurrencies of some sorts. That's a good thing. Now people should use it, not to speculate or hoard it, but to use it for what it was designed for: a way to transfer value directly from peer-to-peer, without banks in between. And declare everything to the tax man. That will still be better than what we have today: only banks, and very little cash.
 
Mikey said:
Yozilla said:
Some Geniuses ain't they - first inflate cryptocurrencies by propaganda means (like from couple hundred $ to 20000 $) thou account owners barely profit from that surge at all - and than TAX them with real yet fiat sums... First they've printed banknotes out of thin air, than they've just typed it in some clouds - and now making others to mine it and tax them for that :perfect:

Beginnings of virtual economy in earnest - taxin' the very thin air, sorts of - i bet that even Varoufakis couldn't see this coming.... :grad:

Very true! Ya know, it's hard to do all of the following with conviction:

1. Pretend it's not there,
2. Ridicule it,
3. Fight it,
4. Tax it! :lol:

Well, in the end I guess it amounts to a government validation of cryptocurrencies of some sorts. That's a good thing. Now people should use it, not to speculate or hoard it, but to use it for what it was designed for: a way to transfer value directly from peer-to-peer, without banks in between. And declare everything to the tax man. That will still be better than what we have today: only banks, and very little cash.

I have no hopes here. The bankers or (4D STS):

1. May have created it in the first place as a seemingly rogue "outlaw" phenomenon
2. Allowed and nurtured the perception of this being "outside the system" to flourish to gain support and legitimacy
3. Cryptocurrencies existing outside the fiat system fosters the illusion of choice
4. Even if none of that is true, the banks will ultimately take it over and make it their own whether the public is aware or not
5. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss
6. My cynicism knows no bounds
 
BHelmet said:
I have no hopes here. The bankers or (4D STS):

1. May have created it in the first place as a seemingly rogue "outlaw" phenomenon
2. Allowed and nurtured the perception of this being "outside the system" to flourish to gain support and legitimacy
3. Cryptocurrencies existing outside the fiat system fosters the illusion of choice
4. Even if none of that is true, the banks will ultimately take it over and make it their own whether the public is aware or not
5. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss

Even if all of that was/is/will be true, it will still be possible to make trusted peer-to-peer transfers between people without any third party in between. That is the core feature and advantage of the software which cannot be taken away. In this sense, it is like email. As long as there is only a small handful of people using it, the technology will fulfill its purpose and will be used.
 
Mikey said:
BHelmet said:
I have no hopes here. The bankers or (4D STS):

1. May have created it in the first place as a seemingly rogue "outlaw" phenomenon
2. Allowed and nurtured the perception of this being "outside the system" to flourish to gain support and legitimacy
3. Cryptocurrencies existing outside the fiat system fosters the illusion of choice
4. Even if none of that is true, the banks will ultimately take it over and make it their own whether the public is aware or not
5. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss

Even if all of that was/is/will be true, it will still be possible to make trusted peer-to-peer transfers between people without any third party in between. That is the core feature and advantage of the software which cannot be taken away. In this sense, it is like email. As long as there is only a small handful of people using it, the technology will fulfill its purpose and will be used.

By trusted...Do you mean: No regulators looking over your shoulder; no official records;no accounting;no potential taxation of it?
(or some combination...there may not be a middle man, but there may be side men, perhaps)
I am thinking that as long as it is a digital transaction, it can be tracked (unlike fiat cash changing hands or some other form of barter).
Is there any way you can do anything digital without it being trackable? Is email a secure peer-to-peer medium of communication?
Look at the Snowden revelations about phone and software tapping by Hermano Grande.
Up to a point people only guessed what might be going on. When it all started, I assume the feds walked into Microsoft and Apple at some point and said "We are going to make you an offer you can't refuse: write us a back door into your operating systems and web browsers."
I guess I am also thinking that when cryptocurrency gets big enough to be viable, the same scenario, in some form or other will play itself out.
Until then, I guess it is possible, as you say, that it is a private transaction.
 
There are a few cryptocurrencies that are designed with privacy from the beginning. So it is possible to send fund without being tracked. However, I'm on the fence about its desirability, at least at this point in time. It is the same reason we are not all using the Tor browser right now. Privacy is also far from being the most important feature of blockchain technology.

Going a bit off topic, recently, I see a few posts on the forum with similar defeatist, cynical underlying tone: "It's the end of the world; there's no point in doing anything now because whatever we do, the STS overlords are going to get their way anyway." I think such an attitude is not very healthy or conducive to the work we are doing here.

It is true that the Matrix is extremely powerful, but no matter how dark the situation looks, there is still something we can do, not with hope, but with the faith that there is a fundamental balancing mechanism in the Universe, and that the Universe knows what it is doing. If Laura had given up 20 years ago because the situation looked too dark, there would not have been this forum, this community and the difference it has made in the lives of so many of us.

Come back to the present discussion, IMO, it is a major, game changing technology that is still in its infancy. And being a technology, just like a tool, it can be used for either good or evil. So it is up to us, as part of the people on this Earth at this point in time to guide its direction.
 
From RT this morning...

https://www.rt.com/usa/412223-nicehash-bitcoin-hacked-million/

Hackers swipe over $64mn in bitcoin from cryptocurrency marketplace NiceHash

After a mysterious 12-hour service outage, the popular cryptocurrency mining exchange NiceHash announced hackers stole an unknown amount of money from users. One bitcoin wallet gained more than $64 million within a matter of minutes.

On Wednesday, NiceHash announced there was a security breach involving the company’s website which compromised their payment services, and the contents of the users’ bitcoin wallets. The announcement came 12 hours after NiceHash suddenly informed users that they were carrying out maintenance.

Two hours later, a user by the name of Erik Callesen posted an image showing an outgoing transaction he claimed he did not make.

“Either I got hacked or something is up,” Callesen wrote.

Callesen added that $56 million had been sent to one bitcoin wallet address.

“I think I got jacked and probably a lot of other folks?” Callesen wrote.

Many other users responded to the company’s maintenance tweet, saying they had money stolen.

When NiceHash admitted they were hacked, they did not confirm the amount that had been stolen. The service said they were “working to verify the precise number of BTC taken.”

However, CoinDesk reported that as much as 4,736.42 bitcoin, worth more than $62 million at the time, was stolen and transferred to one account.

Several users pointed to a Bitcoin wallet address that was opened Tuesday at 9:07pm, which went from a balance of 0.01 bitcoin, valued just over $123, to a balance of 4,655.25 bitcoin, worth $57.7 million, after the user made more than 3,000 transactions at around 9:17pm.

RT America looked into some of the users that claimed to have been affected by the hack and confirmed their money had been transferred to the mysterious bitcoin wallet address.

The full extent of the hack is still unclear and the company has not provided any updates since they announced the hack.

The wallet currently has a balance of 4,736.42 bitcoin, worth $64,080,393.

So, since they've identified the wallet where the stolen bitcoins ended up, does that mean the coins can be recovered and given back to the original owners? And also, does that mean that the user behind the "mysterious wallet" is the hacker responsible for the theft?
 
The exponential growth of energy consumption to support mining Bitcoin will soon reveal that cryptocurrency blockchain schemes are unsustainable. Here are the sobering facts:
https://grist.org/article/bitcoin-could-cost-us-our-clean-energy-future/ .

If you’re like me, you’ve probably been ignoring the bitcoin phenomenon for years — because it seemed too complex, far-fetched, or maybe even too libertarian. But if you have any interest in a future where the world moves beyond fossil fuels, you and I should both start paying attention now.

Last week, the value of a single bitcoin broke the $10,000 barrier for the first time. Over the weekend, the price nearly hit $12,000. At the beginning of this year, it was less than $1,000.

If you had bought $100 in bitcoin back in 2011, your investment would be worth nearly $4 million today. All over the internet there are stories of people who treated their friends to lunch a few years ago and, as a novelty, paid with bitcoin. Those same people are now realizing that if they’d just paid in cash and held onto their digital currency, they’d now have enough money to buy a house.

That sort of precipitous rise is stunning, of course, but bitcoin wasn’t intended to be an investment instrument. Its creators envisioned it as a replacement for money itself — a decentralized, secure, anonymous method for transferring value between people.

But what they might not have accounted for is how much of an energy suck the computer network behind bitcoin could one day become. Simply put, bitcoin is slowing the effort to achieve a rapid transition away from fossil fuels. What’s more, this is just the beginning. Given its rapidly growing climate footprint, bitcoin is a malignant development, and it’s getting worse.

Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin provide a unique service: Financial transactions that don’t require governments to issue currency or banks to process payments. Writing in the Atlantic, Derek Thompson calls bitcoin an “ingenious and potentially transformative technology” that the entire economy could be built on — the currency equivalent of the internet. Some are even speculating that bitcoin could someday make the U.S. dollar obsolete.

But the rise of bitcoin is also happening at a specific moment in history: Humanity is decades behind schedule on counteracting climate change, and every action in this era should be evaluated on its net impact on the climate. Increasingly, bitcoin is failing the test.

Digital financial transactions come with a real-world price: The tremendous growth of cryptocurrencies has created an exponential demand for computing power. As bitcoin grows, the math problems computers must solve to make more bitcoin (a process called “mining”) get more and more difficult — a wrinkle designed to control the currency’s supply.

Today, each bitcoin transaction requires the same amount of energy used to power nine homes in the U.S. for one day. And miners are constantly installing more and faster computers. Already, the aggregate computing power of the bitcoin network is nearly 100,000 times larger than the world’s 500 fastest supercomputers combined.

The total energy use of this web of hardware is huge — an estimated 31 terawatt-hours per year. More than 150 individual countries in the world consume less energy annually. And that power-hungry network is currently increasing its energy use every day by about 450 gigawatt-hours, roughly the same amount of electricity the entire country of Haiti uses in a year.

That sort of electricity use is pulling energy from grids all over the world, where it could be charging electric vehicles and powering homes, to bitcoin-mining farms. In Venezuela, where rampant hyperinflation and subsidized electricity has led to a boom in bitcoin mining, rogue operations are now occasionally causing blackouts across the country. The world’s largest bitcoin mines are in China, where they siphon energy from huge hydroelectric dams, some of the cheapest sources of carbon-free energy in the world. One enterprising Tesla owner even attempted to rig up a mining operation in his car, to make use of free electricity at a public charging station.

In just a few months from now, at bitcoin’s current growth rate, the electricity demanded by the cryptocurrency network will start to outstrip what’s available, requiring new energy-generating plants. And with the climate conscious racing to replace fossil fuel-base plants with renewable energy sources, new stress on the grid means more facilities using dirty technologies. By July 2019, the bitcoin network will require more electricity than the entire United States currently uses. By February 2020, it will use as much electricity as the entire world does today.

This is an unsustainable trajectory. It simply can’t continue.

There are already several efforts underway to reform how the bitcoin network processes transactions, with the hope that it’ll one day require less electricity to make new coins. But as with other technological advances like irrigation in agriculture and outdoor LED lighting, more efficient systems for mining bitcoin could have the effect of attracting thousands of new miners.

It’s certain that the increasing energy burden of bitcoin transactions will divert progress from electrifying the world and reducing global carbon emissions. In fact, I’d guess it probably already has. The only question at this point is: by how much?
 
Bobo08 said:
[...]

Going a bit off topic, recently, I see a few posts on the forum with similar defeatist, cynical underlying tone: "It's the end of the world; there's no point in doing anything now because whatever we do, the STS overlords are going to get their way anyway." I think such an attitude is not very healthy or conducive to the work we are doing here.

It is true that the Matrix is extremely powerful, but no matter how dark the situation looks, there is still something we can do, not with hope, but with the faith that there is a fundamental balancing mechanism in the Universe, and that the Universe knows what it is doing. If Laura had given up 20 years ago because the situation looked too dark, there would not have been this forum, this community and the difference it has made in the lives of so many of us.
[...]

I've taken your quote above a little bit out of context, as intended by you, and have to comment on this important point.

It always seems to new searchers that ALL of this is new. The terror of the situation, the overwhelming odds, the "what the hell am I here for when the deck is stacked so high, and the House wins!" realization.

It's not new, nor has it *EVER* been. It's only 'new' in peoples' perception when they start to figure out what this Arena is really for.

It's a complicated, multi-layered, multi-phasic crucible.

We see many people light fires to burn the World down, just because they can and don't care.

We see as many step into personal fires of their own making, because they need to bleed out until they finally "get it". Sometimes, not always in this lifetime.

And then, there are others who see flames but can't tell one type from the other: they just see flames and watch in the sidelines trying not to get burned. Possibly afraid.

None of this is new. It's been going on for eons. Your short lifetime is yours.

Up to you.
 
Timótheos said:
So, since they've identified the wallet where the stolen bitcoins ended up, does that mean the coins can be recovered and given back to the original owners? And also, does that mean that the user behind the "mysterious wallet" is the hacker responsible for the theft?

Unfortunately no. All blockchain transactions are public so it is easy to see the address where the stolen coins is. But if the address is newly generated, which must be the case, there is no way to know who the owner is. There is also no way to recover the stolen coins. All blockchain transactions are irreversible. In fact, that is one of the appeals of cryptocurrencies, i.e. no one but you is in control of your money.

That hack is just one of the numerous ones in the history of cryptocurrencies, and a rather small one at that. It serves to highlight the risk associated with centralized exchanges/wallets holding people's money. Such exchanges are attractive targets for hackers. A good principle is never to leave any fund in such an exchange longer than absolutely necessary, a few minutes at most.

griffin said:
The exponential growth of energy consumption to support mining Bitcoin will soon reveal that cryptocurrency blockchain schemes are unsustainable. Here are the sobering facts:
https://grist.org/article/bitcoin-could-cost-us-our-clean-energy-future/ .

Bitcoin and ethereum (the 2nd largest cryptocurrency) employ a type of algorithm called Proof of Work to secure their transactions. Its principle can be illustrated by the following analogy: A teacher in a class gives out a simple calculation to the students. However, after coming up with a solution, the students must go out search for a needle that the teacher has placed in a haystack outside. Whoever finds the needle first has his solution accepted and gets the reward for it. The objective of the process is to make it difficult for a malicious student to submit a false solution since he must expend more energy than all other students combined to reliably find the needle before all of them. That explains the outrageous and unsustainable energy consumption by bitcoin miners.

Fortunately, the vast majority of later cryptocurrencies employ another type of algorithm called Proof of Stake to secure their transactions. Going with the above analogy, each of the students must now place a bowl on the teacher's table. The size of a bowl corresponds to how many tokens a student has, i.e. the more tokens a student has, the bigger his bowl is. The teacher then tosses a coin onto the bowls. The student who has the coin fallen into his bowl has his solution accepted. In order for a student to intentionally submit a false solution, he must stake more fund than all other students combined. Note that in this case, no unnecessary energy is wasted.

Even though bitcoin is by far the most popular cryptocurrency now, I don't expect that to continue for very long due to the obvious advantages of Proof of Stake over Proof of Work algorithm.
 
Azur said:
It always seems to new searchers that ALL of this is new. The terror of the situation, the overwhelming odds, the "what the hell am I here for when the deck is stacked so high, and the House wins!" realization.

It's not new, nor has it *EVER* been. It's only 'new' in peoples' perception when they start to figure out what this Arena is really for.

It's a complicated, multi-layered, multi-phasic crucible.

Very true. And after being struck with such a realization, there are usually two types of response: one either freezes in place or jumps up and does something about it. I guess it depends on the type of person.
 
Bobo08 said:
Azur said:
It always seems to new searchers that ALL of this is new. The terror of the situation, the overwhelming odds, the "what the hell am I here for when the deck is stacked so high, and the House wins!" realization.

It's not new, nor has it *EVER* been. It's only 'new' in peoples' perception when they start to figure out what this Arena is really for.

It's a complicated, multi-layered, multi-phasic crucible.

Very true. And after being struck with such a realization, there are usually two types of response: one either freezes in place or jumps up and does something about it. I guess it depends on the type of person.

I agree with you Bobo08. I have seen this same tendency from many on this forum. I can only hope we all move to a more caring and hopeful outlook even if only to share the suffering we see around us. It is not like there is not pain in this process but we can still support one another while we learn the lessons. That in itself is I think worth not switching into "failure" mode.

While we are not given "proof" of the validity of this whole experiment we should at some point develop enough "faith" in these "clues" to to the Work.

As Laura has said "that's why it is called Work".

Session 22 October 1994
Q: (L) Well, since there is so many of us here, why don't they just
move in and take over?
A: That is their intention. That has been their intention for quite
some time. They have been traveling back and forth through time as
you know it, to set things up so that they can absorb a maximum
amount of negative energy with the transference from third level to
fourth level that this planet is going to experience, in the hopes that
they can overtake you on the fourth level and thereby accomplish
several things. 1: retaining their race as a viable species; 2:
increasing their numbers; 3: increasing their power; 4: expanding
their race throughout the realm of fourth density. To do all of this
they have been interfering with events for what you would measure
on your calendar as approximately 74 thousand years. And they have
been doing so in a completely still state of space time traveling
backward and forward at will during this work. Interestingly enough,
though, all of this will fail.

Q: (L) How can you be so sure it will fail?
A: Because we see it. We are able to see all, not just what we want
to see. Their failing is that they see only what they want to see. In
other words, it's the highest manifestation possible of that which you
would refer to as wishful thinking. And, wishful thinking represented
on the fourth level of density becomes reality for that level. You know
how you wishfully think? Well, it isn't quite reality for you because
you are on the third level, but if you are on the fourth level and you
were to perform the same function, it would indeed be your
awareness of reality. Therefore they cannot see what we can see
since we serve others as opposed to self, and since we are on sixth
level, we can see all that is at all points as is, not as we would want it
to be.

Maybe so far "the house wins" but guess what I see very strong possibilities that in the end "the house" will fail. For that I am willing to "wait and see" and while I am at it I want to at least encourage others to do the same.
 
Bobo08 said:
There are a few cryptocurrencies that are designed with privacy from the beginning. So it is possible to send fund without being tracked. However, I'm on the fence about its desirability, at least at this point in time. It is the same reason we are not all using the Tor browser right now. Privacy is also far from being the most important feature of blockchain technology.

Going a bit off topic, recently, I see a few posts on the forum with similar defeatist, cynical underlying tone: "It's the end of the world; there's no point in doing anything now because whatever we do, the STS overlords are going to get their way anyway." I think such an attitude is not very healthy or conducive to the work we are doing here.

It is true that the Matrix is extremely powerful, but no matter how dark the situation looks, there is still something we can do, not with hope, but with the faith that there is a fundamental balancing mechanism in the Universe, and that the Universe knows what it is doing. If Laura had given up 20 years ago because the situation looked too dark, there would not have been this forum, this community and the difference it has made in the lives of so many of us.

Come back to the present discussion, IMO, it is a major, game changing technology that is still in its infancy. And being a technology, just like a tool, it can be used for either good or evil. So it is up to us, as part of the people on this Earth at this point in time to guide its direction.

As far as the "off topic" part goes; I agree that being a defeatist about things is not productive. And I do have faith in the balancing mechanisms of the universe. (even if the balancing act is to wipe the slate clean) I also realize I can sound like a Debbie Downer at times. But, where I am coming from is that it makes sense to play a game that you can actually win at; To put effort and attention where it can do something; To not buy into a false hope that isn't going to make any real difference, anyway. EG, My Liberal friends are so up in arms about Trump and seem to think all the world's problems would be fixed if only Trump was impeached or somehow removed from office. I think most would agree that would not really solve anything but the liberals I know have that fixation and dump enormous amounts of attention and energy into it.

Call me ignorant, but what would bitcoin or any cryptocurrency really solve? It is still a medium of exchange, right? Maybe everybody saves a couple of percent on transaction fees? Supposedly it is private and secure and can't be manipulated. Not sure I buy it. Isn't it an irony that cyrptos have to be valued or evaluated in terms of these other currencies and financial systems they are trying to circumvent? It is electronically symbolic of value, right? But how do you value value? What really is backing up a crypto? Don't cryptocurrencies exist mainly just by "agreement" and "declaration" and "confidence"? Any potential problems there? What happens when a big EMP occurs? The hacking issue? Computers and computer systems are so vulnerable in so many ways. Of course the current system is just as vulnerable to that. It would seem to me that for cryptocurrencies to work and be effective, they would have to have widespread usage and acceptance. If and when that happens, aren't the regulators, lawmakers, IRS and bureaucrats likely to step in using the same rationalizations they are attacking cash with? Do any of you here who are proponents of cryptocurrencies own any?

Maybe I have a prejudice based on falling for too many optimistic sales jobs. Guilty as charged.
("we will learn faster if we incarnate!" "oops, we forgot to tell you. You can't go back!")

But, practicalities aside...

To stretch ever further off topic, for me, it Disco-Ball connects back to the concept of the spiritual world vs the material world; A influences vs B influences. Cowrie shells, dollars, yen, dimes, cryptos and SDR's all have their existence firmly rooted in the material 3D STS world. (unless the digital world is somehow a world of its own)

As for the response to "there are usually two types of response: one either freezes in place or jumps up and does something about it. I guess it depends on the type of person." That sounds dichotomous. Is Goyacobal's response the third connecting aspect of the trinity? To observe...to wait and watch? The "house" only wins its own games. I don't want to play their game. I am open to the fact that crypto-currencies may be a new game. But I am skeptical. Cynicism vs realism: always a fine line. I am just trying to be stoic about it. (and not a defeatist. Who knows what tomorrow may bring!)
 
BHelmet said:
<snip>
As for the response to "there are usually two types of response: one either freezes in place or jumps up and does something about it. I guess it depends on the type of person." That sounds dichotomous. Is Goyacobal's response the third connecting aspect of the trinity? To observe...to wait and watch? The "house" only wins its own games. I don't want to play their game. I am open to the fact that crypto-currencies may be a new game. But I am skeptical. Cynicism vs realism: always a fine line. I am just trying to be stoic about it. (and not a defeatist. Who knows what tomorrow may bring!)

BHelmet,

I can't speak for Bobo08 but I think I understand where you are coming from and I would not say you thoughts are "ignorant" at all. You seem to be taking the "stoic" approach which is I think the general one suggested in all our reading and understanding and I think that gives us a less "wishful thinking" stance.

I agree with your arguments as they apply to the current STS world. I feel I am living "between two worlds", the one "out there" and the one here. I think most of us looking at cryptocurrencies can see the possible applications but it would require a far more STO world before it could be anywhere near being free of outside manipulation that mimics the system of fiat currency we have now.

It is as you say just another medium of financial exchange and that in itself is not exactly our main concern in a world that seems to be falling apart.

One of the recent threads seems more important than bitcoin at the moment if you haven't noticed it Trump's Jerusalem decision

That is not to say this thread should be ignored. Maybe if we all don't go to 5th density we could work on a better value exchange system. Maybe even better than bitcoin (I know it sounds like wishful thinking)?
 
goyacobol said:
I think most of us looking at cryptocurrencies can see the possible applications but it would require a far more STO world before it could be anywhere near being free of outside manipulation that mimics the system of fiat currency we have now.

Agree, but at the same time there is the danger to wait forever until STO 'automagically' appears in our world. If STO is ever to come into our 3D realm, WE have to be the ones actively creating it, and that includes the utilization of a whole spectrum of technologies.

The internet's origin was a military project. Today our forum runs on top of it, which is a kind of a miracle if you really think about it. There is nothing preventing the same happening in the area of cryptocurrencies.

One could be of the opinion that for decades, the traditional banking system has been an incarnation of STS in one way or another. Now crypto comes along and, from my perspective, brings the possibility to "level the playing field" in this sector. Whoever is only focussing on the exchange rates, investments, getting rich, sensationalist headlines, or other hypes, is missing the crux of the technology, and falling prey to said STS desires.

The early internet was full of flaws and was only for experts. The general population came to use it only a decade later. Many missed the boat. The same with cryptocurrencies right now IMO.

At this point, I cannot see that there is anything an average person could do with it, except learning about it and help educating others and help countering disinformation. As a layperson (without deep knowledge of IT, economics, and law), venturing into this sector can be really, really dangerous.
 

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