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It always comes down to trust models, (de)centralization, and whether it’s permissioned or permissionless.

For example multisigs, without crypto, require a trusted and centralized custodian, and if you are lucky you might get a permissioned API that exposes a few end points that were dreamed up by engineers at Stripe or some new tech-startup digital bank.




I'm still not sure I understand you. And you know, decentralization doesn't mean that there is no regulation.


Of course, using a crypto multisig doesn’t give you a pass on the law.

The closest example might be to point to TCP/IP which makes up the web and is (pretty) decentralized. Companies and even monopolies compete on top of this protocol but no single company wholly owns it. Although, ensuring decentralization tends to be a much more strongly considered goal in blockchains than what we’ve seen on the internet.

It’s a long read but “The Crypto Story” does a pretty great job at distilling some of the motivations:

https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2022-the-crypto-story/




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