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The genius behind crypto is that it's not just the extremely gullible. I know a fair number of really smart people, academics even, that have bought into the cryptocurrency hype.

It has this kind of veil of "high techness" to it that is appealing to smart-but-uninformed people (like me in 2021). I'm embarrassed that I fell for it, but on the bright side it does make me a bit more sympathetic for other people who also fell for it.




> The genius behind crypto is that it's not just the extremely gullible.

I don't know about you, but I barely follow cryptocurrency news, and I've still been hearing about major players getting "hacked" several times a year for over a decade.

Either it's Mt Gox or FTX or The DAO or Bitfinex or QuadrigaCX or Terra/Luna or rug-pull meme coins or dollar-backed coins that actually aren't or any of a dozen other things.

Anyone who isn't being extremely careful to avoid scams, given the constant drumbeat of reports about how you have to be extremely careful to avoid scams when dealing with cryptocurrency, is pretty gullible.


Ironically I think being more educated might sabotage you more with cryptocurrency.

My parents, both smart people but neither of which know much about distributed systems or concurrent computing or cryptocurrency, see the news reports about Mt Gox or BitConnect and think "that sounds like a scam", avoid it, and put money into a Vanguard or something.

On the other hand, you have people like me (and probably a not-insignificant percentage of people on HN), who have learned a fair amount of distributed and concurrent programming, and see the "neatness" factor of cryptocurrency, and since the crypto is laundered through interesting tech, we fall for it.

I haven't touched any cryptocurrency since I fell for the unregistered security calling itself Gemini Earn [1] (so almost three years now), but I did think that stuff like Filecoin was pretty cool. Hell, I'll still acknowledge the coolness factor of stuff like Filecoin and Storj and Sia. I just think that the currency itself is wishful-thinking-at-best, and fraudulent at worst (probably somewhere in between).

I don't think I'm an especially gullible person, but no one thinks that they're gullible, so I'll acknowledge that I probably am, but I think a lot of the educated people who got into crypto got into it because they kind of had horse-blinders on when looking at the interesting tech.

[1] Not my opinion, but the SEC's for what it's worth: https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2023-7


This essay scared me away from Ethereum, among other coins, for good:

https://www.paradigm.xyz/2020/08/ethereum-is-a-dark-forest


Being smart or academic does absolutely not mean these people aren't gullible.


I know, but it is inversely correlated.

I don't think most academics would fall for the "Nigerian Prince" chain emails, or the "Romance Scams" you see on YouTube, which are things I usually associate with extremely gullible people.


To be honest, a distributed logic execution engine is an interesting tech, it just isn't something to build any high value economy on top of.


Sure, I'll totally acknowledge that some of the distributed algorithms that have spun out of the blockchain are pretty cool, and I'll even go as far as to say that maybe someday we'll find some very cool high-value uses from them.

Pretend money, at least in my opinion, is not one of those uses.


It’s been about 15 years now. The killer app for blockchain is Bitcoin.


I don't know, I think some of the papers for distributed consensus might lead to something cool; if nothing else it does seem to be increasing the use of formal methods, which I think is neat.

These things can take time; it might be thirty years or more before someone does anything actually useful with the stuff learned from the crypto world.


Crypto: where Kernighan’s Law meets con artistry.




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