Acquired - Ethereum
Episode Date: July 6, 2021We close out Season 8 with the most ambitious organization we've ever covered on Acquired: Ethereum, and it's celebrity wunderkind founder Vitalik Buterin. If you thought Mark Zuckerberg IPO-...ing Facebook at $100B by age 27 was something, just wait until you hear the story of this high school junior creating $500B (!!) of market cap by the same age — and oh yeah, maybe seeding the future dethroning of Facebook, Google, Amazon and all of big tech in the process. Regardless whether you're a crypto neophyte, a die-hard bull, or a skeptical bear, this is a story you need to hear, and Ethereum is an innovation you need to understand. Buckle in for a wild ride... and some special surprises from a few Acquired friends. :) Sponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Links:The Ethereum Whitepaper: https://ethereum.org/en/whitepaper/Yung Spielburg https://open.spotify.com/artist/273so0X2Yuo93vfeX2nLDI and Mike Taylor https://open.spotify.com/artist/30ejUciK31BCg0IVCbt1dW on Spotify Carve Outs:Arthur C. Clarke: https://www.amazon.com/Arthur-C-Clarke/e/B000APF21M? (especially Rendezvous with Rama and The City & The Stars)Disney-Marvel's Loki: https://www.disneyplus.com/series/loki/6pARMvILBGzFThe Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson:  https://www.amazon.com/Diamond-Age-Illustrated-Primer-Spectra/dp/0553380966Nier Automata: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nier:_AutomataMagic the Gathering IRL:  https://magic.wizards.com/en/events/event-types/friday-night-magic
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Should we do the new theme music, even though it's not season nine yet?
I think we should.
Yeah?
Let's do it.
All right, let's do it.
It's a special episode.
Let's do it.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Sit me down.
Say it straight.
Another story on the way.
Who got the truth? Welcome to Season 8, Episode 8 of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert, and I am the co-founder and
managing director of Seattle-based Pioneer Square Labs and our venture fund, PSL Ventures.
And I'm David Rosenthal, and I am an angel investor based in San Francisco. But today,
I am here with you in Seattle, in the flesh. In the flesh. And we are your hosts.
Well, first, we want to give a huge shout out to Young Spielberg and Mike Taylor for crafting
this new intro music that we used to open this episode. We have been wanting for years to do
something distinctive for the show, and it was a real treat to work with both of them on this.
And we have links to both of their fine work on Spotify and just love both of these artists.
They killed it. I am so pumped.
Me too. Well, we started this season with our first blockchain episode covering Bitcoin.
It seems only appropriate to bookend it with the season finale on Ethereum.
So David and I are here together in person to tell this story.
And as you all know from our Bitcoin episode, Bitcoin is some combination of currency, a
store of value, a medium of exchange, which all frankly are up for debate if it's doing a good job at any or all of those things.
And as many of you who have bought or sold cryptocurrencies over the last six years know,
there has been a big second game in town with Ether, ETH, the token used as a currency in the Ethereum network.
But this time, it's not just about currency.
Ethereum is something completely different.
You can think of it more as a gigantic distributed computer that exists all around the globe
in a completely decentralized way.
It's the world computer.
It is.
It is one single virtual machine that runs across millions of CPUs all at the same
time, albeit one very slow virtual machine. There is a strong argument to be made that this enormous
tamper-proof, censorship-proof computer is maybe the most important invention of the last decade,
laying the groundwork for technology
companies to come for the next several decades. And while there are kittens and rainbows everywhere
you look in Ethereum land, there were some absolutely wild stories that transpired to
bring us to where we are today. This thing has had a pretty wild last year, as most of you will know. Having a market cap 12 months ago
at around $20 billion, earlier this year at $450 billion, sort of in the same 12-month stretch,
it's been a heck of a year, Free Theorem. This has been a heck of a year for a lot of things.
No kidding. Well, are you an acquired Slack member? If not, you should. And aside from all
the normal reasons that we usually point out, I'm sure this episode will have quite a vibrant digital assets channel discussion.
It's a great way for beginners and the sort of crypto aware alike to have great conversations.
And as always, you can join that at acquired.fm slash slack. Another thank you to listener Austin
Fedra for curating that channel and for helping with
several discussions as we prepared for this episode. Okay, listeners, now is a great time
to tell you about longtime friend of the show, ServiceNow. Yes, as you know, ServiceNow is the
AI platform for business transformation, and they have some new news to share. ServiceNow is introducing AI agents. So only the ServiceNow
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They boost productivity for
employees, enrich customer experiences, and make work better for everyone. Yep. So learn how you
can put AI agents to work for your people by clicking the link in the show notes or going to
servicenow.com slash AI dash agents. All right, David, take us in. And listeners, as always, this show is not investment
advice. David and I may have investments in the company's assets, protocol tokens.
Utility tokens, Ben. Utility tokens. I checked with the SEC.
That we discuss, and the show is for informational and entertainment purposes only.
These are commodities, not securities.
Commodities. That's right. Before we get into it, two things. One, this is obviously the season
finale. What a season. This is crazy. So we started with Bitcoin. We did the New York Times
Company. We did three freaking episodes on Berkshire Hathaway. And we're ending with Ethereum.
We have Meituan. This is wild. It's so cool we get to do all this crazy stuff.
Yeah. It's remarkable we can find bull cases in all of those things when they've got daggers
pointed at each other, particularly crypto and Berkshire.
Well, there are at least daggers in one direction from Warren and Charlie to crypto. I don't know
about the other direction. Oh, I think the Bitcoin maximalists are very excited to see the time of Berkshire Hathaway be in the past.
Be in the past. Yeah, that may be true. So freaking cool. Thank you guys all for just
being with us on this journey. So awesome. Number two, before we dive in, huge thank you
on this episode to Camilla Russo and her book, The Infinite Machine, which came out recently and served as
basically the main narrative source for history and facts here. Camilla is an excellent journalist,
was part of the technology team at Bloomberg. Brad Stone has quite the crew that he's assembled
over there. And now Camilla runs The Defiant, which I think is sort of a play. It's the DeFi.
Ayo.
Ayo.
But wonderful book.
Highly recommend.
Everybody go check it out.
And thank you to Camilla for writing this amazing history.
Okay.
So speaking of history, if you remember all the way back to the beginning of the season
with our Bitcoin episode, you'll remember that the way back to the beginning of the season with our Bitcoin
episode, you'll remember that the Bitcoin white paper was published, of course, in 2008. But it
wasn't until May of 2010 when the famous pizza day, pizza transactions happened where two pizzas
were purchased for, what was it? It was like 10,000 Bitcoin, something like that.
That sounds right.
Yeah, man, those were some spendy pizzas. It obviously took a little while for this whole
idea of crypto to gain steam and enter the, not even the mainstream, but just broader awareness.
And then the killer app for Bitcoin, which of course was the first killer app, which was
the Silk Road, didn't launch until February 2011.
So it was right at that time, the very next month, in fact, in March of 2011, that a new user shows up in the Bitcoin talk forums online.
How many of these acquired episodes start with someone showing up in the forums?
Someone shows up in the forum. I feel like probably like half the China Tech episodes are like so-and-so is hanging out on IRC with all the other future giants.
Yep.
Amazing.
So the Bitcoin Talk forums were kind of the central hub of this sort of like early Bitcoin community.
They were actually created, I didn't realize this, by Satoshi himself created oh no way yeah in 2009 and this is where the pizza transaction happened this is where the famous
hodl post was in the bitcoin talk forums uh that generated that meme super cool so this new user
who joins the forums is very unlike Satoshi in pretty much every dimension.
And the most obvious dimension that he's unlike Satoshi.
He has a name.
He uses his real name. There is no username. The name, like everybody else is like, oh man, in the episode, who is the smokes too much?
There was the user smokes too much that it posted to the forum uh but this
this new user is just simply vitalik buterin right there laying it all on the line and uh and saying
forever you will know me by my name i'll be a public person i'll be a figure that will uh
identify with all of my comments and you know good and for bad, for being vulnerable,
but also for galvanizing a movement, this real name tied to my real identity is how I will do
that. Real name, no gimmicks. Vitalik Buterin. So who is this character? And why, when literally
almost everybody else in Bitcoin land and crypto land at the time is using a pseudonym.
Why is he willing to use his real name?
Well, he's willing to use his real name because he's just a high school kid.
He's got nothing to hide.
He's got nothing to lose.
He's 17 years old. He joins because he is looking for a way to earn some Bitcoin.
A pretty awesome side gig as a high schooler.
And where is he at this point?
He is in Toronto at this point he is in toronto at
this point so okay vitalik 17 he was born in russia in post-soviet russia to two undergrad
computer science students at kolomna uh which is right outside of moscow it's kind of hard to
imagine like just think about like born. He was born in January
1994. I've never been to Russia, but I hear January is pretty-
I have been to Russia in February, and I can tell you it has freeze your face off cold.
A whole new level. Probably makes Canada look like, Toronto look like balmy and tropical.
Yeah. Southern Canada may as well be the beach.
Yeah. So it's 1994. He's born to these two very young, very unprepared parents.
Not long after he was born, they would get divorced. Russia at the time is in total shambles.
The Soviet Union had collapsed a couple of years before. There's hyperinflation,
double digits per month inflation. People are everything there's a depression people are
starving like this is i didn't realize this how bad this was life expectancy in the in russia
declined by over 10 years from the collapse of the soviet union to the time that vitalik was
born which is five years yeah yeah that's crazy Average life expectancy for people was down into the 50 years. That is insane. So on the one hand, you've got all this huge amount of turmoil he's born into and grit that he's going to have to develop out of this. His parents are getting divorced. I mean, that's so hard for anybody, let alone with all this other stuff. But he also has all these huge opportunities. So he kind of wins the genetic
lottery. Both of his parents are not only hyper intelligent, which of course Vitalik is as well.
Anybody who probably everybody listening to this has at least heard his name, if not heard him
speak. He is quite literally a genius. I bet that's overstated. I bet. I actually
think the majority of listeners do not know
Vitalik's name. Oh, interesting. Well, we'll have to... Just to level set, for anyone out there who's
like, what? What are you talking about, David? He's a public figure to us because the last six
months, especially, we've been diving into the world of crypto and blockchain. That's a good
point. We've done months of research to prepare for this. But last year this time, did I know Vitalik's name?
I don't think so.
That's funny.
I sort of think of him as this public intellectual.
Maybe that's just because he's buddies with Tyler Cowen and goes on the conversations.
Yeah, he's been on some fairly mainstream podcasts at this point.
Yeah.
Anyway, so not only is his parents hyperintelligent, and of course, Vitalik is, his parents are
computer scientists in the mid 90s.
This is a great time to be a computer scientist.
So even though they get divorced, it's very amicable.
So they agree his parents to basically live their lives like together, but separately.
And like number one priority is giving vitalik every opportunity they can so the first and maybe
most important of these things is when vitalik is five they decide to leave this out leave russia
and emigrate to canada and they settle in toronto vitalik gets put into the gifted program in
toronto's public schools which is kind of funny. So he didn't speak English at all until
he arrived in Canada. It takes him a few years to really get comfortable speaking English,
but he's clearly a genius at math and computers and taking after his parents.
He's also really good at writing though, and writing English. So this is crazy. When he's
seven years old, I don't know if this is a school
project or just something Vitalik did for fun. He writes a 30-page document in English in Microsoft
Word called The Encyclopedia of Bunnies. And he structures it. He's really interested in bunnies.
And he structures it like a scientific paper. He's got graphs and charts, and he lists all the chemical elements that make up a bunny.
Is it like typeset and LaTeX? I can just imagine this being an overly academic thing for a child to write.
Totally. His dad, Dimitri, would joke later that it was Vitalik's first white paper. Having read quite a bit of Vitalik's writing preparing for this
across blogs from 2013 and before, through the white paper, through a lot of the stuff he's
written today, he is a talented, succinct, incredible communicator. Totally. Especially
given how young he still is. I think he's 27 at this point as we're recording this
so for high school he's clearly so talented they his parents decide to take him out of public
schools and enroll him in this school called the abelard school in toronto i didn't even know
schools like this existed there are only about 10 students per grade at this school and it's a very intensive curriculum but also like lets kids
explore their own passions so this is where we pick up the story vitalik is a junior in high
school both of his parents are still in tech his dad is a entrepreneur runs a software company
and his dad tells him this is 2011 tells him about this thing called bitcoin that he's heard about he's
looking into is part of the company it's pretty cool and uh supposedly at first metallic you know
like all teenagers was like yeah yeah cool dad like whatever like no big deal like i don't know
like crazy virtual currency but then he like obviously he spends a lot of time on the internet
and he starts hearing about it himself he's like oh actually maybe this is kind of cool maybe i should focus on it so he decides he wants to participate in this whole movement
but he doesn't want to just go buy bitcoin like that would be really boring plus he's a high
school kid doesn't feel like participating in the movement if you're just sort of buying yeah
yeah he he really wants to like be part of. He wants to earn Bitcoin. So you would think at this point, listeners, you're probably going like, this is where Vitalik turns all of Abelard's computer labs into a giant distributed Bitcoin mining machine.
Oh, I actually didn't know that. at this point that this is what he would be doing. But no, this is when he logs onto the forum.
And the reason he does is the way he wants to earn Bitcoin is he wants to
write about Bitcoin as he's going deeper in the communities. People are not doing a great job of
communicating and evangelizing what this is. I think I can do. I'm good at technical writing. I think I can do a good job.
So specifically, he creates his account to respond to a post, a request for writers from the publisher of a organization called Bitcoin Weekly, which is a news site that no longer exists, but
you can go read all this in the forum. The initial post reads,
I am willing to pay five Bitcoin for anybody who would write an article and authorized me to
publish it under the public domain. Pitch an idea to me and I will think about it. If I like your
idea, you will get four days deadline to write your article and three days deadline to finish
your final draft. I am one of the most reliable employer on the market.
You can imagine the mustache twirling on the other end here. So young Vitalik responds and he's like, hey, I can write. Why don't I write about economics and the dynamics of why using
credit cards doesn't make sense for microtransactions? This is all sorts of stuff I
can write about. So the publisher responds. He's like, yep, yeah, yeah, sure. Send in your submission and I'll see if I like it. So Vitalik does.
He writes the article. He gets paid for it in five Bitcoin, which at the time was worth
$4. Today is worth what? Five Bitcoin. I hope he kept those. Yeah, I hope he kept those indeed. 150K today. Yeah, 150K plus.
His posts though, he keeps writing, his posts start to become really popular.
And so he strikes a deal with the publisher because he's kind of the only one writing
for this thing that people are reading.
Because it sounds like a scam the way that it was posted about.
Well, get this.
So they decide that what they're going to do, Vitalik's going to write for free for Bitcoin Weekly.
They're going to post the first paragraph of all of his articles on the site.
And then they're going to hold the rest of the article essentially for ransom, where there's like a fee that has to be crowdfunded by people for a certain
amount of Bitcoin for each article that people have to pay into a wallet address to unlock
everybody seeing the rest of the article. Oh, it's interesting. So it's not just like a paywall.
It's like the only way anybody gets to read this is if enough people pony up.
It's like a Kickstarter. Huh. Fascinating.
It's like a Kickstarter for Bitcoin articles. Amazing. So with this,
they start making a pretty decent amount of Bitcoin. Good for a young Vitalik.
This goes on for a few months, but unlike the original post, Kiba, the publisher,
is not exactly one of the most reliable employer on the market. And Bitcoin Weekly goes under
by the end of the summer that year in 2011.
So people don't really like Vitalik's writing. And that August, a dude in Romania named Mihai
Alassi and his girlfriend, Roxanna, who were fans of Vitalik's writing, they think,
hey, what if we started an actual magazine to give Vitalik's writing a new home
and he can be the head writer? So they reach out to him. Unclear if they knew that he was a high
school kid in Canada or not, but hey, it's crypto. Who cares? Magic of the internet. It's like you
kind of also don't have to disclose that. Exactly. Exactly. So they reach out to him
with the idea to start Bitcoin Magazine, which they do. They team up with a few other folks in the forums and they get to work. The initial idea is that they're going to
start slow. They're only going to publish online and then they'll work up to a real physical
magazine. One of the other people who becomes involved, though, a guy under the pseudonym
Matthew N. Wright, he has a different idea. So Mihai, he goes to incorporate this company. They decide
to incorporate in the UK. So he flies from Romania to London. He's incorporating. And then
he's in the middle of traveling. He's on his way back. Matthew, quote unquote, messages the group
online. He says, let's dream big. And then he hits publish on a press release that he's written.
And I don't think he's told anybody about. The press release is entitled, First Issue of Bitcoin Magazine Goes to Print. And it says,
a 64-page glossy magazine is on its way to the printers with a 5,000-copy initial run,
and subscribers are going to get their copies within two weeks.
Which, of course, no one has done any of that stuff, right?
Literally nothing has been done. This is like the whole time i was thinking when i read this you know the the world of warcraft leroy
jenkins meme yes that's exactly what this is the leroy jenkins the magazine so it's not clear that
this guy is someone you want to work with long term no i think he ends up staying for like another
month or so and then they're like are you gonna get out of here but at this point like you know
vitalik's using his real name he's starting to get out there in the
community a promise has been made so they're kind of like hey i guess we we should make good on this
so that we're viewed as reputable people right and like necessity is the mother of invention
so mihi roxanna and vitalik they're like all, we got to do this. Amazingly, they make it happen.
I don't think they hit the two-week deadline, but they publish a real physical Bitcoin magazine.
It gets picked up eventually in Barnes & Noble. It becomes a real publication. It's pretty cool.
So with that, Vitalik, he's the head writer. He starts becoming even more of a Bitcoin and crypto celebrity. Which at this point are kind of the same thing.
Right. They are exactly the same thing.
In this 2012-ish timeframe, there is no other crypto.
I don't think so.
Not of note anyway.
Certainly nothing of note. And as we'll get into, most of the other projects that are happening, I think Satoshi's already disappeared at this'll get into most of the other projects that are happening
i think satoshi's already disappeared at this point but most of the other crypto projects that
were happening i think were happening on top of the bitcoin network at this point so it's fall
2012 vitalik has now graduated from high school and he starts as a freshman at the University of Waterloo studying computer science.
Super prestigious. CS school, yeah.
So Vitalik at Waterloo,
he's still writing all the time for Bitcoin Magazine.
He's taking a whole bunch of courses.
This is no walk in the park
to actually be a CS student at Waterloo.
Yep.
He also starts working as an assistant
to this legendary professor named Ian Goldberg.
Do you know Ian Goldberg?
I don't.
So he was one of the OG cypher funks back in the day.
He hacked Netscape's SSL implementation as a researcher.
Ended up, he was chairman of the Tor Foundation, helped get that off the ground.
And for folks who don't know, CypherFunk is the email listserv of sort of renegade cryptographer computer scientists that actually that wasn't Bitcoin sort of hatched and proposed
on the CypherFunk email list.
Yeah.
Well, certainly in that community.
So it's all intertwined.
And Ian is buddies with Neil Stevenson. So I think like a lot of Ian's work kind of influenced a lot of Neil Stevenson's all intertwined. And Ian is buddies with Neil Stevenson.
So I think a lot of Ian's work kind of influenced a lot of Neil Stevenson's sci-fi.
Pretty cool.
So yeah, Vitalik, he's busy.
Right.
So he has sort of the side hustle thing that is earning him a name in this community with
Bitcoin Magazine.
But then he also has the approved societal path of being at university where he is also connected to that community through his professor.
Yep. So by the time the spring rolls around of Vitalik's first year at Waterloo, he's ready to do an internship and start going. He's like, he wants like, I want to go get some actual programming, real world experience at a company, but I'm really interested in all this crypto stuff. And right around this point is when Ripple was getting started. So we said,
actually, we should have take back what we said earlier, that there were no other crypto projects,
there was Ripple. And at the time, Ripple still exists and has had lots of controversy since,
but it was a super hot idea to bring blockchain and crypto transactions into
the existing banking systems. They raised a ton of money. So the founder of Ripple,
we talked about this on the Bitcoin episode, was Jed McCaleb. Remember, he was the dude who
also created Mt. Gox. That's right. He created Mt. Gox and then he sold it. And so like-
He sold it to the Japanese dude so the collapse has... He's not
responsible for the collapse, but... That's right. That's right. Yeah. And Jed now runs Stellar,
which is one of the many sort of... That's a fairly credible current ongoing project.
Very credible project. Yep. Yep. Whereas just to make sure we're super clear on Ripple,
there's like a SEC lawsuit against them that's being worked through, right? It's being worked through. Yeah. I think it got delisted from Coinbase.
And certainly it's accomplished a lot. I mean, at some point, I think the market cap of Ripple was
in the tens of billions. Wow. Yeah. That's a crazy story for another day. But for here,
so Jed, at this point, Jed's already like, he's also a big player in the crypto community.
Vitalik gets in touch with him and Jed's like, oh yeah, we got to hire this kid.
And they would have, and history would have taken a very different turn, except they can't
get him a US visa.
So remember, Ripple is like being a legitimate cryptocurrency company.
The idea is they're going to bring it to the US financial banking system. So obviously, they're a USC corporation. You got to have a US visa,
work visa to work for them. They can't give Vitalik a visa. So they're like, all right,
sorry, let's stay in touch. We'll be friends. But you can't actually come work here for the summer.
So instead, Vitalik says, well, Bihai and i like and roxanna work we're close this
bitcoin magazine thing's going well i'm just going to take the summer off i'm going to go over to
europe go hang out in romania and spend the summer with them we'll write for the magazine and mehi
and roxanna were working on a project to basically build a legitimate silk road yeah it's like silk
road exists at this point what does a legitimate Silk Road even mean? I know.
I was wondering this.
We're going to accept crypto payments.
It's going to exist as an online marketplace, but we're not going to mail drugs through the USPS.
Basically, it's eBay.
It's like, oh, yeah, we should just do a decentralized eBay.
Maybe.
I don't know if that's a good idea or not, but clearly the killer use case was drugs.
So needless to say, that project didn't get very far, at least at that point in time.
They end up having this kind of wild summer. They move around Europe. Mihai and Roxanne are also pretty young. I think they had graduated from college maybe a year or two before.
They move around Europe. They spend most of their time hanging out in an anarchist commune
in Catalonia. And for Vitalik, he's always been this super, super serious kid. This is mind expanding for him. So he's having a great time. And by the end of the summer, he emails Waterloo and he's like, hey, I think crypto and Bitcoin is a really big thing. I want to take a year off and just focus on working on these crypto projects and being
in the community.
I'll be back in a year.
Much like actually the sentiment of a lot of super ambitious young technical people
right now who are doing that on everything that Vitalik would go on to create.
He was sort of the first to say, maybe it's time for me to take some time off to focus
on crypto.
Yep. And also, it just hits me over the head how much the parallels between Vitalik and
Mark Zuckerberg, again, 10 years earlier, that we're going to keep getting into as we go along
here. But same deal. I think when Mark took that summer to move out to Palo Alto and work on
Facebook, I think he was intending to go back to Harvard. Maybe he did
the same, like, I'm going to take a year off and see. Obviously, neither of these guys end up going
back to college. So this starts this kind of incredible journey that directly leads to
Ethereum. So what Vitalik decides he's going to do, there are all these Bitcoin meetups and
conferences that are happening all over the world. He decides he has enough money that he's making from doing his
writing, especially as Bitcoin, the currency starts to appreciate. He decides he's just going
to travel around and go to all of them and meet the community and hear about all these projects
that are happening and write about them. What year is this?
This is summer 2013. Okay.
So we're very close to the start of Ethereum here.
He goes to one conference in Amsterdam where he meets a guy named Amir Chetrit,
who was working on a project in Israel called Colored Coins.
This is where it's all going to start to come together.
So Colored Coins was building on top of the Bitcoin network,
and they wanted to bring in real world assets like real estate or fiat currencies, real world financial assets, securitize them and bring them onto the Bitcoin blockchain.
Like, okay, that was an idea a lot of people were thinking about.
So he invites, Amir invites Vitalik to come to Tel Aviv and meet up with him, see the team.
And there are a few other projects that are happening in Tel Aviv at the time that they're
sort of collectively calling this group Bitcoin 2.0. It's a self-proclaimed group of people in
Israel that are going to create Bitcoin 2.0. And it's essentially like a layer on top of
Bitcoin, right? They're not proposing any changes to Bitcoin itself.
That's the thinking they're going to start building. Vitalik would later use the analogy and other people would use the analogy of like, they're going to turn Bitcoin into a Swiss army knife, like Bitcoin is the chassis of the knife, and they're going to build, you know, the small knife and the screwdriver and the toothpick and all the different tools around it. And what Colored Coins was doing was sort of like,
hey, I'm going to put the fact that I own this property on the blockchain so that this property or any physical fig of the real world
can be sort of identified by a marker on the blockchain.
I think that's right.
It's like a representation.
I think that was the plan.
So Vitalik goes over, meets up with a bunch of teams. One of the other
teams in this sort of Bitcoin 2.0 movement is a team called Mastercoin. And what they're thinking
about, their sort of Swiss army knife tool that they're going to build on top of Bitcoin,
is the ability for anybody to create their own other currencies on top of the Bitcoin network and then fundraise
for those currencies. Hmm. This sounds like something people might want to do in the not
too distant future. For sure. And this is where it's worth disambiguating a couple things just
as a vocabulary lesson. In the world of Ethereum, Ethereum, and I know I'm flashing forward here,
Ethereum is the network and ether
abbreviated eth is the token the the currency that exists on that network but in the world of
bitcoin the blockchain is called bitcoin and the coin or token is called bitcoin and so there's
like you can buy and sell bitcoins and there's a blockchain that exists that is also called the
bitcoin blockchain and
so their proposal here is basically like we want to find a way to create other currencies to exist
on the bitcoin blockchain that is not bitcoin that is not bitcoin exactly yeah it's confused
bitcoin is basically bitcoin is two things we talked about this a little bit in the episode
bitcoin is bitcoin on bitcoin bitcoin being the currency and the Bitcoin network being the blockchain.
Yep. So yeah, the way that MasterCoin was going to make this happen of allowing these other
currencies to exist on the Bitcoin network was through this concept, this computer science
concept called smart contracts, which people might have heard of. And people talk about Ethereum being the smart contract language. So smart contracts were actually... The concept was invented by Nick Sabo
way back in the day, who was the dude who proposed Bitgold, if you remember from the
Bitcoin episode. Which was also on the CypherFunk email list.
He was also sort of a CypherFunk. He was actually a lawyer too, I believe. He wasn't
technical. So he never implemented Bitgold. It was just a proposal. But it's one of the couple proposals that were
sort of closest to what Bitcoin- Definitely inspired Bitcoin.
Definitely inspired Bitcoin. Whoever Satoshi is definitely
worked from that sort of foundation. Those were the shoulders that Satoshi stood upon.
So Sabo, he defined smart contracts as, quote unquote, a set of promises.
Remember, he's coming from a legal background, a set of promises specified in digital form,
including protocols within which the parties perform on these promises. So what does that mean?
Basically, smart contracts, and this is what I realized in doing the research, it's just code. It's code that can be arbitrary, but it executes if and only if certain conditions are met.
That was kind of the innovation.
And then when you marry that with a blockchain and something like Bitcoin, where there is a ground truth, nobody can argue over whether conditions are met or not,
then you seed the environment for these smart contracts to actually be really useful.
Right. Yeah. What you're saying is if everything is actually on the blockchain, the assets,
the cryptocurrency, and the conditional logic is also on the blockchain, then you can have things
that will sort of provably do what you think
they are going to do.
Whereas, you know, in the real world, you've got a contract that's written by a lawyer,
and then it takes people actually carrying out the work that that contract says, you
know, they're effectively dumb contracts.
They then require a human compiler to go through and then make sure that the logic that is
in that contract can be sort of parsed and then
interface with things in the real world. And you can get into all sorts of arguments about like,
well, were these conditions met or were these conditions not met? And that's why we have our
legal system and judges and lawyers. Yeah. There's one spec that's written that is executable that
has direct manipulation over the assets to move it. It's pretty genius. Yeah, totally. So the Bitcoin network in Satoshi, it's not like he didn't know about smart contracts.
It uses it. There are smart contracts in the Bitcoin network, but they're limited. There's
only a very specific, very small set of functions that you can call functions in the programming
sense that you can call as part of Bitcoin's smart contracts. And so what MasterCoin and Colored Coins and all these other folks were doing
in the Bitcoin 2.0 movement, they were writing essentially more functions that you can call
in smart contracts. So Vitalik, he's hanging out with these guys. He's like,
well, this is great. I love these ideas. I'm good at writing. Maybe I can help you guys write up
white papers for your projects and sort of help evangelize and crystallize what you're doing.
That's great. They're like, sure, go to town, work on white papers for us.
As he starts the process of writing, though, for each of these projects, he realizes like,
hey, you know, these things are all all separate projects and this is all kind of cool
and building on top of bitcoin but you're all just kind of scratching the surface of a bigger idea
like this is sort of whack-a-mole of like adding set functionality to bitcoin but if you know
anything about programming like the beauty of programming is this idea of turing completeness
that like a programming language
that is Turing complete, you can do anything.
You can create a developer, doesn't need any permission, doesn't need any set functionality.
She or he can write their own functions and do anything ad infinitum.
It's the way that any piece of software technology works, that you have these varying levels
of abstraction. And at the highest
user-facing layer, you have this sort of application where that is designed for a
specific purpose, often for a very specific type of user performing a certain business logic.
Take Slack. That's a very abstract thing that is a field that you type in that's got a chat window.
It's an application. And what people are sort of doing in this Bitcoin land, and this is a field that you type in, that's got a chat window. It's an application. And what people
are sort of doing in this Bitcoin land, and this is a little bit of a stretched analogy here,
but they're basically building highly specific applications on top of Bitcoin and trying to
extend it. It's kind of like the Bitcoin network as a calculator, not a computer.
Right. And what Vitalik's basically saying is, but what if the instruction set, the sets of functions
or instructions that we could sort of call were very general purpose, very sort of abstract,
where there's even further levels of abstraction, applications that could be built on top of
that.
And it's a dangerously difficult undertaking because it's exploitable in all sorts
of ways. It requires incredible amounts of security. It requires you to really think
through every way that someone could use your very primitive set of low-level instructions
to craft whatever they want. But if you can do it, then it's a hell of a foundation.
This is a huge idea. Huge. I mean, basically saying like Bitcoin is a
calculator. Let's build a computer. And if we're going to build a computer, it's got to be a wholly
different thing. So he goes first to the master coin team and tells them about this. He's like,
hey, I'm working on your white paper. What if you guys did this instead? And the master coin team,
sort of half to their credit, they're like, wow, that is a big idea. That's
really cool. And then half to their incredible detriment, they're like, we're going to stay
focused on what we're doing. That was probably a mistake. Let me just crystallize this even
further just because I keep thinking on that. It is a stretched analogy, but it's like someone handed you a Macintosh without macOS for it.
And what you said was, well, I'm going to start building Slack, or I'm going to start
building, I'm just looking at my dock here, Chrome or Photoshop.
And then it's like somebody proposes to you, whoa, instead of just building Photoshop,
build macOS.
And imagine the potential that we will unlock with that. And you're like, no, but I just building Photoshop, build macOS and imagine the potential that we will
unlock with that. And you're like, no, but I really want Photoshop.
And we only have so many resources.
There's this amazing email that's in the Infinite Machine that Cabela cites from the founder of
MasterCoin to Vitalik. He says, but I'd rather see MasterCoin doing its core functions before
we start experimenting with scripting.
Scripting being what you would need, like universal scripting language as part of this to turn it into a real computer.
Yep.
So Vitalik, you know, at first he's a little disappointed.
And then he's like, wait a minute.
I'm Vitalik Buterin.
I've got a following.
People in crypto land know me. I'm good at writing white papers. I'm alsoik Buterin. I've got a following. People in crypto land know me. I'm good at
writing white papers. I'm also pretty technical. I think this is the future. I'm just going to go
do this. So he leaves Tel Aviv and heads to probably the one place in the world, certainly
then and probably still today, where the best place where if you've got the big world-changing
idea, you want people to take you seriously, even if you're not super well-known,
he goes to San Francisco. And of course, remember, he knew the Ripple team,
and Ripple's based in San Francisco. He shows up, he couch serves, he crashes
on the couch in the apartment of Ripple's CTO, Stephan Thomas, in Soma. And he spends two weeks
in San Francisco, and he alternates between doing the
days. He goes on long walks around San Francisco, up and down the hills. And then he comes back and
he just writes the white paper. He doesn't talk to Stefan. Stefan wants things like,
hey, I want your thoughts on Ripple and maybe you should write about Ripple and evangelize us.
He's like, no, no, no, I'm focused. And so he writes the white paper in two weeks, what would become the Ethereum white
paper. At first, he titles it the ultimate smart contract and decentralized application platform.
And then he kind of realizes, you know, again, Vitalik, he knows how to write, he knows how to
convince people. He's like, I need a cool name for this project. So he starts scrolling through
Wikipedia, looking for science fiction
terms that he can sort of use as inspiration, sci-fi terms. And he comes across the word,
I don't know if it's pronounced ether or aether. I always thought it was aether,
A-E-T-H-E-R, ether, let's just call it ether. This concept, I remember this from way back in
middle school. It originated with the ancient Greeks who thought that ether was the fifth element out there. There gods breathed and this idea kind of never got
stamped out in human history so like in medieval times just when the scientific revolution was
kind of getting going people postulated that ether was a invisible substance that permeated
the universe that light traveled the force yeah it's like the force is exactly it's like the force and specifically
light was conducted through ether you know the gods breathe it whatever anyway been disproved
not not the case but vitalik thinks this is perfect he's like oh man the substance that
the gods breathe that it permeates the entire universe that light gets you know conducted
through great i'm gonna borrow this term. So actually,
Ether does exist, and I'm going to use it to title my project. So he comes up with the Ethereum
network of which the native currency on top of it is Ether. Boom. It's born.
Pretty good name. And if you read this white paper, it's pretty A, long, and B, technically complex.
Yes, this is not like the Bitcoin white paper.
No, the Bitcoin white paper, while it does have some reasonably complex mathematical formulas,
it basically succinctly lays out in prose how each of these clever mechanisms exist and how they'll sort of all work together.
The Ethereum white paper is like, here's the instruction set architecture for a new type of
assembly language and the type of machine that it will run on and the registers are going to look
like this. I mean, it's like going back to my operating systems class in college.
Yeah. We'll link to it. You should go look at it, read it, but don't... You should go read the
Satoshi white paper. Anybody can read that and understand that. This, it's for a technical
audience. The funny thing is then there's even a further technical specification on top of that
called the yellow paper, which is like when I was at Microsoft, the PMs wrote the spec,
and then once the specs were signed off, then the devs wrote the design document, I think was
actually how the software would be architectured. So it's sort of like the spec and then the developer design doc of Ethereum.
So funny. That would come a little later. More drama before then. So basically,
we've talked about Ethereum being the computer versus Bitcoin, the calculator or a computer
without an operating system. There are two big consequences of this. So one, you've got a Turing complete, generally programmable computer with a native currency in it.
You now have code with money.
So, you know, with Bitcoin, you have money and not really code.
With normal non-crypto world you've got code lots of code but completely
separate from completely separate from money here so the way vitalik architects ethereum
there are two types of accounts in the ethereum network accounts that can hold and spend and do
things with ether and can execute code there are are user accounts, which humans would hold.
It's like my wallet.
Like a wallet. Yeah, they're user accounts. But then there also are contracts and smart
contract accounts. They are exactly the same as user accounts.
Yeah, this is kind of like the cleverness of abstraction thing that we were talking
about earlier. It's like, how low level and customizable can I make stuff? And you just see it show up in the fact that both user accounts and contracts are sort
of a subclass of account.
And the cleverness of, yep, this account exists over here and you can upload your contract
to it.
And of course, you have to pay.
And we'll talk about that of getting your contract to go live in this location.
But then at any point after that, people can send inputs to it, the contract will execute,
and then the outputs happen. Can send money to it.
Yeah. Yeah. So you've got literally the code contracts that are the same as the user accounts,
meaning they have their own money. The code has its own money. This has never happened before.
This is huge. So that's just one of the two big ideas. The other big consequence of this is that if this network actually gets instantiated,
it's going to be a world distributed computer like there has never been before. So people call
Ethereum the world computer. This is what they mean. Of course, there's AWS, there's Azure,
there's all sorts of cloud computing out there, but Amazon owns AWS. And you can go find all the locations that all their data centers are and whatnot. It's like a thing. It's sort of like thinking about serverless architecture
or even server architecture.
You write some code, you deploy it to an endpoint somewhere,
you expose an API that has an input and output.
But that code lives on one server.
There's probably some replication,
but it's on a server in a data center.
When you deploy an Ethereum,
your contract to a location on the blockchain,
that is replicated on all
million or whatever, hundreds of thousands of nodes on the Ethereum network that sort
of have a copy of that.
Just like every node on the Bitcoin network has a copy of the ledger with all the transaction
history, same deal here.
Every node on the network has a copy of all the code.
Right.
And as you're visualizing this, where your brain should go is,
wow, that's powerful. And then simultaneously, it should go, geez, that distributed nature,
I could really imagine that being like, it's hard to take it down. You can unplug a server
from the wall, but once that code's kind of deployed, that smart contract, it's pretty hard
to undo. Oh, we are going to get into that.
And lastly, your mind should go to a place where you're like, well, that's pretty inefficient.
Wait, so it has to go to every...
What?
That's going to cost a lot of energy and time.
And geez, maybe there'd be a lot of network congestion.
So already, as you're starting to understand the architecture of this, you're like, okay,
really, really good for some stuff and at great cost. Yeah. I had this later in the notes,
but to pull it forward, just for context, people talk about even today, in 2021, mid-2021,
the relative power of the computer that is Ethereum, the world computer,
is roughly equivalent to a Raspberry Pi on a home broadband
connection. And that is running everything. But it is stable AF, David.
Yeah, that's right. Maybe, maybe. We'll get into that. Okay. So this is all pretty freaking cool,
especially for an 18-year-old. So November 27th, 2013, Vitalik, I think he's still in San Francisco at this point,
he's done his draft of the first draft of the Ethereum white paper. He emails it out to a very
small group of people that he knows from the crypto community to ask for their feedback.
So Camilla writes in the Infinite Machine here that I'm going to quote,
that Vitalik was, quote unquote, sure his work was going to get torn apart.
With an idea this big,
there has to be a very good reason why nobody has tried to do it. But that never happened.
Vitalik's email got forwarded and then forwarded again, so that instead what he got was a flood
of responses from people who were excited about the project and wanted to work with him.
Vitalik's vision was much too big to
be constrained. He was thinking about creating a base layer for everything, a computer that could
simultaneously live in all the nodes of an enormous global network, which would be able to process
anything you threw at it without downtime or interference, so developers could build whatever
they dreamed of, and nobody would be able to stop them or their applications like an infinite machine.
Pretty freaking cool.
Very cool.
So cool.
Definitely sci-fi.
Definitely.
I mean, either.
We were all wrong.
The Greeks were right.
It exists.
Okay. Okay, so pretty quickly after this, a core group of five people starts to form to pull this ambitious thing together and try to make this project happen.
So there's Vitalik, of course.
There's Mihai, his buddy, his Bitcoin magazine partner in crime.
There's Amir Chetrit, the guy that he met in Amsterdam, the colored coins guy who initially brought him to Israel.
Amir's like, oh, I get it. This is cool. I'm gonna go do this with you.
Even though at colored coins, we're not going to do this as a part of that project.
I get where you're going.
I get where this is going. And this should be its own thing. And
Amir's gonna give me some drama here because Amir doesn't leave colored coins. He's still
working on colored coins. And then two more people. So the first is a guy named Anthony
Diorio, who is also from Toronto and was a
Bitcoin enthusiast, but unlike everybody else here, actually had some wealth in real world money.
He worked at Goldman Sachs, right?
No, that was Joe. He's going to come a little later. I forget how Anthony had made some money,
but he had some money. So he gets brought on to kind of like, he's like, hey, I'll bankroll this while we're getting started up. And he's like, we should
also get my buddy Charles involved in this. Charles Hoskinson. And for all Ethereum and
crypto fans who've been following this space here, you're probably smiling to yourselves right now because you know what's about to happen.
So Charles had done work on the idea of decentralized cryptocurrency exchanges,
which of course would become a very big thing on Ethereum a few years later.
And these are DEXs, if people have heard of that. So Coinbase being a centralized,
I mean, it runs in AWS. Yeah, it's like the New York Stock Exchange. Right. It's a SaaS application that happens to connect to a bunch of blockchains underneath it.
Whereas a decentralized exchange or a DEX is like, it uses decentralized technology to create
the exchange to trade. It runs in the nodes of the network. We'll get much more into this when
we get into DeFi at the end of the episode. The other thing that Charles had worked on was helping pioneer this idea of a concept, which was just sort of like, you know, out there at the time of a concept
called a DAO, a decentralized autonomous organization. Also going to come back up in a
minute here. So Anthony's like, hey, Charles, like, you know, he's a, he really knows the stuff. He's
good, you know, and he's got some experience running projects.
He would be really good to bring on here. And he knows what he's doing. And the group quickly
decides that Charles should be the CEO of this fledgling Ethereum something company,
foundation, project. We will see. Charles, of course, would later go on to found cardano quickly after that so they've got vitalik
who wrote the white paper and is you know technical but like he's still a kid he's a
second year computer science student essentially right you've got amir who's not technical you've
got mihai who's not technical you've got anthony who's not technical and you've got charles who's
like borderline technical but but not a developer.
So they realize like, hey, we need some devs.
So they bring on two developers, the first of whom is a amazing developer named Gavin Wood, who also for people in crypto land, you know Gavin.
Legendary name.
Yeah, truly a gifted programmer.
Incredibly gifted.
Gavin had intersected with Mihai and Roxana before.
And when he hears about Ethereum and the white paper, which is now making the rounds in the
community, he emails Vitalik and he says, yes, how far along are you and coding it? Can I help?
Vitalik responds like, not far. Yes. Yes. Start tomorrow. So Gavin drops what he's doing, and he gets to work right away on a C++ implementation
of a client to run Ethereum nodes on the network. Gavin makes the first commit to Ethereum's GitHub
on Christmas Eve, 2013. So he's dedicated. Right around the same time, a Dutch developer named
Jeff Wilkie also joins the project. Wilkie was at MasterCoin. So he was
in Amsterdam, but he was working for MasterCoin and joins this as sort of a side project. He
continues working on MasterCoin as well. And Jeff gets to work on an implementation of an Ethereum
client in Go, in the Go programming language. So Gavin's working on a C++ version. Jeff is working
on a Go version.
Which if I remember right from the book was sort of accidental at first. It was like,
hey, we both know different programming languages. We both kind of want to do this. We're both just
going to get started. It wasn't like this intentional, hey, we should have redundancy
to make sure that if we misimplement something in one of the languages, it doesn't become the
way Ethereum works. Which actually ended up being one of the few good decisions in the early days of Ethereum.
And I think was probably really a boon to have both of these versions out there.
So the next month in January 2014, the original five plus Gavin and a few other folks, not Jeff, Jeff decides to stay in Amsterdam. They convene
at an Airbnb in Miami ahead of the Miami Bitcoin conference. I thought the Miami Bitcoin conference
this year was like the first one. No, no. I totally thought that too, because there's so
many Miami jokes that are happening that we should totally acknowledge that Miami 2014 was when
Ethereum first happened, when it was presented,
when this group got together. Miami's got OG tech grid.
Absolutely. Do you know if the Bitcoin conference happens every year in Miami?
That's actually a good question. I don't know. I should know. But nonetheless, it happened there in 2014. So Vitalik, they decided that this is where they're going to announce and launch
Ethereum. Vitalik is slated to give a talk at the conference, but this is where they're going to announce and launch ethereum vitalik is slated to
give a talk at the conference but this is all happening so fast he's just giving a talk as like
vitalik buterin writer for a bitcoin magazine he's not even on the main stage in the conference
planning like it's it's hilarious so they all show up at the house also joseph lubin joe who
you were referring to earlier shows up at the house. Also, Joseph Lubin, Joe, who you were referring to earlier,
shows up at the house. He'd been introduced to Vitalik through Anthony. Also,
Joe was at Goldman. And then in the hedge fund world, also a Princeton alum, go Tigers. And
they decide to bring him on board. He's got some money as well. So he also helps finance things.
So Joe and Anthony are just out of their own personal finances or financing these early days.
And it's not like there's Ether to buy at this point.
They're literally just spending money to cover the costs.
Yep.
So they decided at the house that the original five will be co-founders of Ethereum.
So not Gavin, not Jeff, not Joe.
And the co-founders will get the largest personal stakes of Ether in sort of
the pre-allocation before the network goes live. And that's sort of decided in the early first day
at the house. Gavin's there meanwhile. He had been coding. He's coding furiously at the house,
trying to get a test net up to demonstrate during Vitalik's presentation. And as he's coding,
he's kind of like, he's looking around, he's like, dude, I'm the only one who actually knows
how to build this thing here.
What are all these other people doing?
What would you say you do here?
So he starts getting a little salty.
And he's like, guys, I should be a co-founder
and I should be CTO
because what are you going to do without me?
So he and Anthony actually have a pretty big argument supposedly at the house,
but everything's happening so fast. Nothing gets settled there. They're like, all right,
well, let's just get to Vitalik's presentation and launch this thing. We'll see what happens
after that. Finally, presentation happens at 9.30 AM in the morning on Sunday. I think that was
maybe the last day of the conference or something,uary 26th still not on the main stage but word had gotten out that this was going to be a big
deal so vitalik takes the stage the room is packed like everybody in the crypto community is there
and he announces ethereum i think he announces that the test net is live and people go nuts.
It's like a rock concert.
There's a standing ovation.
There's cheering.
People are really jazzed about this idea, as they should be.
I mean, it's so ambitious.
The reason it hadn't been done is largely because it's just phenomenally risky and a
ton of work.
And then we'll require an enormous groundswell of community support in order to make it happen. Bitcoin already had
this huge lead, all these network effects. It's kind of like me saying, I want to start a new
operating system. And then I'm going to build a new app store on top of that operating system.
It's just nutty. Yep. I don't know. I mean, we could rally the acquired community to make it happen.
Bencoin.
Acquired magazine subscribers.
Acquired magazine subscribers.
Unite.
That would actually be pretty dope.
We should have a 64-page glossy magazine.
It's shipping in two weeks.
One for each company that we've covered.
We are one of the most reliable employer on the internet.
Okay.
All right.
Back to the story.
All right.
Back to the story. All right. Back to the story.
So literally as Vitalik is walking off the stage, everybody and their mom is like, hey,
can I give you money?
Like, I want to fund this thing.
I want a piece of this. So before the announcement, the team had been planning to do a $5 million crowd sale of
Ether to bootstrap the network and raise initial funds to pay back Anthony and Joe and
get going and fund development. They decide though, in the wake of this,
it's like the Roblox IPO. It's like, we got to postpone this. The demand is too high.
So they said like, hey, let's postpone. Let's leave Miami. Let's regroup in Switzerland.
Because at the time, Switzerland had the most
Swiss neutrality, best friendliest laws for crypto companies in the world, and let's decide how to
proceed. Actually, before they get there, in the aftermath of the conference,
Gavin continues to be a squeaky wheel, and they decide, okay, great, we're going to expand the
group of co-founders from five to eight. We're going to include Gavin. We're going to include Jeff from Amsterdam, who's running the Go implementation. And we're going to include Joe as well, because he's now financing this.
Big founding team. for an incredibly technical project. The next big question, though,
that once they get to Switzerland,
they got to start figuring out is like,
well, how do we structure this thing?
Is this a company?
Is this a foundation?
Like, is this Linux?
What is this?
As Camilla puts it in The Infinite Machine,
the question was, would they be Google,
a for-profit company with revenues
and cash flow and profit? Or would they be like the
Mozilla Foundation, which still would have revenue and resources, but is a non-profit
that would allocate resources to developers to both internally and externally to further
the project? So here's where things kind of go off the rails. Basically, Charles Anthony... Remember,
Charles is the CEO titularly at the time. Charles Anthony and Amir, the colored coins guy,
they all want the for-profit, the Google route. They're seeing dollar signs.
Which is so funny that they're seeing dollar signs because it would be a corporation.
In retrospect, there were a lot of dollar signs because it wasn't a corporation.
Arguably a lot more dollar signs.
I mean, we'll never know what would have happened otherwise.
But meanwhile, Vitalik and Mihai, they want the Mozilla route.
Yeah.
And then the developers, Gavin and Jeff, I think mostly they don't really care.
They're just like WTF guys.
Like, we don't have anything right now.
We got to build this damn thing.
And you're arguing about corporate structure? What the hell? If you press them, they probably want the Mozilla
route. But mostly, I think they just don't really care. This becomes a huge schism. Charles wants
to go to Silicon Valley and go do a tour and go raise money from venture capitalists and get the
cash in the door, which they certainly could have done. And then everybody else is like,
you're going to go raise money from VCs? This is still crypto land. The whole point is to rage against the machine.
You're going to go raise money from the traditional financial system?
Meanwhile, fortunately for the way things would go, crowd sales of initial tokens for various
projects were becoming more and more of a thing on top of MasterCoin, which existed at this point.
And there starts to be a really viable argument that, you like you were saying ben you can get plenty of money in
by making this a non-profit foundation yep the question though is is it legal
because like let's rewind has a foundation ever been behind something where you are selling tiny chunks that can potentially be used in the future to have some
utility, but today don't have any. Are speculative in nature.
Yeah, it's totally speculative. And also, because you're a foundation, you don't have
shares, so it's not like you're selling pieces of your company because it doesn't exist. So it's
this weird sort of like- It really is a gray area.
Right. But it really looks on the surface a lot like a securities offering,
which of course would be like a major no-no.
Right.
The SEC would have something to say about that.
Not a no-no in the sense of like, you can't do it. A no-no in the sense of like,
you have to register with the SEC to do that. You need like effectively an IPO. You need to
list on an approved exchange.
There are ways to sell securities to the public, but-
But not the way the Ethereum guys are thinking about it.
Yes.
There's the US, which is obviously the biggest financial market in the world.
But this is a world project and a world computer, and most of these people are not Americans.
So there's that. Yep.
So they retain a whole army of securities lawyers all around the world to figure this out.
They even managed to get, this is amazing,
a former SEC commissioner,
a guy named Joseph Grunfrest,
who was SEC commissioner in the Reagan administration.
He's now teaching at Stanford.
They get him to advise them on like what to do here.
And the question all comes down to like Ether, the currency, what is it?
Is it a security or is it a commodity?
Well, that's a good question.
And the reason you're saying commodity is because it's a good that people can trade
that has a utility rather than it being a share that people trade that is speculative,
that the price will go up or down in the future because it's tied to the performance of an
entrepreneurial venture that's managed by some management team.
Yep.
So if it's a security, no dice on this offering.
Yep.
If it's a commodity, all good.
Anybody can start selling something.
And the thing that like really gives
them that credible argument around it being a commodity is the fact that it has utility in the
ethereum network exactly so we mentioned gas fees like the way the system works is ether is the
currency on top of the ethereum network but ether exists to pay fees to the nodes on the network to get them to
process transactions. It's effectively a bounty. And when we're saying gas fees, you can think of
gas and Ether effectively interchangeably. It's effectively a bounty where you say, all right,
I need someone to do something with this smart contract that I've written.
I need it propagated.
I need an incentive to do that.
Yeah.
Here's what I'm willing to pay for you guys to send this all around the world.
Yep.
So Vitalik wasn't even thinking about the securities law implications of this when he wrote the white paper.
But, you know, he calls it gas.
He's like, this is the analogy.
It's like you got to buy the gas to put the gas in the car to get the car to go.
Yep. He's like, this is the analogy. It's like, you got to buy the gas to put the gas in the car to get the car to go. So they go to, I want to say good friend, like the Berkshire episodes and Solomon Brothers. No, Grundfest, the former SEC commissioner. And they say like, well, hey, so here's how this works. It's gas fees. Real world gas isn't a security. Obviously, that's a commodity. I can just set up a gas gas station and sell gas i don't need to register that as a security with the sec unless i uh always sunny
style then go and hoard all the gas in my basement in the back of a van and then try and resell it
later at a higher price but yes continue so they probably don't bring that up with grunfest yes
so like isn't ether the same thing shouldn't it be a commodity Grunfest. Yes. So like, isn't Ether the same thing?
Shouldn't it be a commodity?
Grunfest kind of thinks about it.
And he's like, yeah, I guess you're right.
It's amazing.
So they take this to their US securities law firm,
Pryor Cashman,
and they get Pryor Cashman to write an opinion letter
saying that like, based on Grunfest saying this,
we are of the opinion that Ether is not a security.
It's a commodity. Bunch of other law firms also write opinion letters and boom the doors are wide
open not just for ethereum to now do a initial crowd sale of their utility token but for anybody
to do an initial crowd sale oh boy a lot of people rubbing their hands together here oh talk about
those dollar signs you know man if uh if only the people that wanted to go the C Corp route had known about this,
they would have changed their tune.
So once this is settled, they all get back together in Switzerland.
This is now June 2014 to make the final call on the direction to go.
And everybody thinks going into this meeting that this is just going to be like a rubber
sand. Like, great, we're going to approve. We're going in the Mozilla direction. We're going
to do the crowdfunding. All good here. Not a big deal. Camilla titles this chapter, The Red Wedding
in The Infinite Machine. Basically, this becomes about way more than how they're going to structure
the company. The devs are starting to really resent Charles as CEO and the decisions he's making and how he wants to run things. And they
don't think he's doing anything. They also don't think that Amir... Amir is still running colored
coins as well. So they're like, what the hell is this Amir guy doing? Why is he part of this?
He's not even doing anything. So there ends up being a mutiny in his meeting and everybody's
screaming at each other they all turned to
vitalik vitalik hadn't been in switzerland he was still traveling around the world evangelizing you
know talking about ethereum and the white paper and everything and he had just been awarded the
teal fellowship to officially he then emails waterloo and he's like hey guys i'm not coming
back and he drops out to work on this so he shows up and he's got like a full-on
full-on mutiny on his hands so they all look at him and they're like you make the call you decide
who's in and who's out which can i just say incredibly foreshadows the future of ethereum
where despite this being and they're not saying the eight of them are this decentralized governance,
but despite the fact that there's eight people
with eight voices,
ultimately when push comes to shove,
everyone looks at Vitalik and says,
all right, what do we do?
Yep, rightly or wrongly.
There's no, you know, it's not a company.
He's not the CEO,
but yeah, everybody looks at Vitalik.
So supposedly he goes out on the terrace of this house
in Switzerland in Zug where they are.
And apparently he just sits there for like a super long time.
He's got a yoga ball that he's like hugging to his chest.
He's like rocking back and forth like a baby.
I'm just imagining the weight on this guy.
So he's 20 years old.
So meanwhile, back in the house, everybody's like staring at each other.
It's like the tension is crazy.
Finally, he comes back in.
It's like smoke is coming from the Vatican.
He declares, Ethereum will be a foundation, full stop and for all time.
Charles and Amir, you're out.
You're done.
You're gone.
And the project going forward is, it's me, it's Gavin, it's Jeff, it's Joe, and it's Mihai.
And you two are out.
You guys are out.
This is pretty heavy stuff.
As I was reading about this, it was reminding me of some of the Zuckerberg Yahoo vomiting
in the bathroom moment.
Oh, it absolutely is that sort of high tension, high drama, pins and needles moment.
Because this is literally like the entire future of the project is on him here.
This is like Facebook could have sold to Yahoo is on him here like this is like facebook could
have sold the yahoo for a billion dollars this is the same moment the code's not done there have not
been any tokens sold yet six seven years later the market cap of all the tokens out there would
be half a trillion dollars yeah like this is a high tension moment because well of course they
don't know that everyone
believes that if this thing succeeds as the world computer that's going to be pretty valuable yeah
yeah there's a lot at stake so they incorporate the ethereum foundation as a swiss non-profit
they move forward with the crowd sale can you you incorporate? Is that word mean corporation? I don't know. I don't know if that's the right thing.
They start.
They instantiate, to use a developer phrase.
The crowd sale starts on July 22nd, 2014 at midnight Swiss time.
It runs for two weeks.
They sell $2.2 million worth of Ether in the first 12 hours. By the end of it, they sell a total of 60 million
Ether for 18.3 million USD, which was way more than any other crypto crowd sale in history to
that point. I mean, even just thinking back 2014, this is essentially a seed round for a company,
an 18 million to use the VC world analog.
That's crazy.
Nobody raised that much money.
Totally.
This was huge.
So the next question is, okay, now we got to actually launch the thing.
Gavin's like, I've been telling you guys all along, we got to launch the thing.
The plan is that they're going to launch in January 2015.
And then throughout the year of 2015, they're going to roll out the network in five phases.
By the end of 2015, they will have rolled out the final fifth phase, which is going to be called Serenity is the code name.
All five phases in that first year?
All five phases in the first year was the plan.
And Serenity was going to transition the underlying network and blockchain from a proof of work blockchain to a proof of stake blockchain, which is going to be a lot more scalable. It's all mapped out.
Non-crypto people who are listening and wondering why we're laughing.
Like, why is David cackling like a madman in the corner over there?
So yeah, we're now in June 2021. There is no serenity. There is no proof of stake. It's coming soon. July, there's a huge milestone theoretically this month.
Listeners, before we dive back into the story and say in exactly all the ways in which this did not
go to plan, it's worth dwelling on this proof of work, proof of stake thing for a moment because we haven't really talked about proof of stake.
We talked at the end of the Bitcoin episode about how proof of stake theoretically was
going to require a lot less energy, but would retain a lot of the same characteristics of
that sort of security, verifiability, tamper proof.
Immutability.
Immutability. Immutability.
Let's save that for a moment.
I do want to talk about proof of work because there was a key detail in the Bitcoin episode
that we missed in the history of proof of work, which of course is that the cryptographic
way of consuming energy to do a very hard math problem and end up with a mechanism that verifies the integrity of
the chain of all the transactions that came before. So of course, it was mentioned by Satoshi,
who proposed it in the Bitcoin white paper, proof of work, and its prior use in hash cash.
But it was actually invented way back in 1993 by Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naur. And I did want to call this out because
it is way too easy to make it seem like crypto was pioneered by a bunch of dudes. And so it's
notable that- There are so many dudes. Oh my God.
It's hard to tell the story. There's so many dudes.
Dude, dude, dude, dude, dude. It's all based on research done by Cynthia,
a female computer science professor from Harvard in the early 90s.
No way. Oh, that's so awesome.
It's funny how this concept that was originally intended to make it cost prohibitive
to be an email spammer ended up becoming the underpinning of crypto, blockchain,
this whole world pioneered by her research.
That's right, because Hashcash was an anti-email spam thing.
Yep. Super cool. I did not know that.
Yep. Proof of work did not know that. Yep.
Proof of work, 93.
Scythia Dwork.
Wow.
Dang.
Vitalik wasn't even born then.
It's wild.
Wild.
Okay.
So on July, in the middle of July, July 30th, actually, 2015, middle of 2015, the team finally
releases the first of the planned five phases of Ethereum.
The Frontier release goes live andereum is open to the public amazing two weeks after it goes live the first new
other token crowd sale happens on top of ethereum auger which is a decentralized prediction and betting market, raises $5.3
million USD in a token offering of the Augur tokens that is built on top of Ethereum. They
build on the quote unquote ERC20 standard that makes it really easy to issue currencies on
Ethereum, just like MasterCoin on Bitcoin. Now with ERC20, you can do it super easy.
ERC being the Ethereum request for comment, kind of putting out there, hey, world, hey,
open source friends, here is a proposal that I'm making and I'm requesting comments on it.
Eventually people comment, the proposal gets revised, and then at some point it receives a
number and now it's a thing out there in the world that is the sort of standard upon which
you can operate.
Because remember, you know, Ethereum at this point, they are now operating and still do like the Linux Foundation, like the Mozilla Foundation.
You know, there are people out there in the world.
They say like, hey, we should add this.
And then the foundation is like, OK, cool.
We'll add that.
So the ICO boom is born just two weeks after the public launch.
The first ICO on Ethereum happens.
That was something from the research that I did not realize that was so fast.
Like, hey, there's this new thing, Ethereum.
It's not even like, cool, there's a world computer.
Imagine all the uses for that.
It's like gold rush to launch my coin on this new thing.
Now, I think Augur is like a real project.
Sure. I'm not saying all ICOs were scams, but there were some...
I don't always drink beer, but what did I do?
There were some tulips in the garden.
Oh my goodness. Yeah. So the next year in 2016, while Auger does happen very quickly and was a legitimate project
at least to the best of our knowledge it does take a little while for people to realize
how much gold is in these hills the next year in 2016 there are 64 icos on ethereum that collectively
raise over a hundred million dollars so this is like mean, that's like a lot of money. People are like, dang, ICO boom, 2016. Well, 2017, there are 966 ICOs that collectively raise over $10 billion.
Floyd Mayweather, DJ Khaled, Paris Hilton.
Everyone's getting a little sweetener for promoting it on their
social media. Oh my goodness. We talked about all this on the Bitcoin episode. Amazing. But what we
didn't realize was just like Silk Road was for Bitcoin, ICOs were the killer use case to bootstrap
up the Ethereum network. And just like the Silk Road, it sort of didn't matter how illegitimate the initial use case was. What it did do was bootstrap a network that could be then
used for all sorts of purposes now that you have this sort of decentralized...
It literally played out exactly the same way. So thankfully, by the end of 2018,
the ICO bubble had deflated. Still though, even in just like the first, I don't know when it
really popped during 2018, but let's say the first six, nine months, even in just the first, I don't know when it really popped
during 2018, but let's say the first six, nine months, I'm making that up, but I'm estimating,
of 2018, there were 2,300 ICOs that raised $11 billion. Oh my God. At the start of 2018,
Ethereum had risen up to a, for a long time, all-time high of just over $1,350 per token
giving it a market cap of over a hundred billion dollars and then when the ICO bubble deflated at
the end of the year in December Ether had crashed to $84 a token or a market cap of just under 10. So 90% of the value in the Ethereum network or of the
Ether token vanished over the course of 2018. It is fascinating that this bubble had a very
specific reason for it, that there was utility in Ethereum to be used by anyone launching an ICO.
A lot of the times there's these bubbles in crypto where you
can't quite point to exactly the reason why the token was getting so much more valuable other than
a snowball of excitement building around it. But this one, it was very clear what the boom was
about and what the bust was about. Oh, it was about the money. It's all about getting the money.
All right. So speaking of money, there's one before we,
they gotta can't wait to move on from ICOs. We got one more we gotta talk about.
That is probably the wildest part of this whole episode. So one of the, what was it? 64,
I think I said in 2016 ICOs, something like that, you know, sort of in the early part of the tip of the spear and the wave was a
little project that a group of folks had put together that they called sloket s-l-o-c-k dot i-t
and the idea behind sloket was it was going to be a decentralized Airbnb and other sort of sharing economy platform
where you could send transactions into the blockchain and use those to unlock hardware
locks like on doors and on bikes and on cars and stuff that would be connected to the blockchain
and the specialized hardware. And then you would
pay the rental fee as part of the transaction on the blockchain. And it would all happen
on smart contracts on the Ethereum network. I mean, okay, it sounds like freaking crazy and
really dumb now, but at the time people were excited. So they decided to do an ICO for this.
But the Slocket founders, they were like real believers. They were like, yeah, this is the future. And a lot of people were excited about this.
Thank God for the diaspora of human enthusiasm and creativity, because when some new piece of
technology comes out like this, nobody knows what the future is. Nobody knows what the killer use
cases are. And so thank God there are legions of people that take their own harebrained ideas and try and
execute them. Because absent that, we would never have the discovery mechanism to discover what the
actual great applications are. Yeah, totally. You could argue whether it was good or bad that
this Lockett team did this. Remember, though, like I said, they're true believers. So they
get a bunch of money in the eyes or either get a bunch of money. No, no, it hadn't happened yet.
They were lined up. They thought they were going to get a bunch of money in the ice or either get a bunch of money. No, no, it hadn't happened yet. They were lined up. They thought they were going to get a bunch of money. They said, hey, we're going to go a step further. Remember, I introduced a little while back with Charles Hoskinson, the idea of a decentralized autonomous organization.
Which, by the way, that is actually in the original Ethereum white paper.
Yeah. As an idea of something you can do on Ethereum.
Yep.
And for folks wondering like, okay, these words decentralized, autonomous organization,
to the extent that a company, a corporation is made up by a set of documents, you've got
your articles of incorporation, you've got employment agreements, like a corporation
is defined by a big pile of dumb contracts.
A DAO or decentralized autonomous organization. And the corporation is defined by a board of directors dumb contracts. Yeah. A DAO or Decentralized Autonomous Organization.
And the corporation is defined by a board of directors and a CEO and a management team
that are making the decisions.
Totally.
And those people are given powers by the contracts, by the documents.
The DAO is simply that, but with smart contracts.
It's all in code.
Yeah.
Why couldn't you have an organization that runs in a provable
sort of code legislated way? Yeah. So the idea is in a DAO, the allocation of resources,
be it capital or time or effort or dev resources or whatever, get allocated in a decentralized way
by people who hold the tokens of the DAO and everybody can vote and their protection mechanisms for minority token holders versus the majority. And anybody can take their
money out at any point in time if they disagree with the direction the DAO is going. But it's a
decentralized organization. Okay, pretty cool. So the Slocket guys, they're like, we're going to be
a DAO. So if you don't like what we're doing, you can vote, you can have a say in the governance of
Slocket. And if you don't like what we're doing, you can vote, you can have a say in the governance of Slocket. And if you
don't like what we're doing, you can take your money out. Then they decide to go even one step
further. They say, you know, actually, we think this Slocket thing is cool, but there might be
other things people think are cool, maybe cooler than Slocket. We'll allocate our money to anything
and we'll just let the Dow decide where the money's going to go.
It's like a reverse Berkshire Hathaway.
Everyone has a say in capital allocation.
It's exactly what it is.
It is the opposite of Berkshire Hathaway.
To say the crypto community goes nuts for that.
This is like catnip for the crypto community.
People are jazzed.
So by the time the ICO closes in May 2016, remember, this was originally for a decentralized hardware Airbnb competitor. They raise $150 million into, they renamed than most first-time VC funds in the world. That's
a lot of money. That is, I think, the biggest crowdfunding of all time.
I think the only seed funding that is larger than that for a single entity is probably Quibi.
Oh, boy. Oh, boy. The parallels. That is more... Fred Wilson and Union Square are going to come into the story here in just a minute. $150 million into the DAO is more than USV's entire
first fund. And they're one of the most active venture capital investors in crypto at the time.
This is a lot of freaking money. It turns out though, that there is a security flaw in Ethereum, and specifically in the part of smart contract code
where DAOs like this one, like the DAO, operate. Yeah. And to put a finer point on that,
there are a few programming languages, but there's one very popular programming language
developed specifically for writing smart contracts called Solidity. And Solidity,
it's kind of like JavaScript. If you
know how to write JavaScript, you can pretty quickly learn how to write Solidity. So the DAO
is basically a big pile of Solidity smart contracts that all interact with each other.
But to your point, in order to run Solidity, there is code underneath in Ethereum's core
software that needs to make sure that when those Solidity smart contracts
are running, they're doing what the programmers intended for them to be doing.
And that code all exists on all the nodes in the Ethereum network.
Some downsides to distributed systems here.
So right after the DAO finishes their ICO and gets all this money in the bank, so to
speak, one of Solidity's core developers realizes that there's
this bug in Solidity. And the consequence of this bug is that you could drain money.
An attacker could come in and drain money out of a DAO. Uh-oh. So in probably one of the biggest
unforced errors of all time, they in the foundation, they're like, okay, great.
We're going to update this.
We're going to update our clients.
We're going to post about it.
We're going to let everybody know what's going on.
We're going to post like, okay, so they do that, right?
But it's a distributed system.
So like not everybody, not all the nodes in the network update the client software
that they're running on to patch the whole.
And anytime on the internet,
you're going to have bad actors, especially in crypto land. Well, a bunch of hackers are like,
oh, shoot, here's a whole blog post about how to exploit DAOs and how to drain the funds.
And here's this DAO that has 150 million bucks in it. I'm going to go start hacking on this thing.
So the initial exploit was actually wouldn't have been discovered we don't
think except for the fact that the ethereum foundation published about it yeah i mean it
could have been independently discovered by other folks too but yes one of the core developers on
solidity found the bug and then fixed the bug and then they published about the bug
and everyone wasn't all fixed yet. They breathe this deep sigh of relief.
Yeah.
Huh.
Until the balance in the Dow's account starts slowly going down.
So this is the crazy thing.
It's like, you know, it's like the main plot point of The Last Jedi, you know, where it's like the slow motion cruiser chase throughout the whole movie where it's like they're just saying one it's like happening in slow-mo it's all this is exactly what happens so the way this exploit worked
you could steal money but you could only steal it very slowly and you could do it in a way that like
was unstoppable you did yeah you sort of dripped it out so for two weeks everybody is freaking the
f out like vitalik is losing his mind. Everybody is losing their mind.
The DAO was so big, that 150 million bucks was 14% of all Ether in existence was in the DAO.
And it's getting robbed. So Vitalik calls on all exchanges like Coinbase, Binance,
everybody to stop trading ETH.
Stop trading.
Literally pause everything.
This is amazing.
A group of white hat hackers band together and they call themselves the Robin Hood group.
They're like, we're going to hack the DAO as well.
We're going to attack the DAO, but we're going to do it. We're going to drain the funds into an account that then we're going to take that account
and we're going to give it back to all the people. So great. You cannot make this stuff up.
Figure out how to drain it faster than the black hat attacker. And the craziest thing,
because we've talked about this a couple of times, but the way that you can get stuff to happen on
the Ethereum network is by spending ETHTH by offering a reward to do it.
It's like the more they can bankroll their white hat efforts, the faster it will happen.
And so they're out like-
Raising money.
Yeah. They're asking anybody who they know who is a big ETH holder, a lot of the early true
believers, like, hey, send your ETH to our address so then we can drain the DAO faster.
And when they start doing this,
they aren't even publishing about it yet. So they're kind of freaking out that like,
wait a minute, we're actually just black hat hackers right now until we tell the world what we're doing and why. And everyone realizes that we're doing this for the good of everyone.
It's this crazy Spider-Man gif with all the pointing.
Yes. This like such a giant
cluster so nothing unfortunately nothing works so like the white hat the robin hood group they're
draining the dow but the black hats are also draining the dow everybody's freaking out the
foundation and vitalik decides all right we're gonna do a soft what's called a soft fork of
ethereum where we're gonna get all the nodes that are running Ethereum, all the miners, to update their software and basically stop.
We know the addresses of the black hats.
We're going to get them to stop processing transaction requests from the black hats.
We can do that by just like update the software.
It's fine.
And then everything will continue on.
Cool.
It's not great, but it's not good.
Well, I mean, it really makes you wonder
how decentralized is this really? Well, wait till we just wait. Let's see where this is.
Like, wait a minute. You're telling me that you're willing to modify the core code to just be like,
yeah, everyone except that address. We don't like those guys. Yeah, exactly.
Well, so they're about to do this. And then a group of researchers at Cornell,
led by Professor Eamon Gunn-Sreyer, figures out that if they were to do this, the way they were going to do it, I don't know the technical details, they would actually open up the network to big distributed denial of service attacks.
So you could do this, but this is not going to be good.
So they decide, all right, we're going to call off the soft fork.
So that leaves only two options.
One, do nothing.
And the attackers steal 14% of all the ETH out there.
And they've already stolen one third of it.
Like the Black Hat guys have 50 of the 150 already stolen.
Yep, exactly.
Or option two is do what's called a hard fork and actually modify the underlying protocol itself to cut out
the history, like go back and modify the history of the blockchain. And that necessitates ending
the current Ethereum blockchain and wholesale starting over with a new one.
Basically, you're rewinding the tape before the attack started. You're changing the code then. So
you're sort of like undoing all the transactions. Everyone's like having the money move sort of like
from destination accounts back to source accounts. So like all that gets undone. And then the code,
you know, the bug gets patched and then we fork and now we're just playing everything forward
again from there. The future can unfold
with this bug fixed and none of those transactions happened. Yep. So it actually, you know, to a lot
of folks listening, I think going with the hard fork and option number two might seem like the
obvious right path here, but this has a huge philosophical consequences as, as you were
alluding to Ben, you know, this is essentially a bailout that we're talking about here. It's just like 2008.
We screwed up.
The consequences of our actions ended up in some bad places.
Rather than taking responsibility and moving on, we're going to have some deus ex machina.
A government, a higher authority is going to come in and reset things here.
Right.
And what they sort of proved is like,
geez, these Ethereum Foundation people have a lot of power over this ecosystem.
Like if they come out and Vitalik comes out and says,
okay, everyone, we want you to hard fork,
then as long as 51% of people hard fork,
and really it's 51% of the sort of mining capacity.
So it's not that many players that need to,
you just get a few of the big guys together.
They hard fork.
That is the new source of truth.
Yeah.
And sure, technically,
the way that you look at the architecture
is that it's decentralized.
But like, if we were willing to wind back the clock
and rewrite history,
then we kind of could always do that.
And in the future,
we always sort of will be able to do that again.
And so really, you're betting the farm not on what you thought you were, which is like,
contract is code, and this is immutable and unchangeable. But really in like,
well, if a few people decide that the quote unquote right thing to do is to undo history,
make the change, and then go forward from there.
How is this any different than Jerome Powell deciding to parachute money in?
Yep.
So Vitalik is like, again, this is a huge decision.
He's really stressed.
Finally, Eamon, the computer science professor at Cornell, sits down with him and he says
to Vitalik, I'm going to ask you a question.
This is a quote, and I want you to answer truthfullyik, I'm going to ask you a question. This is a quote,
and I want you to answer truthfully. I'm not going to judge you. Just be completely honest.
Are you serious about building the world computer or are you trying to appeal to illegal money flows,
drug dealers, illegal gamblers, and whatnot? And Vitalik responds, no, that is not what this is
about. We want to build the next generation of applications.
I really believe in the world computer.
And Neiman says, okay, well, immutability, not doing the hard fork is paramount if you
want to appeal to this illegal money crowd.
If you don't and you're serious about the world computer, then it's completely reasonable
to do a fork.
And so that kind of convinces Vitalik.
So they do it.
They do the hard fork.
All the miners switch over.
Literally, people are popping champagne
at the foundation and at Cornell.
It's all happening.
And then a couple hours later,
all of a sudden,
the old blockchain comes back to life.
This is another dramatic moment
where you're imagining them
sort of watching the old chain
on some monitor somewhere
and you're like,
wait a minute,
they're adding new blocks
to the old chain.
How is this even possible?
It's like the end of Return of the Jedi
when the fireworks are going off
and everybody's having that,
you know,
the First Order, though,
is like, they're brewing.
So what's going on there?
Well, so it's unclear to me, at least.
I don't know if it's known, if anybody else knows or broadly, whether it was either on a mistake that some of the miners just like didn't get the message and update their-
Kept mining the old chain.
Kept mining the old chain.
Or if it was on purpose, kind of a protest.
Right.
True believers.
Or the attackers themselves were like, hell, man, I want my money.
Right.
So that old chain keeps going. It is still going to this day. It is called Ethereum Classic.
You can buy Ethereum Classic tokens on Coinbase. It has a $4 billion market cap.
It's the 22nd largest cryptocurrency by market cap.
Amazing. Amazing. Ethereum, of course,
the main thing, quote unquote, main chain, has a $200 billion market cap, as we were saying. So
it's obviously more successful. But yeah, this is crazy. Yeah. And Ethereum Classic is in some
ways Dogecoin-like, where people are trading it even though they know there's a
fundamental flaw and its future development does not have any effort behind it to fix bugs and
develop new features. And it's not going to evolve the way that Ethereum is going to evolve for the
future. So they survive the DAO, and this becomes known in history. This is one of the defining moments of
Ethereum. And ironically, look, there's Ethereum Classic, right? There's the fork and everybody
who really is into immutability and whether you want that for philosophical reasons or to do
illegal stuff or whatever you want that for, that exists. But for the main Ethereum blockchain, ironically,
this kind of helps it because they're like, look, we're legitimate. We're going to do the right
thing. We are a system and a protocol that is in development. We are evolving. There will be bugs.
There will be hacks. When that happens, this is not Bitcoin. When that happens, we're going to
do the right thing and we're going to fix it. And you can understand why that's actually pretty appealing to a lot of folks.
It demonstrates a pretty extreme amount of pragmatism. It's very interesting how this
crypto community started as exclusively true believers. And then as it got more into the
mainstream and as there's more money behind it, and as it needs broader societal adoption, the sort of trappings of traditional society start to seep in a little bit.
And there is this sort of realization that, geez, maybe safety nets are kind of good.
And maybe having someone at the helm who has good judgment, also maybe that's kind of good.
And the future of Ethereum, as much as Vitalik wants to sort of work his way
out of it, for better or for worse, there is a little bit of a benevolent dictatorship going
on there between Vitalik, the foundation, and the largest mining pools where ultimately we
are putting our faith and trust in something. Yep. And it's certainly hard to know what would
have happened otherwise, but had there not been a
Vitalik, I don't think the hard fork would have happened. Only he, just like all the co-founders
put the gun in his hand to set up how the company was going to be, how the organization was going to
be. Without somebody like that at the helm, there's a good chance this would have just devolved into chaos right with vitalik so goes the community yep so that doesn't necessarily
mean though that uh ethereum is uh out of the woods shall we say or that all is you know
sunshine and rainbows and kitties and unicorns david we did say at the beginning of the episode
this is the world computer and it's also the world's slowest computer. It is maybe the world's slowest computer. And we should talk about also like
your comment about the Raspberry Pi. There's not any sort of more Raspberry Pis getting
daisy-chained to that thing as this is growing. So we're seeing the ICOs, we're seeing all these
people spinning up Coinbase accounts during COVID. We're seeing, I'm sure you're about to
tell us about the boon of DeFi.
DeFi summer, baby.
It's still all happening on this little Raspberry Pi.
It's still all happening on a Raspberry Pi.
Yeah.
So scalability, as more and more stuff is happening on Ethereum, the Raspberry Pi is
having a harder time keeping up.
And there has been this explosion of stuff.
So for a sense of scale, right now, the Ethereum network processes somewhere on the order of,
call it like 15 to 45 transactions per second. So that's like the entire Ethereum world computer,
15 to 45 transactions per second happen on it. And those transactions could be anything.
If you really want to abstract this, think about that as an actual transaction, like a wire transfer or something about in software, like a tweet could be a transaction, like
any sort of movement of bits from one place to another.
Any read-write on the system.
Yep.
For comparison purposes, the Visa network can at peak load process about 50,000,
5-0-1,000 transactions per second. Centralization, baby. You can really scale with that.
A lot more. Now, in theory, once the final Serenity release of Ethereum, which together with a few other things is being called Ethereum 2.0.
Once that is live, in theory, the Ethereum network will be able to process up to 100,000
transactions a second. So like, dang, that's like a pretty serious, it's like a Tesla Roadster
style upgrade. And you're probably scratching your head going, wait, wait, wait, how's that
possible? So maybe let's put a pin in that and now, but it's coming, dot, dot, dot. And it's
been coming for six years, but it's coming. It's coming. But right now, it's not here.
So as network congestion gets worse and worse, the way gas fees, the amount that you have to pay to
get the nodes to validate your transaction, the price that you have to pay to get the nodes to validate your transaction,
the price that you have to pay, the gas fees keep going up.
It's supply demand.
It's effectively your CPU still has the same clock speed, but now there's a kajillion people
that want to do stuff on that CPU.
Yeah.
So it goes from a de minimis amount in gas fees that you have to pay in 2015, 2016 to, I think in 2017, it hits maybe like $13 per fee, equivalent of $13 USD
per transaction you have to pay. Then that dies down a little bit. And then at the peak-
It's like 70 bucks this last year?
Yeah. At the peak in the last few months here as DeFi has just totally taken off,
and DeFi involves lots of transactions.
Decentralized finance. There is
no application that requires more transaction throughput than high-frequency trading,
lending, all that stuff. Yep. It spikes up over $70 just to execute one transaction.
So obviously, this is a problem. And Vitalik and the Ethereum Foundation knows it's a problem,
but progress is not happening super fast. So there's this famous Fred Wilson quote, Fred Wilson from USB, one of the most prominent early
VCs investing in crypto, board member of Coinbase, plenty of other, of Dapper Labs,
maker of CryptoKitties, which we'll get into in a sec. So he's doing a fireside chat that's on YouTube at Multicoin Capital's 2018 summit.
And he just goes off on Vitalik and Ethereum, like literally goes off.
He argues that they're incompetent, that they can't ship, that they're blowing the lead
for the whole ecosystem.
He says somebody needs to go over to Switzerland and fire those effers who don't know what
they're doing.
Boom, he lays down the gauntlet.
And his rationale for that is like, hey, at this point, it is a growth stage startup.
There are playbooks here to run.
You know, he was on the board of Twitter.
I remember reading Hatching Twitter and feeling like, actually, this Ethereum story, it feels
similar to how Twitter came to be this band of renegades, sort of pseudo-anarchists. What was the Twitter? We've been making the
comparison between Vitalik and Zuck in this episode. Really? There's also a comparison
between Jack. Yeah, absolutely. Totally. And so much tumult happened at Twitter,
but Fred witnessed, here is how you take something that has unbelievable product
market fit and is scaling like crazy and figure out how to put great management in place.
Gotta get our boy Dick Costolo in there. Oh, man. So Vitalik then responds, he goes on Larsen's
Unchained podcast and is like, yeah, I mean, you're a VC, you want them, but no. And it's debatable who's right here. But in the meantime,
so developers need their... They're building stuff that's really cool. It's executing very slowly.
Performance is such an issue on the network. Other blockchains start popping up to compete.
They're like, well, hey, there's a problem. It's a free market. We'll start an Ethereum competitor.
So we've referenced Cardano from Charles Hoskinson. Unbelievable that that guy was one of the co-founders of Ethereum and
then went on to start Cardano. And went on to start Cardano. Polkadot comes out from Gavin.
Gavin Wood had left the foundation and started working on- This is the genius programmer who
did the initial implementation of- He made a Rust client, a Rust Ethereum client as part of Parity, I think is his company, and was a great contributor from Parity into the Ethereum ecosystem for a long time. But then they start Polkadot, which is a competing chain, a little different, but competing chain. There's EOS, which raises $4.2 billion in an ICO before that bubble burst. They end up getting sued by the SEC. There's
Binance's Smart Chain. There's lots and lots of folks out there. By and large, though, A,
a lot of these projects still here in 2021 haven't even shipped. So you think Ethereum shifts slowly,
look at some of these other ones. None of them get real traction, though, except maybe Solana,
which we'll get into Solana in a little bit. But meanwhile, these transactions
are exploding on the Ethereum network. We talked about what they are, DeFi and NFTs. Let's get
into it. So NFTs, I thought the NFT boom kind of came after DeFi. No, I'd forgotten about this.
NFTs became a thing first. Huh. Well, if crypto kitties.
Exactly. So at the end of 2017 CryptoKitties. Exactly.
Yeah.
So at the end of 2017, the Ethereum Foundation hosted their first official Ethereum Foundation
hackathon in Toronto.
And a Canadian startup incubator called Axiom Zen from Vancouver, they're like,
oh, we're looking at blockchain stuff.
We're going to send our team over to Toronto.
We're going to participate in the hackathon.
Totally.
At the hackathon, they come up with this idea. They're like,
look, there are these ERC20 tokens, which are used for ICOs and creating your own currencies on top of Ethereum. Those are commodity tokens. Every token is just like every other token.
So they're fungible. They're fungible. Yeah. It's like American dollars. Sure,
they have serial numbers, but if I have 20 bucks and then I exchange that for a different 20 bucks, I still have 20 bucks.
Still 20 bucks.
What if we implement a new token standard where every token is different?
Every token is unique, and that's actually the appeal.
We can make them collectible.
We'll do things and this is the internet.
Let's make them cats.
The internet loves cats.
We've got all these cats.
And this is Ethereum.
I mean, that community is like a cats and rainbows
oh my god to say it's like catnip is obvious hey yo crypto kitties so literally i didn't figure i
didn't know this crypto kitties invented the nft yeah i don't think i knew the phrase nft like uh
i actually came very close and really regret not buying crypto kitties in 2017 i remember going
through the website being like this is wild i can't believe they're doing this. But yeah, I don't think NFTs entered. People didn't think
about it as an NFT. It was just a CryptoKitty. Right. And people thought, hey, we could do this
for other things. In fact, there was a friend and another venture capitalist that was pitching me on
this idea of baseball cards, but on the blockchain, like CryptoKitties for sports. And so people were
thinking about like, hey, we could take this idea and do it for other stuff. But there wasn't like
a category name that was in the public consciousness. And of course, you know,
many listeners will know CryptoKitties, Axiom Zen changed its name to Dapper Labs.
Amazing. And they are the company behind NBA Top Shot now.
Amazing. So freaking cool. So CryptoKitties
accounted for, at its peak, 15% of all the transactions on the worldwide Ethereum network.
Crazy. So yeah, that's NFTs. And then of course, that goes on to people and the alien,
everything going on now that people probably know about. The other big set of applications, though, that are happening on Ethereum in the sort of post-ICO summer after the ICO winter is DeFi. So decentralized finance,
for people who aren't up on it yet, we're not going to go super deep. We don't have time here,
but it is super freaking cool. And basically, the idea behind Bitcoin was,
we're going to create a decentralized currency, a non-fiat currency.
We're going to go outside the traditional financial system to create money.
DeFi is like, well, what if we take that a step further and we just go outside the traditional financial system for every financial product?
It's something like 15%, 10%.
I can't remember exactly what it is, but a meaningful percent of the US GDP is the finance and financial services industry. So clearly, there's a lot of stuff that needs to happen.
Yep. A lot of instruments, a lot of different professionals to manage those things.
All sorts of stuff. If we've got a new type of money and we've got a new set of rails that that
money can move around in programmatic ways. We need all those instruments in this
ecosystem too. And remember, what is Ethereum? One big idea is the world of computer. The other
big idea is it's code with money. Oh, shoot. Well, you got code with money. Now you don't
need the code with institutions. The code's got the money. Mind blown, David. Mind blown.
So DeFi, the first major DeFi project was actually MakerDAO. Yes, DAOs are back. MakerDAO launched the DAI stablecoin, which was a totally decentralized stablecoin. You didn't need to have a counterparty like with Tether, on the other hand, saying like, don't worry, I hold USD in some bank account somewhere. Like, don't need that anymore. Then at the end of 2018, Uniswap launches and Uniswap was like...
Liquidity pools, baby.
Liquidity pools.
Now, suddenly, you don't necessarily need a specific counterparty to trade with. There is
exactly what it sounds like, a pool of basically pairs of tokens from one to another if you want
to swap assets without somebody on the other side of the trade.
And there's a very, very acute and real use case for this, which is like, hey, I want to buy a coin.
Before Uniswap, I would go to Coinbase, I would go to FTX, I would go to some centralized exchange,
and I would do it. I would sell some Bitcoin and I buy some Ether or whatever, or I would put money
in. And then I would pay a whole bunch of fees to that exchange. Well, with Uniswap, where you just do this decentralized peer-to-peer,
no centralized exchange, no fees. Great. People love it. In June of 2020, another project,
a decentralized lending platform called Compound, they go even further. They say to participants on
their system, which are lenders and borrowers, if you participate in the system,
we're going to give you a new compound token. We're going to give you a utility token for a
compound by participating in the system. This kicks off a craze. This becomes known as yield
farming, and this kicks off DeFi summer, and it is all up and to the right from there.
Before this compound event, at the start of 2020, there was about 1 billion USD
worth of collateral that was in DeFi. By the end of the summer last year, it was $12 billion.
In May of 2021, last month, it hit $100 billion USD equivalent.
Which is half the market cap of ETH.
Of ETH. Yeah. So you can imagine the pressure that this is putting on the Raspberry Pi that is the
Ethereum computer.
Quite a constrained world computer at this point.
Totally.
And for all these DeFi projects, each one has an associated token.
I mean, that's kind of the crazy thing is they all work the way that Ethereum does,
where there's a utility token that allows you to do stuff on
that platform. And of course, that platform is a sub platform that sits on top of Ethereum,
in the same way that you could have, like going way back to our earlier example,
Ethereum is the operating system, but like somebody made a browser, and then you could
have web apps inside the browser. And so there's sort of these, it's an application with our
platform within a platform within a platform type thing. But it is crazy that-
And the computer scientist in you is getting excited.
Absolutely. Each one of these projects that has a purpose also has an associated utility token
that you can trade that can do something inside of that project. It's just the speed at which the complexity
of this thing is just growing. It's really hard to stay up on what is the current frontier.
And it's so exciting too. These are real things that are happening.
Bitcoin is a whole separate thing. And I think Bitcoin is a store of value. That makes sense.
I think it's a good idea, but that's what it is. All this stuff is how there's so much innovation happening and new value being created
in Ethereum. It's awesome. So that brings us to today. At the start of 2020, the price of ETH
was 140 bucks a token. Last month in May of 2021, that had skyrocketed up to over $4,000 a token. And Ben,
as you referenced at the top of the show, about a $450 billion market cap for ETH. That has since
come down by a factor of about two. ETH is right around $2,000 a token right now and right around
$220 billion market cap. Not bad for a raspberry pie. In December of 2020,
the Ethereum Foundation did finally launch phase zero of the Ethereum 2.0 upgrade,
which started the beacon chain to start the process of moving to proof of stake.
But sharding, which we haven't really gotten into, but that's going to be the real scaling.
Listeners, we'll get into Ethereum 2.0 and sharding here which we haven't really gotten into, but that's going to be the real scaling. Listeners, we'll get into Ethereum 2 and sharding here in analysis because that is the conversation
that we want to have around what does the future of Ethereum look like and how should we think
about this thing going forward. But let's pause on that for the moment.
Let's pause on that. Yep. So yeah, here we are. It's kind of amazing.
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in the show notes. Our huge thanks to Huntress. So as we get into analysis, man, I was so freaking
pumped for this episode. I was doing all the research, all the crazy stories, all the history.
The one thing I didn't have time to do was I meant to go back and reread all the great pieces that Paki has done
on the whole Ethereum ecosystem, on Web3, on all the applications on DeFi, especially his great
piece he just did on Ethereum. Zero knowledge proofs.
It would really help with our analysis if I had done that.
Yeah, well, you are in luck.
And I just heard the doo-doo of joining our Zoom call here.
Is that Paki McCormick I see on Zoom?
Hello, Acquired.
What's up, Ben and David?
How are you?
What is up?
Great to have you, man.
I am so honored to be here for the last episode of the season.
I was wondering why Zoom was open on my computer this whole time. I'm like, David's here in person. This doesn't even make any sense.
I hope he joins at some point. Well, I'm here now. This is going to be so fun, a topic that
is near and dear to my heart and a podcast that is near and dear to my heart. We're like the
Super Bowl halftime show of podcasts. You thought it was just Ben and David, but like, boom, there's Beyonce.
Well, Paki, the first sort of analysis section we want to do here is the bull case and the bear case for Ethereum.
And because you're Mr. Unicorns and Rainbows and Bubbles and Sunshine and the Optimist,
I would love for you to lay out what is the bull case
for Ethereum from here? Why is it going to beat all of the challengers? And we haven't even really
talked about some of the challengers yet. How is ETH2 going to go well? What the heck is ETH2?
So I don't know where you want to start, but I think you painting the bull case would be
just perfect. Fantastic. So when I wrote my piece called Own
the Internet on Ethereum, I think ETH is around $2,400. So I'm about $400 more bullish now than
I was then. But I think the bull case ends up being pretty simple and something, and I think
this is maybe a meta theme for kind of all of crypto. For it to work, it kind of has to have analogies to traditional business. And I think the bull case here is more demand and less supply. You know,
you can boil it down to that. So I know you've talked about some of the use cases, we've talked
about DeFi, we've talked about NFTs, maybe touched a little bit on DAOs. There's all this stuff being
built. I'm talking to so many people who are building things on top of Ethereum right
now who are not in the least bit perturbed by the price. I think that high value art sales will
continue to happen, but there's going to be this long tail of NFT content that is created on the
internet where there's just ownable files. I think there's an explosion happening in the
DAO space right now. Kipatrilli just wrote a great piece today, kind of laying out the whole landscape.
It's so crazy that DAOs are back.
DAOs are back.
Literally the worst thing.
They almost broke Ethereum and they're very, very back.
I mean, there's so many interesting projects being built.
There's a company called Syndicate Protocol right now that is essentially rebuilding investing
infrastructure on the
blockchain. And like, there's all of these projects being built by people, some of whom are crypto
native, some of whom are coming from kind of traditional web to traditional internet that are
building on top of the blockchain. The fun thing about ETH is that, you know, I kind of view it
like, you know, Ethereum is AWS, if you had to use Amazon stock to use AWS.
So you had to buy Amazon stock to use AWS.
And then when you used AWS, they actually did a share buyback and ate up some of those
shares.
And when you say supply to main, you're talking about ETH, the token, or Ethereum, the network,
or both?
The way that it works is to do nearly anything that you'd want to do
on top of the Ethereum blockchain. You essentially need to start with ETH, which you pay transaction
fees in the form of gas fees. So you need to buy the thing, create demand, and you need to spend
that thing on top of the blockchain. And you might buy other tokens that you use in certain projects,
but you're buying them with ETH and you're still paying gas fees. For the most part, right now, what happens is with ETH1 or Ethereum, we are in
proof of work world, just like Bitcoin, where people are solving math problems on their computers
and they're getting rewarded in ETH to do that. And then they're having to sell a lot of that ETH
to go pay for the computers themselves,
the electricity to pay their taxes
that they're making off of this.
And so all these ETH are being minted
and then just kind of like kicked out of the system.
So there's a big kind of sell pressure on.
What's happening with EIP-1559,
which was a proposal that is approved
and is about to be implemented.
What's happening with EIP-1559, which was a proposal that is approved and is about to be implemented. What's happening with EIP-1559 is that gas fees are splitting into a base fee and a tip, where the tip is,
there's a bunch of transactions at any given block and you can pay more to be further in the block.
So that's one thing. The other piece of it, which is a huge change, is that the base fee is being
burned. So instead of going to the miners and being sold to
be cashed to do whatever, that's just being wiped out. So it's effectively deflationary
or potentially deflationary because you're basically saying the amount of ETH that exists
in the world, of course, mining will continue. So the people will sort of continue creating more
ETH, but now there's a way for it to be destroyed also in the base fee basically getting burned.
So the more things that are happening, there's more demand for the currency itself.
And then as more of those things happen, more of the currency is burned off.
So it's potentially deflationary.
So there's this meme that goes around in the Ethereum community that if Bitcoin is sound money because it has a cap supply, then Ethereum or ETH is ultrasound money because it has a decreasing supply.
And so if you've seen the bat and the speaker on Twitter, that is the ultrasound money meme.
And so that's the one part of it.
The other thing that's happening is the switch to ETH2, which will change it all of a sudden all of these essentially
sell orders that were coming in from miners that are now going to not come in, right?
Exactly right. And so the inverse of less sell pressure is essentially more buy pressure.
It's more buy pressure, right? And so it's essentially like all of the stuff that was
being sold to pay for computers and electricity and all this stuff off-chain is now essentially being bought, assuming everything goes well.
Always a big assumption with Ethereum.
Always a big assumption. And that is a whole nother thing. I think EIP-1559, less of a huge assumption. ETH2 is the very big assumption. We're probably like six months out from ETH2. All right.
Straw poll amongst the three of us.
First to happen, ETH2 or full self-driving Teslas?
Yeah.
ETH2, but not by much.
I'll go with ETH2 too.
I'm also going to go with ETH2.
But I think it's interesting, right?
And that like all these things that seem like technological challenges are also kind of human challenges. Just like Tesla, everyone's
like, oh, you know, the tech is there, but it's the regulation. I think same here. There's a bunch
of people who are ETH miners who are bummed that, you know, they bought these rigs and they have
their whole thing set up and they're no longer going to be running these proof of work things
and making ETH for doing so. And so that I think is the opposing camp to ETH to, is the miners who've been making all this money off of proof
of work. But if it does switch to proof of stake, which it seems like it will, the big thing that
happens there is that instead of spending a lot of electricity to solve really hard math problems,
and maybe hurting the environment, maybe not, depending on if you use renewables, all of that,
what happens is you put up whatever amount of ETH, I think to do it directly on chain,
you need to hold 32 ETH and put them up or stake them. And you essentially vote, yes,
this is a good transaction. We can allow this. No, this is a bad transaction. We won't allow this.
And you earn ETH and that's where you get your yield from staking your ETH.
If you're voting in the right way, but if you contradict yourself, or if it's proven that you've voted in a way that's bad for Ethereum, then you lose your stake.
And so you're staking the stuff to vote. But what it also means is that the yield for staking
means that all of a sudden, instead of just being kicked out of the system,
the value that is being created on top of Ethereum actually starts accruing to ETH holders. And so that's like
the really big thing where it's always been this disconnect in my mind where the question that I
would always ask people is like, great. So people use Ethereum. What happens? Like how does value
occur to ETH? And proof of stake is how value accrues to ETH because you need ETH to stake,
to secure the network. And then for doing that as a holder, the value accrues back to you.
Yeah, it essentially makes it a cash-flowing asset.
It makes it a cash-flowing asset.
Okay. So to identify what proof of stake is, let me throw out the question that everybody
has to have in their mind at this point. So proof of work, you get rewarded with a token
in order for spending money on energy to do some hard math problems. Proof of stake
makes it seem like, okay, well, now just the people who have the existing ETH are the people
who get to vote whether something's legitimate or not. So it almost feels like we're shifting
the power from labor, from the computers doing
the work to mine, to the power going to capital. Whoever currently has the most ETH and is willing
to risk it to say, yep, I'm staking my ETH on the line here to say that this is the most
legitimate transaction and you can take it away from me if it's proven later that it's not a
legitimate transaction. Is that the right way to think about it? I think Bitcoin fans, maximalists,
whatever you want to call them, Bitcoin people would say that a proof of work is a much more
democratized, open, fair way to do it because anyone with a computer in the world is able to
become a miner. On Ethereum, you need to own a certain amount. And so it's 32 ETH. That's a meaningful amount
of money. That's $64,000 at today's prices. You can also stake smaller amounts if you do it through
Coinbase and a bunch of other projects where you're able to stake ETH in smaller amounts,
and then they'll pull them and stake for you. So it's not like you have to be the richest person
in the world. The fear in all of this is if somebody gets 51% of the ETH in circulation, then they can
just take over the network.
They win.
The whole thing is done.
They take everything.
But there's always a 51% issue with any of these decentralized networks.
There's a 51% issue with any one of these for sure.
We should say this actually was, I was going to bring this up later, but it's worth calling
out now.
If you look at the pie chart of current miners of Ethereumereum ethermine f2 pool 2 and nanopool
combine owned like something close to 60 so it's only those three mining pools that could hard fork
if they wanted to but of course it's not in their incentive to do it because then people wouldn't
trust the system their their holdings.
They want ETH to continue to get more valuable.
Which is the other really kind of interesting, I think, piece of a bull case for Ethereum.
And yeah, I guess for Ethereum more than Bitcoin is that it's in the interest of anybody building
on top of Ethereum for ETH to be more valuable because the more valuable that ETH is, the more secure the network is.
So there's all these different ways, I think, where the value can accrue.
Yeah.
So in some ways, like the bulk case there would be that it's so geographically distributed
that you can't turn Ethereum off.
You could crash the value, but there's no way it's going to go down completely
so it's like it's censorship resistant but it's not collusion resistant like if those three parties
colluded to do something they could but there would still be a lot of other people out there
running eth nodes and it's in everybody's interest running ethereum nodes and it's in everybody's
interest to make that network as robust as possible, such that if any single set of actors does something bad, then there still exists a large network.
And to buy up enough for those pools to continue to own enough or for any outside party to come in and buy up enough to influence anything and to do a 51% attack.
Yeah, because in proof of stake, it's not about the miners anymore.
It's about how much ETH itself you hold, right?
Exactly.
And so if ETH is all of a sudden $10,000 and the market cap goes up to a trillion dollars,
then it costs $510 billion to run that attack.
If it goes up to 20, it costs a trillion dollars to run that attack.
So the more valuable it is, the more secure the network becomes, which I think probably
is why Ethereum, you know,
I think just the Lindy-ness of Ethereum and the fact that it's been around.
Explain Lindy.
Okay. So Lindy is this concept that the longer something has been around,
the longer it's likely to be around. So if something's only been around for a day,
then the chances are probably in another day, it's going to be gone. Like this could be a
buzzy social app. This could be whatever else.
If it's Play-Doh and people have been referencing Play-Doh for millennia,
then chances are people are going to be referencing Play-Doh for millennia in the future.
And there's a bunch of reasons that that happens.
One is, you know, quality, I think, rises to the top over time.
There become these network effects where people start teaching philosophy courses
and using Play-D Plato and all of that.
And I think with a blockchain, it's network effects and Lindy a little bit on steroids where there's also this financial piece kind of tied into the Lindy and it's attracting
money and attracting money.
It's like you own Plato coin in addition to teaching Plato.
Exactly right.
Exactly right.
And so, okay, we talked about EIP-1559, which you've now said enough times that I actually
know the number, which is about changing the way that gas fees work and changing the way
that mining works and potentially will make ETH deflationary. So now we talked about switching
to proof of stake. Paki, do you have a good handle on what the proposal is for these side chains that are
proof of stake to interact with the one main core Ethereum blockchain?
So now we're getting into sharding. And so right now, there is a single chain. It's one of the
reasons that there's all of this congestion is because everything that you're trying to do is fitting a block, each single transaction into the main chain, and that's it. And so of course,
there's going to be congestion, particularly when DeFi was exploding and NFTs were exploding,
gas fees were high because people were bidding to get in. And so it was just insanely expensive
to use Ethereum and the network was congested. With sharding, what happens is that
these transactions kind of get batched off the main chain in any number of like maybe 64 shards
and then come back down to the main chain as one transaction. So instead of 64 separate things
happening, it happens one time and comes back down to the main chain as
one transaction, which decreases congestion. Yeah. Let's introduce the scalability trilemma.
So this was an interesting concept that was proposed by Vitalik, where he basically said,
there are three sides of the triangle. You've got decentralization, which we hold dear.
There's security, which we also hold dear. And then there's scalability, or you could think of that as bandwidth. And David and I talked about you can
get 15 plus transactions a second, but it's certainly not 5,000 transactions a second.
It's not going to scale to a lot of transactions. And so the proposal for these side chains is
interesting because you're basically saying, we're going to punt a little bit on either security or
decentralization in order to get that scalability. So for little ticky-tack transactions that you
don't want to pay huge fees for, but also if they don't matter as much, if there's a lie in it
somewhere or there's an attack on it and it's not that big a deal, it's kind of fine for that not
to happen on the main Ethereum blockchain.
It's almost like not all laws are the 10 commandments. Things can be treated with
different weights. And so for those things, maybe it's okay to have these side chains that,
sure, we're going to punt a little bit on the decentralization, or sure, we're going to punt
a little bit on security, but it's going to enable a lot of these ticky-tack transactions
to happen in a way that actually makes the whole system kind of work better.
So that said, there exist things like Solana that are Ethereum-like in the fact that they are
global-scale computers, but they make different trade-offs in that trilemma and definitely get a lot more
scalability, but perhaps don't have the same level of hardcore security and decentralization as
Ethereum. The only thing that I would add to that is that there's this concept of the execution
layer and the settlement layer. And right now with Ethereum, those two things are all bundled
into one. So it's like having all of the trades happen
in real time on the New York Stock Exchange, and then all the settlement and the bank accounts and
the money trading hands at the end of the day also happen in that same spot. Sharding on Ethereum
or things like Solana could be where a lot of the execution happens. But because Ethereum is the
most secure and more decentralized potentially than the other
ones, a lot of the settlement will still happen on Ethereum, even if a lot of the activity happens
in a bunch of different places. Yeah. The analogy I've been thinking about with Solana,
they're the most interesting competing other chain with Ethereum. And I kind of think about it like, yeah,
lots of organizations use AWS and they use Snowflake. And that makes sense. It's not like
you're only going to use one or the other. Just to put a fine point, because you brought up the
execution layer and settlement layer, it's worth making the analogy to the current financial system
where we've got a very low bandwidth connection between banks that doesn't need
a lot of transactions.
You've got Fedwire.
That needs to be bulletproof.
But how many per day really need to execute?
Not that many.
But credit card transactions, yeah, we need tens of thousands per second around the world
because a lot of people are doing that.
And there's going to be some issues.
There's going to be some fraud.
There's going to need to be some reversals.
We need to build all sorts of other mechanisms. But do all of those need
to happen on Fedwire? No, no, they don't. So to put the bow on the bull case, is it fair to say
this is the next internet? Web3 is the next breakthrough paradigm shift for technology,
the way that the internet was. It will power
trillions of dollars of new economic activity the same way the internet did. And importantly,
this is part of the bull case, Ethereum will be the base layer upon which it all happens.
That is a good summary of the bull case. Yes.
Ben's been reading Paki's pieces. Okay, so then let's go to Bear.
I mean, the very first one here that I think we've all been alluding to is like,
either ETH2's switchover doesn't happen and they blow their lead in the corresponding
network effect because it's technically difficult and also difficult to get the community on board,
or that it goes poorly.
And in trying to make the system work faster, they actually kill the golden goose of this existing bulletproof-ish but slow system.
That, to me, feels like the big bear in the room. Does that seem right?
That seems right. And I think, again, if you talk to Solana or some other single chain, single shard protocols, I think what they might
say is that because you're switching over to sharding, this beautiful thing that we haven't
really discussed, but is one of the reasons that people like building on top of Ethereum and like
building a Web3 in general, which is composability, or people call it money Legos or media Legos,
where you can have all these things that snap together and work together instantly.
These are like smart contracts that exist at different addresses on chain that you can sort
of daisy chain together.
Exactly. So it's like a bunch of open source projects that fit together really nicely that
anybody can just kind of take off the shelf. And so there's a bunch of those daisy chains
that happen that if they're not on the same chain and they're sharding,
then there's speed lost in that kind of moving down from the shards to the main chain.
They kind of just break composability for certain use cases.
And it's like, maybe there's enough things that somebody else can come in and say, like, look,
we can do all of the things that Ethereum can do.
And we're single shard and we're faster and X, Y, and Z.
And so maybe there's enough there to kind of provide the activation energy needed to
move over to another chain.
It's sort of like to bring it to the web to world.
Like I built this great application.
It calls these three other APIs and I send data into this API.
It sends data out, which then calls this other API.
It's beautiful.
Actually, though, between these two, there's actually a phone call that needs to get made.
Right. And it's happening much faster and all of that, but I think that's a really good analogy.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, they do have this huge lead, but they threaded a needle the first time by
creating Ethereum at all. The concept of a Turing-complete, globally distributed computer
upon which other, not only applications, but platforms for applications could be built,
that's a rabbit out of a hat. That's threading the needle. And they kind of need to do it again
in order to make this shift to a scalable future.
In doing the research for me, it seems like there's also people like Fred Wilson are just kind of fed up with how slow it's moving. We've known that scalability is a problem for a long time. We still benefits to Ethereum, it's going to reach a certain point in the equilibrium where gas fees are too high.
It's just too much of a pain for developers where they're like, all right, fine.
I'm out.
I don't know.
What do you think, Becky?
I think that's certainly a possibility depending on how slow it moves. There are already some things like Audius Project,
which is a distributed kind of music player,
which is building on both.
And it also settles on Ethereum.
Both Solana and Ethereum.
Both Solana and Ethereum.
And then like for really fast things like likes
or upvotes on certain things,
there's just these really quick transactions.
That's all happening on Solana. And then it's coming down and settling on Ethereum and all of that. But there is this
idea that different pieces are being picked off. But there's also this thing where if there are
enough good blockchains like Solana that can interoperate with Ethereum, but that certainly
lower gas fees and lower congestion. And if there are enough side chains that gas fees just get so low,
that even if a bunch of people use this thing,
maybe the take is just so low that not enough value is accruing to the holders of the token.
Of Ethereum.
That's the bear case for ETH,
is that this thing becomes so rarely used that those tokens don't become super valuable.
Potentially, right?
The transaction, even if everybody in the world used the credit cards,
but interchange dropped to 0.0001%, Visa and MasterCard become a lot less valuable.
And so maybe there's something at play there.
There may be a very good response to that critique, but that's one that's just kind
of in the back of my head a little bit is what happens if everything gets so decongested
and gas fees drop so much that there's actually not that much money to be made, even if this
is something that a lot of people are ultimately settling back on.
And it's interesting, your comment there on the credit card companies, it would both, because ETH's value is derived from the supply-demand match, it's actually
a worse quote-unquote business on two axes. It'd be that smaller percentage SPIF,
and there would be way fewer transactions happening. So it's sort of like a exponential
problem for them if a lot of the demand for transactions on the Ethereum blockchain
shifted to other blockchains. I think that's right.
At least for ETH holders. I think that's right. Yes.
Everything is a double-edged sword, right? I i mean its strength is also its potential downfall
well i think that covers it for sort of high level bull and bear and i think in playbook here
we may discover some more but do you want to shift to power yeah let's do it this is interesting i
guess we did seven powers for bitcoin it's a whole new world in protocol level power.
This thing's... It's almost like, first, I want to wrap my head around what's the power of HTTP.
And you raise the right point that Bitcoin is simple. It is complex and clever in the combination
of genius insights to create the system that worked
beautifully together. But Ethereum, it's actually quite difficult to wrap your whole head around it
the way you can wrap your whole head around Bitcoin because it exists in all these different
layers. So maybe as we're doing power, we should define it a little bit tighter and say the Ethereum network rather than trying to say the
asset of the tokens. Yeah. I like that. I like that. Okay. So for folks who are new to the show,
the options here coming from Hamilton Helmer's seven powers are counter-positioning,
scale economies, switching costs, network economies, process power, branding, and cornered resource.
And normally, the way this is kind of defined is what enables a business to achieve persistent
deferential returns above their nearest competitor, sort of how to be more profitable than their
closest competitor.
Of course, this is a foundation.
And of course, this is a big open source community.
So it's interesting, How would we define the persistent
differential returns of the Ethereum network so that we even have some criteria to figure out
the power? I think that's easy. I think that's the value of Ether. Does it all keep coming back
to that? Actually, it's the market cap of Ether. It's the total combined value of all the Ether in
the world. So yeah. I mean, gosh, I'm tempted to say like, Ethereum has every single one of
these powers.
Wow, David's got laser eyes over there in the corner.
I know.
To me, I think network effects are, for any blockchain, the number one thing that any of them have. And this one actually works
in a couple of ways. One, there's kind of the concept that we talked about that
everything gets more secure, the more people who are using it and the higher price the ETH is.
And then I think even on top of that, all the things that are being built on top of Ethereum, I think really benefit from it, where the holders of a token of a certain project are more likely to stick around.
So I think that's the potential power of businesses built on top of Ethereum is that they're incentivizing users to get more of their friends to use the thing that they're using because their token gets more valuable as they do it.
And so those things have their own really strong network effects, I think,
that then I think benefit back down to Ethereum itself.
Yeah, it's multi-layered.
It's multi-layered.
You're right.
It's interesting.
I keep trying to come up with a good non-crypto analogy because I think the macOS one that I
threw out earlier where Ethereum is kind of the operating system upon
which you can build platforms and applications, that felt right.
But there is also this element where it's also like being a shareholder in Apple as
well as macOS.
Well, this is where I think there's counter-positioning too, right?
If you view AWS and the like as competitors to the Ethereum network. There's no way that Amazon, even in
a post-Jeb Bezos world, is going to be like, yeah, cool. When you use AWS, you get paid in Amazon
stock. Right. Right. Yeah. It's like, no, we want to capture that upside. That's our leverage.
Oh, there's massive switching costs. I mean, if you're going to go write something for Solana, you don't write in Solidity.
So any of these applications that have already begun development or are already developed
for Ethereum, there are some other systems that are compatible with the, they call them
EVM compatible, with the Ethereum virtual machine, basically the globally distributed
computer that is Ethereum, you can, with minor tweaks, port those over to non-Ethereum blockchains. But for ones that are
dramatically different and better in a lot of ways, like Solana, it's going to be hard to get
the developer community to really shift at this point. It's not that Ethereum has a 30-year lead,
but they have a four,
five-year lead with the developer community that is non-trivial.
I think there's another element of switching costs too, which is for participants in the crypto economy, Ether is the coin trading pair, DuJour and Bitcoin too, but probably Ether more
than Bitcoin for other coins and other options.
You want to buy an NFT, you're buying that with Ethereum. You're not buying that with
Solana tokens. Or you want to buy Solana tokens, you're probably buying that with
Ethereum. Or you want to trade on Uniswap. I think Ether is the number one trading pair on Uniswap.
And then there's another level, which is that if you're accruing tokens for participating in
something that's built on top of Ethereum, those are ERC20 tokens. And so maybe there's another level, which is that if you're accruing tokens for participating in something that's built on top of Ethereum, those are ERC-20 tokens. And so maybe there's some
mechanism where you sell, you convert to something else, and then you get a new token if the project
switched to another chain, but it seems incredibly complicated, if not possible to pull that off.
The fact that all these tokens are ERC-20 tokens is a switching cost as well.
Yeah. The thing that springs to mind is on the Bitcoin episode, we were talking about how entrenched the US dollar is versus Bitcoin because the government both settles its
debts and collects taxes in USD. And there are so many things that plug into the Ethereum network
at this point that it's sort of the same effect where if you're participating in a lot of these
different projects, you're going to end up with ETH one way or another, and then it's sort of the same effect where if you're participating in a lot of these different
projects, you're going to end up with ETH one way or another.
And then it's work for you and it's transaction costs for you to move that to a different
blockchain.
All right.
What's next?
Let's keep going here.
So there's some that it doesn't have.
Like what's the cornered resource?
I don't think it really has that.
Vitalik, maybe?
Although people aren't exactly cornered resources.
But maybe, I don't think there's any other single person
who is as much the face of crypto as Vitalik.
And it's a liquid asset, so this is not exactly right,
but there's something about ETH holders,
or at least serious ETH holders,
or people who have held for a long time
that are effectively cornered resources, like people who just aren't going to sell and who
are incentivized for ETH to become more valuable. The ETH hodlers, maybe not as boisterous or
passionate maybe as the Bitcoin hodlers. I can buy that. I can buy that.
I think there's something there where, I mean, at some point you have to pay a bunch of taxes
if you sell your ETH. So
maybe that's the cornered resource. There's a bunch of people who don't want to pay a lot of
taxes. Latent capital gains. What about, I think there's probably scale economies.
Definitely scale economies. With currently the mining network and then in a proof of stake world,
the number of ETH holders out there who are staking. That's true. There's also, I mean, you could argue that there's been negative scale economies as well,
where, you know, gas fees got prohibitively high because too many people were using the
network.
I mean, maybe it's negative network effects as well, but too many people using the network
degrades the experience and all of that.
So maybe those are things that if you assume EIP-1559 and ETH2
go through smoothly, become powers, but in the short term may not be.
That's a great point. Yeah, we've been two sunshine and rainbows over here on that point.
Yeah. Ethereum as a network got less utility in several ways as it got bigger.
Yeah, for sure.
And that is the opposite of what happens in a whatsapp or
a facebook or any of these like true network effect businesses or just to stay on scale economies
it's also the opposite of what's true in like a netflix where you have that pure play scale
economies where the bigger it got the more cost effective it got for them to do things like license content. Yeah, here, the bigger it got, the harder it got.
That doesn't show up here at all.
Okay, maybe not then.
The bigger it gets, the more secure it gets,
and the more people are willing to build on top of it.
But then there's also certainly the diseconomies of scale up to this point.
Yeah.
So continuing down the things that it's probably not,
I don't think there's really process power.
There are a lot of people who contribute to this thing.
It's a big open source project.
But I don't think that gives it power.
I think in large part that has held it back.
Yeah.
Well, Fred Wilson would say it's held it back.
Yeah. And so much of the value actually happened when there wasn't a lot of process to it at all,
when it was the sort of founders and sort of early folks contributing to it
that kind of created the initial system. Yep.
All right. We haven't talked about branding yet. It's the last one. How do you guys feel about that?
Yes. It has branding branding power the way this would
classically be defined is that tiffany's i'm gonna pay more for this diamond because it's
right tiffany's and i don't think this has that uh i would say maybe that's it's other than network
effects maybe it's its biggest power right like all right let's go so vitalik wrote a post that i
that i referenced in the piece too on legitimacy and how
like one of the main reasons that different things in crypto have value is because they have
legitimacy and so you can get legitimacy in a whole bunch of ways but because ethereum's been
around a long time and performed well in the past and all of these things it keeps accruing
legitimacy and so you could build and people people have built, forks of Ethereum.
There's Ethereum Classic out there right now, which is the same thing, but it doesn't have the brand power associated with.
And so it all kind of ties in together where there are network effects because people moved over.
And so it makes sense because other people are moving over.
It's like there's a bunch of things jumbled into one.
But I think the existence
of an Ethereum classic
or an existence of a bunch of other chains
that technically are the exact same
as something like Ethereum,
but their coins are nowhere near as valuable.
I think to me, that's kind of brand power.
That ties into the Lindy thing
we were talking about before.
Yeah, that's a really good point
because it's funny how the psychology of would I go put $5,000, again, not investment advice, into Ethereum feels
like, maybe. It's probably not going to go to zero, but would I put $5,000 into a brand new
coin that someone told me is doing something technically interesting but I've never heard of?
I might be like, how about 500? There's definitely some kind of test the waters thing. And it's funny that
it's actually more around how much would I be willing to invest, not how much would I be willing
to pay. But there is a brand power that accrues to it from a trust perspective to even though it
is a very, very volatile asset, give me some amount of trust that
it's here to stay. I buy it. I mean, Paki, you're spot on with the ETH Classic argument.
We appreciate you joining our Liquid Super team to bring us this great insight.
It has been an honor to be on your Liquid Super team.
There is something that's sort of been ruminating, and I know we already did,
Baron Bull, but there's got to be a bear case on all of crypto that's like the bear king here that
we're not talking about. I mean, there's a variety of things that are pseudo-Black Swan-y,
like quantum computing, or someone figures out how to crack RSA effectively, or let's put those
Black Swan-type things aside. I mean, where is there a perma
burst on the entire crypto bubble? I think there are still a lot of things
that are happening on Web3 or happening on Ethereum because it's early and cool, and they have no impact on the real world. And so one kind of big
bear bubble burst case is just that it doesn't find applications where it's that much more
useful and useful enough to be worth kind of the extra complexity. That's not my belief,
but I think that's maybe one of them is it just doesn't find
the application still. I think that's been de-risked over the past few years.
Another one is everything is still so tied to the price of Bitcoin. And Bitcoin is,
you know, it's blessing and disgrace. I don't think there's anything fake about it just because
it is kind of built on human belief and the fact that other people will accept Bitcoin. But if people decide for whatever reason, it has tanked a bunch recently.
If people decide for whatever reason or governments start to crack down and it's
just not worth the headache, then if Bitcoin goes down, at least temporarily,
everything is going to absolutely crash. It's been wild to watch just these last couple of months, like as Bitcoin has swung around,
Ether has swung around, Solana tokens have swung around.
And it's like nobody realizes these things are completely not connected, but they are,
which is your point.
That one's a big one to me.
Just even the fact that they trade together, I think is a big one to me, let alone what
happens if Bitcoin drops.
The fact that they're not being priced
independently yet is either a phenomenal opportunity or something to be worried about.
How do we feel about the state actor government risk? Not necessarily in terms of like,
oh, a government state actor is going to do a 51% and destroy these things, but more like
what we're starting to see with China of like, Hey, no, we're going to make it illegal
to do this. We're going to try and prevent our citizens from participating in either Bitcoin or,
or in the whole decentralized ecosystem and Ethereum.
I think Uber is a good analogy actually, uh, where it's this race between what governments decide to do and how much people really want to use this thing.
And so if it can get to a point where there's a ton of utility and it enables cross-border payments and people who are in hyperinflationary markets need cryptocurrency as a stable thing to keep their money in. If those use cases accelerate past the
point of what kind of governments can control and there's a groundswell, then that's awesome.
The Uber case is that they would go into town, they'd break all the rules, but customers loved
Uber so much that they could fight the local governments and win because they had all the
constituents on their side. And so I think that's probably the race that plays out is, can crypto find enough use cases and provide enough real value to
enough people that if the government's tried to crack down, it would cause an uproar?
Right. Because right now that cross-border payments thing is real in countries that are
having monetary crises. But in terms of actual real use cases, most of them, while there are very cool
things like Audius out there, most of them are for true believers. And so to your point of if a
government bans it, there has to be enough of the citizenry who is in it for the utility of what's
already built rather than in it for the belief in the future to sort of continue its sort of development and
momentum. Right. Like you couldn't ban the internet at this point. There was probably a time
in the early nineties, late eighties where the government could have said, yeah, no internet.
And people would have been like, that would have been cool. I'll use my web TV instead.
And there wasn't money tied up into it. And I think we're past that point now,
but I think that's the race. Okay. Thank you for helping me tie off that section in a way that calms my... I just felt like we missed something there. Playbook?
Yeah, playbook. So the first one that I thought was really interesting is that,
just to contrast this against the Bitcoin episode, Bitcoin's pretty set in stone,
but Ethereum evolves. And they've demonstrated this ability to learn from mistakes, adjust
the underlying software and the contracts to change to what the community feels is best.
And that's for better or for worse.
Is Ethereum truly immutable?
Does it have strong...
What's the phrase?
No, I don't think it's truly immutable.
And yes, it does have weak subjectivity.
There still are... There have been a bunch of hard forks. Right. There are decisions that are left to human actors
who can influence 51% fairly easily, and then it changes the way the world works. We talked about
the three mining pools. It's sort of this, in contrast to Bitcoin, it does represent the human element of the way that all of our existing social monetary technology systems are structured, where we do have faith in institutions.
Not that I think this actually happened, but it would be much less crazy than with Ethereum to say Bitcoin was probably given to us by the aliens.
I'm not saying that it was, but it could have been, you know, this is like, it was like a technology
transfer from an advanced society where they were like, here it is, you know, whereas that is not
as we've seen with the history of like, Ethereum has been built in public by humans.
Yep. Yeah. The other thing that makes me think Bitcoin was built by aliens is
no human could sit around with $60 billion in a bank account and never touch it.
You're talking about Satoshi.
Satoshi, the Bitcoin stake.
Totally.
I've got one that I think is a really, really big playbook theme that we've only scratched the surface here and we can't fully dig into, but I think we're going to in the future of acquired quite often is, you know, look like Fred Wilson's arguments against Vitalik and against the
foundation had a lot of merit and rewinding back to the original history and the founding, you know,
Charles and Anthony and the desire to do a for-profit company for this as the vehicle and to raise
venture financing, there was merit for those things. Ethereum and so many other crypto
organizations since Ethereum have proven that there is another way to generate and for people
and institutions to capture amazing amounts of value outside of a
traditional USC corporation with a foundation. I mean, Solana is a combination of a foundation
and a C corporation that is operating things, but most of the value and most of the tokens are held
by, I believe, by the foundation. This is a whole new way of structuring projects, companies. It's
kind of like Paggie's liquid super teams idea.
It totally is. And this is going to change a lot. And certainly lots of VC funds,
USV, Andreessen Horowitz, et cetera, and crypto native funds have been like,
yeah, cool. We get it. We're going to buy tokens instead of buying shares in C-Corps. Cool. And
maybe it's that simple, but I think we're just scratching
the surface of all the implications of this. Yep. All right. I got another one that we touched
on earlier, but it's worth sort of repeating that would we literally think of what was the
playbook to build Ethereum? What was the playbook to build Bitcoin? It was bootstrapping the network
with illegitimate use cases. But then once that network has been laid, you do really
cool stuff on it and cool legitimate stuff that is better than what came before or at least serves a
different use case because now you have this infrastructure. And I was trying to think,
where did this show up or did we see this with the internet in the same way that we've seen it
in crypto where you had the Silk Road and Bitcoin, you had ICOs with Ethereum. People talk about the adult industry being an early adopter of
the internet and pioneering video technologies. And that happened to some extent.
It also happened with Ethereum. We didn't talk about it really in history, but there's a thing
called SpankChain, SpankChain, SpankCoin, something like that, that it for sure was
one of the first applications on Ethereum. Yep. But I guess the contrasting point that I want to make is it's interesting to me that
the internet started in university computer science departments. And maybe I'm missing
a huge chunk of internet history, but it doesn't feel like a bunch of nodes were lit up on the
internet because people wanted to access it something illicit
and it's fascinating to me that that has happened twice in crypto but was not a part of the internet
or really i don't think a part of the pc revolution and didn't really seem to be a part of the phone
revolution it's sort of like a new way not to the same scale i don't to gain widespread adoption. Not to the same scale, I don't think. Yeah. Yeah. It's a spectrum.
So the playbook is start with an illicit use case if you want to get adoption.
The crypto playbook is figure out how to get as many nodes on your network as possible,
as fast as possible at whatever cost so that you can gain the benefit of what will happen
down the line with it. Makes sense to me.
Packing any playbook themes?
I mean, I think the interesting thing on that playbook theme is that people who are operating,
selling drugs in porn all had a really hard time operating in the existing system.
So I think it's less illicit use cases and it's more enabling something that wasn't possible
for a group
of people before. And those people were not able to transact in the existing system to the same
extent that they were in something kind of decentralized and a little bit more anonymized.
And so I think certainly that piece is true, but I think that's maybe a playbook theme is that
if you're enabling something that wasn't previously possible to a certain group of people, that's where you get your first adoption.
Maybe like marketplace building 101 is find that passionate core niche and expand outward from there.
I think maybe that's the kinder, cases that are internal to the network right now.
And they're still looking to find ways to kind of initial activation energy before going out and taking over external use cases?
Yeah, man, it leads me to another thing that I've been thinking about a lot with Ethereum and crypto broadly that I sent out this tweet the other day that was it was in this vein of jobs to be done that you're sort of talking about,
Paki, which was, what are examples of blockchain-based applications that A, created a
lot of value besides profits from speculation, B, would have a worse user experience if built
on centralized technologies, and C, has a primary function that is not finance or currency?
And I got a lot of really good pushback from a number of people, including friend of the
show, Chad Whitman, that were basically like, why would you put C in there? Why does it have to
have finance or currency not be a core part of it? Because what Web3 is, is bringing finance
and currency in an integrated way to networked software. And it's like in the way that Web2 was about bringing
dynamically loaded data into your web pages, it's kind of like asking, what's a good example of a
Web 2.0 app that doesn't use AJAX? It's sort of like the jobs to be done of all things on Web3
on the crypto internet do involve a transfer of value between people and i i think like i'm sort
of coming around to the idea that yeah i'm not gonna see like the next spotify that is just
straight up better than spotify but decentralized and because it's decentralized it's like
no we're gonna see a version of spotify that lets me transact directly with artists because like
transacting directly or something
involving decentralized finance is actually the point of Web3.
Yeah, I think DAOs are fascinating here as well.
Where the big innovation and where most of the people are doing their work is not on
the technology side, but it's on the incentive design and the tokenomics and all of the things
to help coordinate groups of people on the internet in ways that might otherwise either not be possible or be filled with so much friction.
And that comes back to the financial aspect and whether or not it's financial, the tokenization aspect where at least you have status from owning a bunch of tokens or other things. And so I think that idea of baking incentive design into the core of the product and letting the community
design incentives for themselves is mind-bendingly fascinating.
Shoot, guys. I mean, I've gotten interested in BitClout. That's such a good example of this,
right? What is BitClout? It's Twitter with money, right? But Twitter with money is super freaking different than Twitter. Totally. Like many times I have wanted
to invest in someone some way that I thought was criminally underfollowed for the quality of their
content. And like, yep, that is exactly what it lets me do. Yep. Cool. All right. I think that
about wraps it for Playbook for me. Me too. We want to thank our longtime friend of the show, Vanta, the leading
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How are we going to do this? Are we going to decide on air how to do this? I guess so.
I thought you had a plan. So I'll tell you what we're not going to do,
and Paki and David can doodle on what we are going to do. So we are deliberately not grading
this one on the investment return of ETH. Bitcoin, I think we talked about, was a 3 million X in one
decade. That is the single greatest return in human history on any asset in one decade. But that is not what
Ethereum is about. It is the world computer. Sure, it's a financial asset, but it's not primarily
a financial asset. And so, of course, it is a cryptocurrency. But I think if we focus in on
grading and tying this episode up based on its investment return, I think we're missing the
point. Yeah, totally agree. So David, how are we going to grade this one?
I think we should grade the Ethereum Foundation on their stewardship of the Ethereum network
over the past seven years.
Yeah.
And to abstract it even more, you could say like, grade how Ethereum's implementation, how successful has it been given the sort of germ of the idea initially of the world computer that exists on a blockchain? utterly amazing what has happened here like no vitalik no white paper no foundation none of this
would exist no defy no nfts no crypto kitties no nba top shot no audience no and like yeah none of
these things are quote unquote mainstream yet but they they're pretty darn close. And there are billions and billions
and billions of dollars of economies that have been created here. So that is out of this world.
That's on the one hand. Now, on the other hand, look, 2014 was a long time ago.
They've shipped a bunch of versions, but relative to certainly the initial promise of we're going to be at the Serenity release by 2015, we are way far behind here.
And I think Vitalik himself has certainly said and admitted that there are many things he would want to go back and change about the beginning of Ethereum and the trajectory that it's been on.
So I'm going to land on an A-. I think it gets A range because of the first part of what I just
said of like, this is freaking unreal. Now, the actual execution, you're not ready for primetime
yet, guys. So they're getting there. But I'm going to go A-.
And it's funny how it just parallels so many other open source things.
Like famously, the meme in the early 2000s was next year is the year of Linux on the
desktop.
This stuff, you're herding cats.
And Vitalik is literally herding cats.
He's literally herding cats.
So it's sort of to be expected with the path that they chose.
The question is, was it executed better or worse than your sort of average open source
project, given what a world-changing idea they had to start with?
I do like your A-.
The only thing, and I'm going to violate the way that I initially opened this by talking
about ETH here, The only thing that would possibly
push me closer to an A, but I'm not going to go there and I'm going to land with an A minus,
is the fact that they have created $200 billion plus of market cap in six years.
And you look at Uber that IPO-ed at 80 billion after 10 years, and that everyone refers to as
like, geez, if I could just get a little Uber in my portfolio, just one, all I need is one. You hear so many VCs that are like, yeah.
So the value creation activity, or at least perceived value creation activity that Vitalik
and the team have done in the last six years, seven years, whatever it is, is remarkable and outpaces basically every hyper growth startup.
For sure.
Yes.
I cannot argue with that.
But A minus to your point of like, if this is the route that you choose in this open
source foundation way, and this is the way you choose in which to execute it, there are
laws of human physics that govern your ability to continue to affect change.
You got to manage it well. And they've managed it okay.
Yep. Paki?
You left the A wide open for me. And of course, as the rainbows and unicorns and butterflies guy.
The other big kind of crypto thing that we've touched on a little bit, but not
that we haven't talked about too much is the idea of trade-offs.
And I think there's a bunch of trade-offs inherent with the way that they decided to
do things.
They have a human team that is just the starting point that they dealt themselves.
So if you're starting after that, I think given the fact that they have a human team,
given the fact that they don't want to change things too many times and change things too
quickly, they've forked and they've made some decisions in the past that are very human decisions,
but they can't do that too frequently and still be viewed as a secure thing.
They're, of course, going to be slower.
Obviously, it'd be amazing if they were faster.
But look at the explosion of things that has happened on Ethereum in in the past year despite all of that and maybe they made
the exact right trade-offs even accidentally over the past few years to get to the point maybe the
world wasn't ready five years ago to get well certainly i mean like the world wasn't ready
it was accidentally super lucky that you know it was at least stable during the time when we were
all locked inside and looking for new ways to organize ourselves and all those things.
So there's a ton of luck involved as well.
But I think looking from then to now and then what's potentially going to happen in the future and like the seeds of things that are being planted right now to even just be alive to this point when there have been other blockchain spinoffs and Bitcoin
spinoffs and other things, and Ethereum is still standing as number two and the most exciting in
terms of just like world changing potential. I mean, I don't know how you do a much better
job than that, whether it's by skill or luck or some combination of the two, you have to give it
an A. All right, there we go.
I didn't expect anything less.
Tacky McCormick, not boring as expected.
Yeah, well, you guys want to do some carve-outs before we wind it up here?
Yeah, I actually have some great ones for this episode.
Ooh, multi-carve-out.
Yeah, well, it's two in the same category so
criminally as long time listeners of the show you know i've been reading sci-fi for
not my whole life but like a number of years now i really enjoy it love it been through you know
the asimov books and everything like so fantastic i have not until the last couple of weeks read Arthur C. Clarke.
And it's fantastic. I love his stuff. Famously, he coined the term, any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, often quoted in the tech world and plenty of other
things, concepts he pioneered. He was writing in the 50s and 60s, kind of like same time-ish
as Asimov. And his writing is great. I really like
it. So first book I read was Rendezvous with Rama. That's a really cool one about a dead
seeming alien spacecraft enters our solar system and what happens. That's super cool. And then I'm
in the middle of the city and the stars right now, which I'm also really
enjoying. Billions of years in the future where all of mankind has been reduced to one single
city on Earth. Yeah, the rest of Earth is a desert. Yeah, super cool. Highly recommend.
I like it. Adding to my list. I'm going to do a little bit of a popcorn one this time,
because I think I've been a little heavier in the past. I'm watching Loki right now on Disney Plus, and it is exceptional.
It is so clever. There are so many little details. It opens in a way where I'm like,
I totally didn't realize there was this hole in Avengers in the MCU, where they created an opportunity to go and tell this entire story
with Loki. And as soon as I saw the beginning of the first episode, I was like, oh my God,
of course, that was unresolved. And I just think it's Marvel and it's Disney at their absolute
sort of storytelling best. And just so that I don't say full rainbows i contrast it heavily with the winter soldier show
that they've come out with where it seems like loki was made for people who like are looking
for these sort of really clever fascinating marvel on top of their game shows they're made
for the nerds yeah and then they just like cranked out that winter soldier thing like it was like pacific rim or just like it felt really off-brand
in a way where i was uncompelled so it's interesting to see how some of these spin-off
shows they're doing from the mcu and from did you watch uh wandavision i did that was that was great
too loki's like wandavision caliber so if you're into that, go check out Loki. It's great.
Great. All right. So I'm actually going to go to sci-fi as well. It's pretty much over the past
year and a half, all I've been reading. And recently my friend, Ben Rollert, a composer,
recommended that I read Diamond Age by Neil Stevenson. And he's famous for Snow Crash and
coining the term metaverse and all those things. Yeah. Diamond Age is really fascinating because it's a non-digital future.
It's a future where a lot of the innovation has come on the physical side of things.
And the world map is split up in all of these interesting ways.
And it takes place in what is today China.
And they have these matter compilers that make all sorts of interesting things,
including islands and airships.
And it's just like a totally different view of the future where no one spends any time
on computers.
And it's all centered on this book that talks to the reader and is actually read out loud
by a real human actor.
And it's just a very different view of the future that I'm used to reading in sci-fi.
And the best part is it reminds me in terms of writing style, a lot of Kurt Vonnegut. And so
it's just this really fascinating book to read. I would highly recommend Diamond Age by Neil
Stevenson. Awesome. Love it. Since this is the season finale, I got two more. Can I throw in
two more? Let's keep going. All right, let's keep going.
I've been playing on Xbox Game Pass near Automata, which is a Square Enix game.
I never would have played otherwise.
It's kind of a weird game to play because you've got to play through it like four times.
It's like watching The Big Lebowski.
Yeah, it's like an auteur type piece.
It's kind of cool, though.
Paki, you reminded me of it, like yeah it's like a it's like an auteur type piece it's kind of cool though like a packy
reminded me of it like this weird future it is sci-fi and that you play as a as an android and
you're fighting robots but like yes there's a very different vision of the future uh that i find
interesting and then my other one the pandemic has subsided here in the US. We are very lucky on that front. I've been vaccinated.
A couple of weeks ago, I did a in-person recording with Jeff at Software Daily.
Oh, it was so good.
It was so freaking fun to be back in person.
Ben and I are here now.
Paki, we got to get you out here next time live.
It's so great.
And at the end of it, we were hanging out.
We're like, it's so great to hang out.
You want to play some Magic the Gathering? And so we put a Magic the Gathering night together with a couple of buddies and like, God, it was so much fun to just be like back in
person playing cards. Like so fun. That's awesome. Listeners, if you haven't checked that out yet,
it's a great episode with Jeff and David. So go listen. Well, speaking of Packy,
where can people find you on the internet?
You can find me at notboring.co
or at PackyM on Twitter.
Great.
Well, Packy, thank you so much for joining us.
Listeners,
we really enjoyed being on the journey
the last six months.
I mean, whiplash
and holding all these competing ideas concurrently
and just forming new perspectives
and new ways of looking at the world. I hope you've enjoyed it as much as David and I have.
It's truly a privilege to be able to do this and get all the incredible feedback and comments that
we do from you all. So thank you. Thank you so much.
If you want to be a part of what we do here, you should become an LP.
We're going to do more Zoom calls in the coming months and more book clubs.
And we got 50 plus great, I think probably closer to 75 plus great LP episodes in the
catalog for everything from the basics of VC fundamentals through pricing and packaging
through hiring and building great teams, all sorts of good stuff in there.
If you want to become a part of the Acquired community,
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