Bankless - 132 - Polynya's Crypto Thesis
Episode Date: August 15, 2022This conversation has been a long time coming. Polynya is a pseudonymous writer, investor, and crypto researcher. Polynya coined the term “modular blockchain” and has been influential on 100 dif...ferent crypto topics, most notably on rollups, though they’re quick to point out that rollups are no longer their main focus. This is a unique episode, in which Bankless DAO’s Eureka John acts out Polynya’s voice based on a 5-hour text-based discord interview. Tune in as we explore Polynya’s fascinating mind, covering their broad crypto thesis, EIP-4844, and the future of Ethereum Scalability. ------ 📣 Forta | Help Make Web3 a Safer Place https://bankless.cc/Forta ------ 🚀 SUBSCRIBE TO NEWSLETTER: https://newsletter.banklesshq.com/ 🎙️ SUBSCRIBE TO PODCAST: http://podcast.banklesshq.com/ ------ BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🌱 LENS | ACCESS CODE: MINTME https://bankless.cc/Lens 🚀 ROCKET POOL | ETH STAKING https://bankless.cc/RocketPool ⚖️ ARBITRUM | SCALING ETHEREUM https://bankless.cc/Arbitrum 🦁 BRAVE | THE BROWSER NATIVE WALLET https://bankless.cc/Brave 🌉 JUNO | BRIDGE FIAT TO LAYER 2 https://bankless.cc/Juno ⚡️ ZKSYNC | THE LAYER 2 SCALING ENDGAME https://bankless.cc/zkSync ------ Topics Covered: 0:00 Intro 9:00 Polynya the Anon 13:45 Polynya IRL 20:05 Cautious Optimism 25:35 Polynya’s Crypto Thesis 29:58 Accruing Value at the L1 31:54 Bitcoin vs Ethereum 33:30 Alt-L1s and Decentralization 35:10 Everything is Finance 38:10 Layer 2 Value Capture 41:33 Rollups vs ETH 45:30 Increasing L2 Demand 47:40 Layer 2 Tokens 52:45 A Symbiotic Relationship 56:08 Cosmos and Alt-L1s 58:45 App-Specific Chains 1:00:30 All Just Chains and Bridges 1:02:14 Why Cardano Rocks and Sucks 1:04:23 Cults and Tribalism 1:05:20 Changing Crypto 1:06:54 Changing the World 1:07:35 Polynya’s Message 1:08:30 Thank You Polynya ------ Resources: Polynya on Twitter: https://twitter.com/apolynya?s=20&t=4Cws8vmOo7v2mRmI8mGyfw Polynya’s Writing: https://polynya.medium.com/ Modular Blockchains: https://newsletter.banklesshq.com/p/ultra-scalable-ethereum Eureka John: https://twitter.com/EurekaJohn1?s=20&t=ws5GNZKUSZtegsJQkvcuAg ----- Not financial or tax advice. This channel is strictly educational and is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or to make any financial decisions. This video is not tax advice. Talk to your accountant. Do your own research.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Bankless, where we explore the frontier of internet money and internet finance.
This is how to get started, how to get better, how to front run the opportunity.
This is Ryan Sean Adams. I'm here with David Hoffman, and we're here to help you become more bankless.
Guys, we have a special episode for you today.
Polenia's cryptothesis.
Pellania is a crypto-anon.
David and I have called this individual Polynia in the past.
Turns out that is not how you pronounce Polynia's name.
it's Pellena. We did this conversation in kind of a unique way. Do you want to describe that
before I get into some of the takeaways here? Yeah, we've always wanted to host Pallania,
as one does, who has a podcast with a writer who's writing very informative, technical literature.
Also, definitely one of the most in-demand podcast guests that's out there, but we could never
have them because they were so anon that even their voice is too far doxed. So Ryan and I
spent about five hours across two days in Discord with Polenia doing a written interview as if
it was spoken. And then we turned that into a script and we got a voice actor to come and speak
and give Polenia a voice. So that is what you're about to listen to here on the episode today.
Some takeaways for you. Number one, who is Pelenia? This crypto-Anon, what is it like to be
an anon in crypto and why did they choose to become anon? Number two, Pelenia's investment
thesis. I was particularly interested in this, David. Where will the value accrue? The layer one,
the layer two, different tokens, alternative layer ones. And also, Pellenaia tells David and I what
bankless got wrong in the thesis, a little kind of correction and a change. Number three,
the long-term relationship between Ethereum, the layer one and its layer twos and roll-ups,
is this a parasitic relationship or is it symbiotic? We talk about that. Number four,
Pellena also steelman's Cardano.
An argument for why maybe bankless shouldn't give Cardano such a hard time.
We get into the puts and takes of that as well.
David, there's some implied knowledge coming into this episode that I feel like
when we start to bandy about terms like L1 and L2, that's maybe easier for most bankless
listeners.
L1, of course, is the Ethereum layer or the blockchain layer of things.
L2 is sort of the roll-up.
and we use these terms L1, L2.
But there are some other things that are maybe less common knowledge,
even for seasoned bank listeners,
such as EIP 4844, this term proto-dank sharding,
and this other term dank sharding.
David, could you give us a quick explanation of some of these terms
and why they're significant, maybe how they relate to Ethereum's roadmap?
Yeah, I think really the thing to emphasize here is EIP 4844,
which is the thing that we talked about the most with Pellena.
And really, this is part of Ethereum's roll-up-centric roadmap philosophy.
EIP 4844 really enshrines roll-ups as a first-class citizen on Ethereum.
And you can actually kind of see in the moment where I have this like aha moment, like, personally,
about like what 4844 does.
There's like this link between layer two usage and layer one usage in Ethereum's current state.
So like your transaction on arbitrum or optimism or whatever shows up somewhere and with block space demand on the layer one.
So blocks based demand on layer two does carry over, does translate to block space demand for the layer one.
Not at a one-to-one relationship is like a 10-to-one or a seven-to-one relationship in roll-ups current forms.
With EIP 4-844, it a little bit breaks that relationship in that transactions can scale on roll-ups without there being too much more data going on to the layer one.
So roll-ups are like relinquished from their bond to the Ethereum layer one.
And like there can be 10 times more transactional activity on a layer two.
that doesn't actually put a larger footprint on the Ethereum layer 1.
So 4844 really takes the brakes off of layer 2 scalability
and allows them to really just go wild.
And that's with this call data op code,
but really is the idea that layer 2s are free to scale
without having a larger and larger gas cost on the Ethereum layer 1.
Yeah, one way to think of it is it makes it ultra cheap
for layer 2 transactions to post onto layer 1,
like massively more cheap.
100x, we're talking about.
or a thousand X even.
And EIP 4844 is also called a proto-dank sharding
because it's a skinny-down minimum viable product release
that is tentatively scheduled for the next maybe release after the merge.
We don't know yet, but it could possibly be coming in 2023.
And this is all part of Ethereum's big push towards scalability
and seems very achievable.
I mean, it's not a massive undertaking to implement this.
So we actually expect it to come relatively soon.
And again, this is an order of magnitude increase in terms of roll-up transaction throughput
or cost decrease.
You think of it that way, too, of like roll-up transactions costing a small micro-fraction
of a penny rather than, you know, 10 cents or 20 cents as it costs today.
And this, of course, is just good pre-knowledge to have going into our podcast with Plania.
If you are at all familiar with Palena's writing, you know that they are very, very smart.
So we just needed to prime the listener with this information so you can fully digest.
Proto-Danksharding, of course, is actually a name coined between Proto Lambda,
who is a person in the Ethereum space and Dankrad, who works at the EF.
But the name actually works out because it's Proto as in like early dang sharding.
Later comes full dang sharding, which is just the full manifestation of this full vision.
And you just add another order of magnitude of scale.
onto roll-ups. So much scale that, like, we can't even comprehend the level of scale that it's
going to bring. But don't hold your breath for dang charting. It's not happening anytime soon,
20, 24 and beyond. But this information is just going to be really, really useful to understand as we go
into this episode with Pellania, because this is what they focus on. And so having this in your brain,
as you go into this, is going to be useful. So with that, let's get right to the conversation with
Polenia. But before we do, we want to thank the sponsors that made this episode possible.
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Bankless Nation, this conversation has been a long time coming.
We're super excited about it, and we're thrilled to introduce you to our next guest, Puleña.
Puleña is a pseudo-anonymous writer, an investor, a crypto researcher as well.
They call themselves a crypto hobbyist, but I'm pretty sure I've learned more about
blockchain scalability from this crypto hobbyist than I have from 99.9% of the so-called
experts in the space.
Polinia coined the term modular blockchain
and has been super influential
on about 100 different crypto topics
most notably on roll-ups
that's where I learned most of my roll-up knowledge
from Polinia
and is also quick to point out though
that roll-ups are no longer their main focus
Polina, welcome to bankless
it's great to have you on.
Hello there, Ryan, David, delighted to be on bankless.
All right, we got to get this out of the way
and talk about the meta of the podcast
This is the first time we've done a podcast in this format for bankless listeners as well.
To preserve your privacy, you're Anon right now, and we are having this conversation through a written chat log,
but your voice is being reenacted right now by a member of the bankless community.
Thank you, Eureka, John, for doing that.
Is it cool that we're doing it this way?
Is it kind of weird, Pena?
I've written dialogue for fictional characters, but never autobiographically.
So this will be an interesting experience.
My personal experiment would be I'd try to write it as a screenplay.
It's something new for you, too, isn't it?
What do you think?
Well, autobiographically was the wrong word, but you know what I mean.
Yeah, this is certainly a first for us.
But the crypto world always throws fun curveballs, and we like to be flexible here at Bankless.
Just curious, in an ideal world, who would play you as a voice actor?
Anyone like either fictional or non-fictional?
Huh, let me think.
I'd say my ideal choice would be Maggie Chung.
Okay, so I'm looking up Maggie Chung right now.
For the listeners who aren't familiar, who is she?
You got to check out our work. Maggie Chung is an actor from Hong Kong. Some of her best work is
in the mood for love, Irma Vep and Hero. Interestingly, some of Maggie's best work is in the
silent moments where a lot of the emotions are conveyed through subtle gestures and movements.
I suppose that's why I'd like to hear more of her voice. I should say her voice is pretty
captivating too, but excuse my simping. Okay. Well, we have some new movie recommendations to check
out as well. So thank you, my friend. We're going to talk about crypto. But first we
kind of want to talk about you, the anon, because this is super fascinating to us. Why did you
decide to be an anon in crypto? And is it hard? Sure. This is one of my many pseudonyms.
There are many reasons to go in on. It's mostly a clean separation from my various hobbies.
Going back, this is actually my third anon in crypto itself. The wonderful folks from REF finance
will know my other crypto anon, which I also used on Steam since 2016. I kind of
of messed up there, you know, crossing wires between the two and ons. Anyway, specifically for
Pellinia, it was a pretty simple objective to raise awareness about sustainable scaling strategies.
It comes from a time when the prevailing narrative was something like Cardano will release
smart contracts soon with one million TPS and there'll be a mass exodus from Ethereum overnight.
I could barely believe what I was seeing and decided it would be fun to do my little bit and to
bridge the massive information asymmetry. The plan was to write a few posts and then disappear.
Obviously, that didn't quite pan out, given I'm here rambling on about.
So, yeah, it's just difficult to cover different hobbies and then move on to the next one
without any baggage, if you will.
Yeah, but this has to be difficult, juggling different lives, switching back and forth.
Is it hard?
Ah, you see.
The trick is not to juggle too many lives at the same time, but to move between them.
Most posts on my blog were written in Q2 and Q3, 2021.
At that time, this was my first.
primary hobby. Since Q4, 2021, I barely have one blog post a month so I can move on to other things.
I'd say at any given time, I only have two or three active anonns. It's not too difficult if
you plan it out. And remember to be strict about the time you spend on each. Each anon
and community has its own challenge. I'd say for crypto, it's not sure how to put this, but
the general hostility, you know, I mean, I've never had an anon on some he,
he did religious or political venue, but it's pretty fascinating how angry people are on Twitter.
Yeah, certainly. We're all too familiar with it on our side as well. So, Pellini, I've gotten a hint
that you've actually got this very rich life outside of crypto. You've apparently written dialogue.
I think you might be a film or TV connoisseur. Obviously, you've played some games on Steam.
I know you're Anon, but can you cast a little light on the life that's behind the Twitter profile?
All right. Without giving too much away, my primary interests are in the field of arts, entertainment,
and culture also happen to be my primary day jobs, so to speak, but just like my anons,
I keep moving between different projects and my work.
Moving to 32-hour work weeks has been tremendously more productive, and also, at least
for me, I know 32 hours may seem absurd for some, but yeah, also it gives me more time to
indulge my hobbies, of which there are many.
I'm generally more inclined towards humanities-related topics, but I have no idea my
what may interest me next. So I'm making it up and playing it by ear and trying to make the most
of my meaningless existence. I think you've definitely left some breadcrumbs of your strong interest
in culture on crypto Twitter and on our ETH finance. But to hear that you work at Calm 32-hour
work week with the seeming intent on experiencing the many facets of human culture that the world
has to offer seems to be at odds with the very technically adept persona that we find on crypto
Twitter. So how did you become so technically minded? And
Why bother with the drama of crypto Twitter when you could be out touching grass?
Ah, my persona is a bit of an illusion of Fugazi.
Back in 2020, when I first started writing comments on RE finance and RCC, I used a completely
different tone, more of a curious observer, more of a neutral tone.
But at some point in summer 2021, again, I realized crypto calls for a more unique strategy.
I decided to create a new blog with a new name and go on the effect.
with hyperbole bombastic statements. It worked too well, and the posts went viral within a
matter of days. In reality, I'm not technically minded at all. Heck, I couldn't read a line of
code to save my life. So I suppose the skill I'm employing here is understanding a topic that I
actually have no idea about or qualifications for and churning a narrative out of it. Crypto-Twitter
drama. I kind of regret that one. I stayed away from crypto-twitter for the longest time.
focusing mainly, mostly on my medium blog and Reddit, but got so many requests eventually buckled
under pressure. And the account grew quickly. And I stayed due to inertia and many asking me to.
And I could see my presence there was making not an insignificant impact. But anyway, I think I've
had enough now. And lately, I've only been on Twitter a couple times a week.
Okay, so maybe you're not technical, but you have this insane ability to synthesize high.
technical content and make a mental model out of it. From our perspective, the reader's perspective,
the listener's perspectives, it feels extremely technically well informed and makes you appear
that you've worked in related fields prior to crypto, something like computer science,
hardware architecture, distributed systems design. Where did all of that come from? Are you just
one of these like really smart types that can absorb information extremely fast? I'm not sure.
I think it probably comes from being curious about different topics and moving between them.
I definitely don't have an innate talent, probably just experience in identifying the important
points to get an overview of the situation, I think.
I've observed that everything we do is complex.
Some things like computer science may seem more complicated and extremely technical than something
like, I don't know, woodworking or something, but despite appearances, once you're
interested in a variety of things, to me, it seems everything is more or less equally complex.
One thing, there are some incredibly complex projects like building Apollo 11 or Birch-Kleifah that
needs millions of people to collaborate. But I mean, what an individual can process, whether it be
the chief architect, the chief scientists, there's always a broad overview that one person can
understand relatively easily. You know, I think the other thing people like about your voice is that
it feels like non-tribal. It's almost scientific in its approach. So you come at things from a
neutral perspective, you're building on first principles. These are economic and technical,
and I think people find that refreshing. The fact that you're not a crypto-shill. You almost seem to have
this love-hate relationship with crypto, and you appreciate its virtues, but you're also quick to call
out the vapor and the fluff. Why do you have this love-hate relationship with crypto?
Well, I wouldn't say it's a love-hate-and-relationship. I just have a different opinion on things in
crypto. Some things in crypto are very cool, while most of it is embarrassing, really, which is
what you would expect. I mean, it may seem refreshing because crypto is deafened by very, very loud shills.
I mean, do you feel the same? Oh, I definitely have a little bit relationship with crypto.
Crypto, I feel like it's attracted some of the best and most genuine, most human forward people
in the world. Like, we've got some of the biggest brains of our generation legitimately. But it's also
attracted these cult leaders, scammers, like these short-term thinkers. And sometimes I'm embarrassed
to even be part of this industry. And other times I couldn't be more proud to play a part in it.
But I guess I would say the reason I'm still here is because the good outweighs the bad.
At the base level, I think that's especially true. The protocol level, the cryptography level,
crypto is a technology that I think will bring tremendous freedom to the world. It's probably the most
important thing I feel like I could be doing with my time. And maybe that's where we should turn the
conversation next, Belaena. Let's turn the conversation to crypto. Yeah, I hear you, though I'm
probably a bit more on the neutral side than you are. Also, not sure if the good outweighs the bad
in its current state, but cautiously optimistic, if you will, in the long term. I think we should
start there then, because that's a distinction that's worth talking about. So David and I, as listeners
know, we're ultra optimistic about crypto.
over the long run, and I want to hear your bare case for the space. Like, in what ways could this
crypto experiment go wrong? I'm not talking about the current state. We both agree there's a ton to build
and lots to do, but in the far future, how do you think this whole crypto thing could turn out
badly for us? Crypto is a blank slate that can be used for good as much for bad. So far,
there's more gambling, and I should say, Kwanseys that have destroyed more value than they've created.
I know that's kind of an abstract opinion and also satisfying our innate gambling instincts can be looked upon as a productive, valuable use case.
But subjectively, in my humble opinion, thus far, crypto hasn't really done enough, or as Vitalik once asked, we haven't earned it.
Simultaneously, fintech and banking continue improving.
And in some developing countries, you have solutions like AliPay, M-Pesa,
or pay-tm, which are ridiculously simple and convenient.
I mean, it's not just fintech or banking.
It's pretty much everything, really.
Like y'all said on a roll-up recently, bullish humanity.
A majority of humanities not actually on crypto, but in democratic institutions,
public corporations, cooperatives who are doing their very best to improve things.
And they're no less well-intentioned, motivated, and talented than other crypto people.
we live in a prosperous time in history by many a measure.
And it's quite possible we get to a point where I'm not sure why crypto is needed.
My bull case is that crypto seamlessly integrates into the traditional venues and fills the holes.
Not holes, but let's say gaps, which in certain niches in crypto is uniquely qualified.
I'm not sure if that makes sense, but my idea is something like not bankless.
but better banks. In the very far future, I'm so bullish humanity that I think will solve our
trust issues and get rid of trustless solutions. Trust is inherently highly efficient and scalable,
and that's what's got us to this place, achieved remarkable things, and in the first place,
the best optimization is better trust, not trustless. I sometimes joke, okay, the half joke,
Ethereum will succeed when it's no longer relevant. Okay, so what I'm hearing,
is that crypto is currently neutral at best
when it comes to the value it's bringing for humanity.
We're still early, so there's still potential there.
Meanwhile, our Tradify banking system
is actually getting meaningfully better over time
and actually providing new value to the world,
banking the unbanked, connecting people financially.
And we share this idea that crypto will become the back end
to the current financial system that we have.
But I failed to see a world where the banking system
becomes system systemically superior without crypto.
Crypto, it's like tugging the banking system
by force to become better by its mere existence.
And now that crypto exists, banks must compete with it.
And only in crypto, can you codify, can't be evil.
So it forces banks to not be evil because there's this can't be evil alternative.
I don't see a world in which we produce a bull market in human trust that isn't supported
by this underlying trustless system.
It's the fact that we have the option to run trustless systems at the base layer is what
creates a flourishing of human trust on layers on top of it.
Do you agree with all that?
agree, but I don't think crypto codifies can't be evil in quotes at all. So far, we've seen a hell
of a lot of evil things happen. Tons of scammers, grifters, opportunists. The traditional
systems have checks, balances, and protections, but there's none in crypto. So I'm not sure I really
understand what you mean here. Not all of crypto obviously can't be evil. Upgrade keys, for example,
means that the window of still doing evil is very, very open. But some parts of crypto,
have been elevated into a can't be evil status.
I'd put Uniswop there, other DeFi protocols there.
What's got people so excited about Uniswap in 2019,
we all realized that there was this can't be evil liquidity primitive
that would be in our DUFI toolbox for like the rest of time.
So our idea is that the can't be evil toolbox grows and grows and grows exponentially.
And that is something that the banking layer will have to contend with by exactly what you said,
becoming better banks.
That I agree with. I definitely think technologies like Uniswap can improve banks, exchanges, and such. And I don't think we're focusing nearly enough on these proven valuable use cases. Yeah, so I actually think we're fairly aligned on that part. Like maybe Bankless Veer is a little optimistic in tone sometimes, right? No one has ever accused David and myself of being too bearish on anything in crypto. But I actually think we arrive in much the same place as what you're talking about, Polynia. Okay. So philosophy,
aside, what I love about you is that you're also an investor. And as an investor, you've got this
value accrual thesis for crypto, as do we. And I think your thesis, your value accrual thesis is unique.
And it's kind of contrarian for many others I've heard. So let's get right to that. What is your
thesis for crypto? At the end of the day, all of us want to see greater financial inclusion and
options for all, but mildly differ on what might be the best way to achieve it. I don't have
a strong thesis. I'm also not much of a crypto investor. My first impression of Bitcoin was that it doesn't
make any sense as a medium of exchange. This was back when it was the main narrative, but I thought
it's the greatest Ponzi that the world has ever seen. You see, the fatal flaw of Ponzi's before is
they had a perpetrator. Maybe Ponzi is too harsh, but I mean, it was the first, let's call it
the first non-productive collectible without a perpetrator. So my
thesis was pretty much we love to gamble and this is the best one yet that that was a while ago
i haven't owned any bitcoin for years for a variety of reasons um for the longest time i was out of
crypto markets but i got kind of interested again in 2019 with the rise of defy combined that
with eip 1559 and proof of stake and there was actually something new and interesting here
an alternative economy anchored by a productive asset.
Of course, I was watching bankless from day one since I found out about it on Areth finance.
Aside from Ether, I really don't find any asset in crypto investable.
And even ETH is far too volatile for my taste.
So sure, plenty will make a ton of money on speculation alone,
but making money is the least interesting thing about investing for me.
Investing aside, my actual ideal, let's call it a wish, is to see
protocols blossom without tokens or governance, just immutable protocols that exist as a public
good for all. Wait, hold on. If investing isn't about making money, that making money is the least
interesting part of investing, then what about it do you like about it that? Well, there's no way to
say this without sounding like a pretentious knob. So I'll say it. It is about efficient allocation
of capital in what matters most to me. As in to say, the future is a better place when we
you can allocate capital more efficiently, and you intend on allocating capital to places
that you think are good? Yeah, pretty much. I mean, good according to me anyway. As far as I mentioned
earlier, my focus is in areas of culture, arts, entertainment, but there's a deeper layer to it. It's
independent forms of art and entertainment that are innovating. A curious thing about these fields is
there are pioneering works that often go underappreciated because they're kind of far ahead of their
time, but they make an impact indirectly on society at large. Well, getting off topic here, but my
point was, investing in such works gives me a lot more satisfaction, even if I barely break even
than a sure shot trade, like say, shorting Luna or something. Oh, my God, David, we found
someone who's in it for the tech. Well, there's definitely a context to it. And I'm obviously speaking
from a position of privilege. I mean, that's a relative thing. I don't have.
any extravagant needs so I can afford to invest my money in things that matter to me.
Just wanting to get rich is absolutely fine.
Okay, back to the tokens and governance thing.
Do you see a possible universe where Ethereum has a blossoming app layer that doesn't
involve tokens or application governance?
And how would you see this future come about when we have so clearly seen the coordination
power of tokens work its magic for better or for worse?
Like, how would you see this governance-free app layer manifest?
As much as I'd like to see more experimentation on that front, I doubt it's going to happen.
People like tokens.
I think they're here to stay for better or for worse.
Maybe we'll see some protocols do very well without a token.
We wish I'll see.
All right.
So personal investing aside, I guess.
Why don't you tell us your best guess for like how all of this plays out, all layers of the stack?
How do you rank order part to the crypto tech stack on what captures the most value?
And I think we can start broad here, Polyni.
like L1 assets or the app layer, maybe we'll start there.
L1 assets or the app layer, which will accrue more value and why?
I expect the app layer to capture the most value.
With one caveat, money is the best application.
If the L1 asset is great money, then it's likely to capture a ton of value.
The thing is, aside from Bitcoin or Ethereum, most L1 assets are abysmal money, often by design.
some of them are even proud of this.
So it's probably going to be more of a case-by-case thing.
It's also important to clarify that the app layer does not necessarily mean the app token.
We've seen recently Uniswap capturing more value than Ethereum, but none of it goes to the
uny token holders.
Okay, let's quickly make this about Ethereum just for a second.
Which captures more value, ETH, ether the asset, or the aggregate Ethereum app layer?
It depends on how the Ethereum economy shapes up.
If it's largely financial in nature, with all the high value settlement happening on L1,
then there's a good chance that ETH captures a ton of value, rather more or less than the aggregate app layer is hard to say.
But it's hard to imagine it'll be much more, if at all.
An alternative outcome is most value is through consumer activity on roll-ups, in which case, the aggregate app layer definitely captures more.
I have no idea how it's going to play out, but thus far it seems crypto's lasting use case is deep.
defy. So by current trajectory, there's a decent chance, ETH becomes a very valuable asset.
All right. So the money piece. Money, you said, is the killer app. And you mentioned Bitcoin
was the best Ponzi game you'd ever seen. So between Bitcoin and Ether, which is better money?
That's an easy one. More challenging question, please. Ah, okay. You are a bankless listener.
But seriously, like, tell us why you think that. I'm assuming you think Eith. Is it the same reason
that David and I think that?
Yeah, pretty much. I mean, your listeners know it well, so I have nothing to add.
Okay, maybe. Let me attempt a devil's advocate. How should I put this? Let's say there's a chance that a bunch of wealthy people continue to believe in Bitcoin, and it remains the most valuable asset.
But I guess that doesn't necessarily mean it's better money, no?
Yeah, I mean, I guess they're tackling the money problem in different ways. Bitcoin through maximum ossification and the memetic narrative around all that.
and Ethereum by making its block space more valuable and generating this internal economy for
ETH demand.
And I definitely know which one I'm bidding on.
But why do you also say other layer ones suck at being money?
Like, do you think that changes over time?
I mean, there was a time when ETH was a much worse money than it is today.
Oh, yeah, definitely.
I'm sure any L1 that builds a strong social layer will focus on economic sustainability
eventually.
Four years ago, ETH was pretty much where most L1 assets are today.
The ultimate goal was to be money, the economic bandwidth, whatever, but you're not going to be good money in the first place if the asset has high inflation and no viable plan for economic sustainability.
I mean, we also believe that a decently high amount of decentralization is needed for an asset to become money, at least on the layer one.
Like, do you agree with that? And do you think Alt Layer 1's past this decentralization test yet?
Depends. How do you define decentralization here?
I would say anti-corruption resistance, like an inability to tinker with the dials around issuance and block rewards.
That's important. Having a large group of block producers that haven't turned into a small group of powerful cartels,
even like the ability for the average Joe techie to run a node to validate the chain as a check on block producer power, all these are important.
It's censorship resistance, it's uptime in the event of catastrophe.
You've got to have a reasonable distribution of supply and more distribution.
is always better. I also think you need defy on the base layer because a decentralized money
with a centralized banking layer isn't very useful at all. And this is one of our main criticisms of
Bitcoin. There's no defy. It's stuff like that. Hmm, that's an interesting question. I definitely
agree all those are very desirable properties. And some of them may be required for good money,
like say uptime. But I'm not sure if some others, like the average Joe running a node,
has any direct correlation on being good money, or if there are big cartels running the show,
it may not matter if the average Joe thinks the cartels are trustworthy. I mean, indirectly,
I can see that it makes for a more resilient network in extreme conditions, and thus the base
asset is better money. But yeah, I don't have much of an opinion about it right away.
Blania, a second ago you said, it depends on how the Ethereum economy shapes up if it's largely
financial in nature. That if word sticks out to me. Ryan and I,
have this thesis that all financial transactions will push out all non-financial transactions
by their very nature. Like financial transactions are worth something and therefore these transactions
can afford higher gas fees than non-financial transactions. So the idea is that Ethereum or any
crypto-economic network really naturally concludes as a financial system no matter what its initial
state is because, you know, limited blocks place supply, the ones with higher gas fees, push
out the ones with lower gas fees and the ones that have higher gas fees will be financial
in nature by the very nature.
So it seems to us that Ethereum is destined to become financially dominated in its on-chain activity.
Like, financial stuff will be a significantly dominant block-based purchaser.
Do you agree with this idea, or do you see a place for other blocks-based consumers that aren't finance stuff?
I agree with the idea.
I think it's inevitable high-value financial transactions price everything out.
I'm looking at a scenario where defy remains a niche category, and there's maybe something else.
Some novel applications on roll-ups, let's say, which Chief Mesh.
mass adoption of a billion users. In such a scenario, it's possible these applications accrue
more value than the finance stuff. That's more of a hypothetical. I think everything we have seen
so far points to financial apps being the dominant use case anyway. Ah, okay. So like maybe defy
dominates on the app layer as the majority consumer of block space on the layer one, but maybe
something like gaming takes off on layer twos, and then it's layer twos that compete with the
defy layer one to consume block space. So maybe it's like the aggregate level of gaming on a layer
two actually does compete with defy layer one block space consumption. Is that a strong possibility?
Important to note that after EIP 4844, roll-ups are no longer competing with L1 applications.
They have their own dedicated space and fee market. So let's consider the example of a game that
has its own roll-up. It's actually a volition, but anyway, it has its own consumers and it's a
multi-billion dollar business that makes more money than all of defy combined. It pays Ethereum some
negligible amount of that, but that's about it. Come to think of it, so rare is kind of like this.
They pride themselves on their Web 2-like, in quotes, experience, and their customers pay
with their credit cards and so on, and many don't even know what Ethereum is. Like I said,
after EIP 4844, it won't be competing with L1 apps either. I don't think this is likely, though.
It does seem like financial applications are the lasting sustainable product market fit for Ethereum
DAPs that will accrue most value long term.
But there are other possibilities worth considering.
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and get started securely staking your crypto assets. Okay, so, and getting back to the original
theme of this, which captures more value, the Ethereum Map layer or ETH. Let's talk about layer two
value capture execution layers. How strong is layer two value capture potential when compared to
the Ethereum layer one or the Ethereum app layer? And maybe this answer changes as to whether
it's a generalized roll up like optimism or arbitram or a specialized rollup like SarkX, which is
what Sovere is versus a ZK roll up. How do you think about this stack? There are a lot of different
dynamics at play here. Let me try to boil it down. Basically, the highest financial transactions
will accrue the most value, and those are going to remain on L1.
Likewise, the L1 DAPs will do the bulk of the high-value stuff.
Since financial apps need generalized composability, it's probable whichever L2 focuses on
defy also accrues significant value, mostly through MAV.
But you could have a different L2 with a thriving ecosystem, but lots of low-value transactions
with very little MEV or transaction fees.
Specialized roll-ups are going to be very very very.
efficient and capture no MEV in very little fees, but they may be very lucrative on the
strength of the applications revenues alone. And then you have ETH being used as money on L2s and all
L1s alike that could capture a fair bit of value too. This is where I'll probably cop out and say
this is a complex topic with many possibilities. So it depends on the nature of the L2s, their app layers,
and nature of the space, and so on. So let me see if I can summarize this. If there's a general
layer two that focuses on defy and it becomes the defy layer two, that's probably pretty
valuable because it comes with high value paid for its gas fees. It comes with MEV potential.
This is probably the highest value flavor of layer two that's possible. And after saying this,
it kind of sounds like this layer two is the closest fractal from the Ethereum layer one itself.
So that kind of just makes sense. And maybe there's a layer two that's mainly about social applications,
whether it's a generalized or app-specific roll-up. It doesn't really matter because
these social transactions, whatever they are, don't come with MEV potential. So that layer two
can't capture MEV because there is none. And a chain like this sounds like it captures little to no
value. And then there's like these application specific chains where perhaps the chain itself
captures little to no value, but the application itself does. But then it becomes dependent upon
the nature of the application itself and what it does and how much value it can capture. Is this all right?
And also does this equation change when it's an optimistic roll-up versus a DK roll-up?
That sounds about right. In reality, it's probably going to be a mix and match of all the above and a lot more.
There's also a dark horse scenario where an L2 builds an awesome money that is genuinely innovative and the L2
asset becomes the primary collateral in its ecosystem instead of Eith. I think WorldCoin is attempting a pure
money play as an L2. There are also some scenarios possible where L2 is basically free to use,
but each smart contract on it pay a small commission to the L2.
So there's a lot, a whole world of possibilities here.
I can't think of why the equation would change,
whether it's an optimistic or a ZK roll-up.
All right, so this is important.
So in the past, David and I have been really bullish
on L2 demand for Ethereum block space
as a driver for eth value accrual.
And that's the simple idea that the burn leader board,
which charts the Ethereum apps
that buy the most block space on Ethereum.
So the idea is that the top block space consumers
on that board will no longer be the open seas
and the uniswops of the world,
but they'll start to become the layer twos,
like an optimism, an arbitrum, the ZKs.
But I think you've said this idea could be completely wrong,
that after proto-dank charting in EIP 4844,
which could come as early as next year, by the way,
Ethereum Blockspace purchases by roll-ups could drop down towards zero.
In other words, it'll be extremely low cost for Roll-ups
to use Ethereum and purchase Ethereum Blockspace.
And this is great for Roll-up users, of course.
Everything gets cheaper,
but it also removes a source of value accrual
for ETH the asset. Can you go into that idea a little bit more? Okay, I think many disagree about this.
So take everything I say with a grain of salt. Today, the arbitrums and optimisms may appear on
leaderboards because Ethereum is not designed to support roll-ups. It's still in a monolithic state,
if you will. So roll-ups have to pay unnecessarily high fees due to high-value defy or NFTs or
whatever that's bidding up the global gas price. Basically, EIP 4844, introduced.
produces a dedicated data layer to Ethereum with its own fee markets that can 1,000x the current
utilization of today's roll-ups. Put another way, basically roll-ups can expand 1,000x capacity
all the while paying Ethereum a quite negligible fee. Now, once this 1,000x is saturated,
the 1559 mechanism kicks in and it gets bid up, but it's still expected to stay negligible.
And then dank sharding comes and expands that capacity by 20x.
And through the decade, Danksharting continues expanding 100x over the next decade as bandwidth
and storage gets cheaper.
And not to mention, you have off-chain data options for volidiums like data layer or
ZK Porter that are targeting some very high data bandwidths to basically millions of TPS.
Yeah, I know TPS is a pretty useless metric, but you get the idea.
So, in short, there's going to be an abundance and ever-increasing data capacity.
So one silly in a hyperbolic analogy would be data layers are like a vast ocean with roll-ups as cruise liners on top.
You'd expect the water to be pretty cheap and the cruise liner will capture much more value.
But there's more to it.
You have the settlement layer, the L1 we know and love, which will interoperate in bridge assets.
That's going to capture more value.
In the long term, though, the real driver of value accrual would be ETH's use as money on all these L-2s and indeed also all.
L1's side chains and others. And maybe even meet space someday. But yeah, like I said, many disagree.
So make of it what you will. So this is actually pretty divergent from how we've been saying on bank lists.
We've been saying that as people migrate to the layer two's and layer twos begin to dominate,
that layer twos will become the dominant buyers of layer one block space. And what you're saying
is almost the opposite of that. That EIP 4844 and then later dink charting makes layer two's
consumption of L1 block space largely negligible, even as layer two block space demand goes up.
So L2s won't be dominant consumers of layer one block space in your opinion?
Yeah, yeah, pretty much.
Meanwhile, you still have the high value financial transactions that will remain on L1.
They'll continue to dominate L1 transaction fees.
It's possible years or decades down the line, the L2 data fees aggregate it to be something
substantial, but it's probably going to require a different paradigm.
Okay, so you're assuming that L2 demand doesn't increase by a bunch of orders of magnitude
after it becomes so much cheaper.
And I got to ask the question, is that a valid assumption?
Because it seems to be the case with technologies, whether you're talking about bandwidth
or processor speeds or energy, that whenever something we like gets cheaper, we just find new
apps to use it.
So why wouldn't block space be like that?
It's kind of like people in the 1990s saying, oh, my 56K modem is fine.
What would I ever do with broadband?
Like, there's not enough apps for it.
And I get everything I need without a 10 megabits per second connection.
I'm fine with my 56K modem.
Oh, no, no.
I'm assuming that L2 demand does increase by several orders of magnitude to match the
increased supply.
Like I said, post EIP 4844, roll-ups can expand their capacity by 1,000X of today's activity,
all the while continuing to pay negligible fees to Ethereum.
It's only after this 1000X capacity is saturated, does the 1559 like mechanism kick in.
But by then, we'll be ready to expand the capacity again with full dank sharding.
But there are deeper factors at play here.
I don't know how deep we want to get into this.
But basically, it's much easier to scale data on a data layer than execution on the rollup.
Assuming there are no other bottlenecks, you simply add more data sampling nodes and your data capacity increases.
This is very much unlike execution layers where adding more nodes actually reduces throughput.
Bandwidth, which is the chief bottleneck for data layers, also increases much faster than compute,
which is the chief bottleneck for roll-ups.
So I actually had a thread about the dynamics on how compute advancements are slowing down on a cost basis.
So there are many factors at play here, which ultimately result in data being the relatively abundant resource.
Okay. So let's assume all that is true.
that L2s do not produce high fee revenue for Ethereum since data in this world is so plentiful
in post-dank charting.
So does that mean that L2 tokens themselves accrue all of the value?
And if so, is this bearish for ETH the asset?
I think we're going to see some innovation with how L2 tokens accrue value.
The obvious candidate would be congestion fees plus MEV.
But I have a hunch that in the long term, the most efficient fee markets and MV mitigations
may leave an L2 with a competitive investment.
advantage. I mean, an advantage versus other L2s where users pay a high cost, both in congestion fees and MEV.
It could be that some L2s build strong network effects or have other special features or higher
security where users are happy to pay a bit of premium. Then there's also the alternative mechanisms,
like I mentioned earlier, maybe you have an L2 that has no transaction fees, but instead
takes small commissions from the DAPs deployed on it. I can see this go a lot of ways.
and some L2 tokens become valuable, especially the ones with network effects in a thriving financial
ecosystem. Worth noting that while data may be abundant and not that expensive, there will be larger
entities bridging in and out. Roll-ups will be interoperating with each other, and so the settlement
layer will probably remain pretty busy. Definitely not bearish for ETH, as ETH will be the primary
money used across most of these L-2s. Some will definitely push their own assets, but ETH just has a much
larger economic capacity in any roll-up that outright shunzeeat will be at a massive competitive
disadvantage. It's also important to note that roll-ups are entirely additive to the broader
Ethereum ecosystem, actually. I've also previously argued, so are Alt-L-1s and side chains.
They induced new demand that wouldn't have otherwise existed given Ethereum's limited capacity.
It's kind of like the budget airlines, boom, you know. People were worried that budget airlines,
Ryanair would kill Air France or whatever. But in reality, they just ended up expanding the overall
demand for air travel, including the premium carriers. Okay, so you just said that ETH will be
the primary money in layer two's. Why? Like, why not stable coins or why not layer two native
assets, the tokens, or why not Bitcoin? Straight away, not Bitcoin, because currently there's no
secure way to bridge Bitcoin. I've seen some designs for trust minimized bridges to Bitcoin,
but what I've seen, it's mostly going to be a one-way bridge.
Definitely a good idea for roll-ups to build this and start swallowing some of that Bitcoin,
but ETH is much easier, natively secured by roll-up bridges.
Like I mentioned, Eith just has a larger capacity,
so it's just a better economic collateral than anything in this industry, barring Bitcoin.
But yeah, maybe a roll-up comes up with a brilliant money design,
and it gains serious value.
I do expect to see stable coins play an important role,
but the USDA may be an awesome medium of exchange, but it's quite a poor store of value.
Also the standard unit of account, but again, a poor store of value.
So for a lot of the use cases, we expect in defy, we need something more sound like Ethereum
of Bitcoin.
Okay, I want to zoom out and integrate all of this because this is actually new for me.
The bankless thesis has been that layer two is bullish for the layer one because aggregate
block space demand for layer two translates into blocks based demand for the layer one.
with 48444-4-4, this becomes not true, and necessarily so, it becomes not true,
because if there was a relationship between layer one and layer two block space consumption,
if that relationship was preserved, this actually limits layer two scale.
So we need to decouple the relationship between layer two and layer one block space
to fully, like, take off the brakes of layer two's scalability.
But then that begs the question, how do layer twos remain aligned with layer ones?
if layer twos are only consuming the minimum amount of layer one block space,
therefore contributing the minimum amount to layer one security,
meanwhile they are hosting this massive burgeoning GDP on top of them,
and the Ethereum L1 doesn't have a share of that,
does that make layer two's parasitic to the layer ones?
And your answer is no, because first, Ethereum will be money inside of these layer twos.
Ethism, money network effects are too strong for a single layer two token to penetrate.
And two, trade between these layer twos,
will route through the layer ones, either directly or indirectly via bridges.
Am I understanding this correct?
In most cases, it's going to be a symbiotic relationship.
It's notoriously hard to build large economic security, economic bandwidth, and liquidity across many assets.
To the point, only Bitcoin and Ethereum have succeeded.
Although, some may argue that they are both pretty negligible in the grand scheme of the global economy.
By paying a negligible fee to Ethereum, the roll-up,
gets fully secure access to all this liquidity and security. It's a huge win. Meanwhile,
Ethereum also wins because it wouldn't have supported any of this activity anyway. But there are
definitely edge cases to consider. Let's consider a scenario like you mentioned where you have a
massive L2 and its token is some significant fraction market cap of ETH, let's say 20% or so.
There's two ways to look at this. Firstly, this is activity that Ethereum is.
is unable to host anyway.
So there's no real loss there.
From the other side, from the Rollo's perspective,
they're paying such a negligible fee to Ethereum that it doesn't make any sense for them
to risk losing access to all the security and liquidity that brought them so much success
in the first place.
But on the other hand, if they contributed a significant amount, let's say 50% of its fees
to L1, then they would be well justified in spinning out their own L1.
So it may turn out that low value accrual from L2s is actually for the best.
Look, I think at the end of the day, all this is a bit of a red herring.
And any activity outside of the Ethereum L1 is net additive to the industry at large
and the broader Ethereum ecosystem in specific, because Ethereum L1 wasn't going to host
this activity anyway.
So there's this frequent meme or critique out of some of the alternative ecosystems out there.
Cosmos, definitely, I think, but also other.
others too, that the Ethereum model forces layer twos or ecosystems to pay rent to the Ethereum
overlord, or more specifically, more nefariously, ether holders themselves. Does the 4844 model
take the wind out of the sales of this critique? Okay. This whole pay rent thing, in quotes,
is quite absurd. Ethereum provides the highest quality settlement services and roll-ups bid for them.
It's as simple as that. By the way, I'm pretty sure with Cosmos, you have,
chains paying some portion of their fee to Adam. No. I'm pretty sure I saw some chain planning to pay
25% of their transaction fees to Adam. Anywho, 4844 is explicitly designed. And later, full dink
sharding too, of course, designed so roll-ups pay as little fees as possible. I'd expect a busy,
successful roll-up will pay less than 1% of its fees to Ethereum long-term, though you may
also have ghost chain roll-ups that pay a lot more because they fail to accrue value themselves.
In this world where the majority of crypto-economic GDP is hosted on layer two's, what does the
layer one look like? Is Ethereum just like a marketplace for liquidity and trade across these
various layer twos would remain on the layer one? What remains on layer one is the majority
of the crypto-economic GDP, of course, the world is highly unequal. And this is very directly
reflected in crypto. Come to think of it, I'd even argue, crypto will remain even more
in equal with the absence of any social welfare or redistributive mechanisms.
So basically, the top 1% entities will be responsible for 99% of the GDP.
Financial institutions, billionaires, governments, and the like will always choose the most
robust, the most secure space. And that'll always be Ethereum L1. When you're transacting millions
of dollars, you couldn't care less if the fee is one cent or $100.
So even if you have 99% a normies on L2, it could be that 99% of the economic activity
in dollar terms or E terms remains on L1.
It's also important to remember the L1 itself will keep improving and expanding capacity
with one of the splurge roadmap items being upgraded to an enshrined ZK EVM roll-up.
So you think that the current DFI blue chips, like,
Uniswap, Maker, AVE, won't have to uproot themselves and find new homes.
Their primary headquarters will always be the Ethereum Layer 1.
Yeah, you can definitely think of Ethereum L1 as their home base.
Their headquarters.
It's where their protocols and most of their liquidity will live.
The challenge, then, is seamlessly making all of this available to the various L2s.
I've seen some interesting ideas from the likes of Maker and Avey in development to address this,
and I'm sure more will come.
another possibility is they deploy their own roll-up and make that their headquarters while still being fully secured by Ethereum, of course,
but this will only be possible for some protocols where atomic composability isn't a big deal.
What kind of defy app do you think would be most suited to have its own app specific layer two, like the unichane, for example?
Are there certain kind of defy apps in which this would make sense?
I haven't really thought about it.
I've actually discussed this with a couple of defy protocols.
The main thing you lose is atomic composability with other Ethereum L1D5 protocols.
Although this is only partially true because technically you can have a ZK roll-up that settles every slot that can compose with L1.
Well, at least one way for now.
I'm not sure if a uniswap chain makes sense, though, because it's atomically exchanging assets that already exist.
But I just now realize that a uniswap chain might make sense where it connects.
assets from all L2s in one place, maybe? But I don't know. Clearly just a shower thought.
All right. So to tie off the scalability and value accrual topic just now, in a recent podcast we had
with Olaf from Pauly Chain, he's investor, of course, he said this and it kind of stuck with me.
It's all just chains and bridges. That's what he said. And what he meant was, Ethereum is nothing
special. It's just another chain. Any chain has a path to become an L1 like Ethereum. And he expects
many to start to follow Ethereum's path. Ethereum is not special in this way. He even expects
bridges to start to host smart contracts and enter the value accrual game, starting to compete with
Ethereum on that level. And this is very different from the bankless thesis. The bankless thesis
believes we're more likely to see a power law winning chain as a settlement layer with
a globally significant monetary asset at its base. And currently we see Ethereum as the primary
contender for this role, though the bankless thesis is completely open to others.
taking that role and taking that throne. And in this world, there are many chains and many bridges.
It's still a multi-chain world, but only a few of them get to become a global monetary asset and serve as the
world's settlement layer. Maybe not even a few, maybe just one, maybe two. And I believe that these are the
tool dueling ideas in crypto, maybe from crypto's inception. You have chains versus bridges,
you have that thesis versus the crypto money thesis on the other side. It's kind of like copy.
Cosmos versus Ethereum, the core thesis for the space. Which do you see is more correct? Or is there
some space in between these two? Why not both? I mean, that's what Ethereum delivers, the best
money and the best chains and the best bridges. Thank you. Plena. Let's get into some fun stuff.
Can you steel man the Cardano ecosystem? What are the best properties of Cardano?
This one's easier than you may think. It's by far the largest L1 outside of Bitcoin and
Ethereum with a strong philosophy of inclusive accountability. I'd even argue they skew closer to Bitcoin
than Ethereum as to how cheap and easy running their nodes should be. They have a very enthusiastic,
very engaged, and probably third best social layer generally. Okay, I'll just say it. L-1s are basically
cults. And the Cardano Colt is pretty dedicated. Their validator distribution is the best in the
industry, better than Bitcoin and Ethereum in its current state. And they also,
have strong teams working on roll-ups like Orbis and Micamida and probably the most activity
happening around next-gen scaling solutions outside of Ethereum and Tezos. I'd say Cardano is the
best position to be the number two settlement layer for roll-ups after Ethereum, but no idea if they
can pull it off. Have we on bankless been unnecessarily mean to Cardano? No. Okay, okay, why not?
A lot of it is definitely well-deserved. Haskinson's a bit of a bit of
a bell end and their shills are obnoxiously loud, at least during the bull markets.
I'll have to say, as obnoxious as crypto Twitter generally is, some of the most polite
discussions I've had were with Cardano people. They sincerely believe in their mission of maximizing
decentralization, keeping nodes easy to run, and following on from Bitcoin while avoiding
Ethereum's mistakes. At the same time, making Cardano the laughing stock is undeserved. They are a real
project with real research and development, and they have a strong community. Now, personally,
I'm very skeptical. It'll ever amount to anything. So anytime an ADA, she'll make some bombastic
statement, please don't hold back. All right, fair take. But I'm going to wait until I see some
blocks-based fees, at least. Let's talk about cults and crypto. Obviously, this industry is especially
tribal, of course. Would you say that tribalism in crypto is a bug or a feature? What do you see as a role
of cults in this industry. I mean, what else is there? So everything in crypto is a cult?
I mean, I think there's definitely a clean distinction to be made between productive and
unproductive assets. And there's definitely assets that are not Ponzi's and communities that are
not cults. So far, there's nothing in crypto where a vast majority of its value isn't derived
purely from being a cult. I mean, the whole L1 mania was driven purely by an expectation to
accrue as little value as possible. I mean, what would you call this, if not a cult?
But maybe that's what society's built on. Cults. Most of our earliest institutions probably
started that way. I'd say there's still a distinction to be made, but let's move on.
As we wrap this up, let's zoom out a little bit. And this will be a two-part question.
If you could snap your fingers and change one thing about crypto and you can't just like delete
all the scams and the short-termism, what would it be? It feels to me like there's this general delusions
of grandeur. People think that they can reinvent the wheel from scratch or whatever. This is rather
naive as we have for millennia evolved and developed systems and done so in an extremely
diverse and decentralized manner. Too often we see crypto protocols throw away these basic
learnings only to fail miserably and then to start to incorporate some of this wisdom in a
haphazard manner. I think crypto would be a lot better off to be more humble and pragmatic. Take from
traditional avenues what works and build on them, improve them, and of course to integrate with
the traditional avenue where it makes sense. You want to build solutions that work for everyone,
not just a few holy warring purists. So you want us to get practical? Pretty much,
or at least don't do stupid things that have been proven time and time again to not work to
the heons. Yes, I love this. We often say on bank lists, we're speed running the history of money
and finance and human organization. And we're not saying we're speed running all of that,
to throw it all away. I'm saying no need to speed run it. Let's just start from where we already are. I mean,
imagine how incredible our accomplishments as a species has been that we can build something like
a blockchain in the first place. I mean, don't throw it away. Build on the shoulders of giants.
Okay, the second part of this question is to zoom out even further. If you could snap your fingers
and change something about the whole entire world, what would it be? Probably a terrible answer,
but I wouldn't change a thing. Damn, not even world peace?
I mean, sure, I can point at 100 different things that are bad, unfair, or even selfishly
everything that causes me suffering personally. But this is the human experience. It's an absolute
miracle we exist. We shall grow. Learn and improve together. Well said, the human experience is
irreplaceable and life is an absolute miracle. And it's been a pleasure to share this miracle
in space and time with you, Polania. Last thing then. We want to open the mic to you. This is
the first time you've been on a podcast, you now have a human voice, and the entire crypto
community is listening. What do you want to say to them as we close? Oh, I don't have much more
to say. Okay, maybe just enjoy yourself. Make sure you're entertained. The pleasure has been
mine. I'm eager to see what Polina sounds like outside of shit posting on Twitter.
Well, from the perspective of the listener, it would appear that you've spent about 45 minutes
with us chatting, but in actuality, it's been about five hours in Discord together. So,
Pollyne, thank you so much for your time. I would be shocked if it were only 45 minutes.
Ryan and I are currently in debate as to how long this transcript will actually turn into
audio length. Sounds like I'm taking the underside to you both. Yeah, I think this is over
60 minutes easy, but we'll see. I really have no idea, and that is the fun part. So let's wrap
this up. Pellania, thank you for joining us in Bankless. And also, I want to take a moment to give you
my personal thanks. You taught me something brand new about Ethereum in 2021 and stretched my
understanding of crypto through your modular blockchain thesis. We made an entire podcast about this.
Thank you so much. I really appreciate it. And I hope you stay with us in the years ahead.
Thank you. And for everything you've done to educate us. By the looks of it, there's a whole
lot of educating still left to be done. And I'll be cheering from the sidelines.
All right. Action items for the bankless nation, some education. We'll include a link to our
modular versus monolithic blockchain show in the notes. This is a digest of everything Polenia taught us about
blockchain scalability and roll-ups last year. Go listen to it. I consider this required listening.
If you want to understand Ethereum and roll-up scalability, we'll also include some links to
Polania's top articles. Make sure you read them to understand their full thesis. Hey, Palena,
it's time for me to do the risks and disclaimers, but would you like to do them instead?
Wow. Has anyone done this before? You'll be the first, but it's a thing that we're going to start doing.
And disclaimers, crypto is risky. You could lose what you put in. But we're headed west.
This is the frontier. It's not for everyone. But we're glad you're with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
