The Breakdown - Governments Couldn’t Ban Bitcoin Even if They Wanted To
Episode Date: February 28, 2021Today on “Long Reads Sunday,” NLW reads “Can Governments Stop Bitcoin?” by Alex Gladstein, published recently by Quillette. Gladstein argues that both technical and legal attacks on bitcoin ar...e extremely difficult to execute, even for large governments. -- Earn up to 12% APY on Bitcoin, Ethereum, USD, EUR, GBP, Stablecoins & more. Get started at nexo.io -- Enjoying this content? SUBSCRIBE to the Podcast Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/podcast/id1438693620?at=1000lSDb Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/538vuul1PuorUDwgkC8JWF?si=ddSvD-HST2e_E7wgxcjtfQ Google: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9ubHdjcnlwdG8ubGlic3luLmNvbS9yc3M= Follow on Twitter: NLW: https://twitter.com/nlw Breakdown: https://twitter.com/BreakdownNLW The Breakdown is produced and distributed by CoinDesk.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW.
It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world.
The breakdown is sponsored by nexo.io and produced and distributed by CoinDesk.
What's going on, guys? It is Sunday, February 28th, and that means it's time for Long Reads Sunday.
This week, we have a returning guest to the show, although it's not actually his voice, it's his
words through my voice. Today we're going to read, can government stop Bitcoin by Alex Gladstein
that was published last week by Quillette. This has obviously been a big theme for Alex Gladstein
and for the industry as a whole. Alex was on the show to discuss exactly this point with Ben Hunt a few
months ago, so I'm really excited to get his matured, cogent, written down thoughts, and I know that
you're going to enjoy it too. Can Governments Stop Bitcoin by Alex Gladstein?
Since its creation more than 12 years ago, Bitcoin is undefeated.
Its price has leapt from 5 to 50 to 500 to 5,000 to now past $50,000.
The number of global users has eclipsed $100 million.
The system's network security, number of developers, and new applications are at all-time highs.
Dozens of companies, including Tesla and Square, have started to add Bitcoin to their corporate
treasuries.
This worldwide success doesn't mean that people haven't tried to stop Bitcoin.
The Digital Money Project has in fact survived a variety of attacks which in some cases threatened its existence.
There are two main vectors, network attacks on the software and hardware or infrastructure,
and legal attacks on Bitcoin users.
Before we explore them and consider why they failed, let's start at the beginning.
In January 2009, a mysterious coder going by the name of Satoshi Nakamoto launched Bitcoin,
an open-source financial network with big ambitions,
to replace central banking with a decentralized peer-to-peer system with no rulers.
It would use a programmable, highly fungible token that could be spent like electronic cash or saved
like digital gold. It would be distributed around the world through a set-in-stone money-printing
schedule to a subset of users who would compete to secure the network with energy and in return
get freshly minted Bitcoin. Initially, most were understandably skeptical and very few paid
attention. There had been attempts at creating e-cash before and all had failed. No one had been
able to figure out how to create a decentralized, incorruptible mint, or how to grow a system that
couldn't be stopped by governments. But a small community grew around Bitcoin, which promised just that.
Led by Satoshi and Hal Finney, this group of iconoclast discussed, tinkered with and improved
the software in its first years, using their computers to mine 50 worth us Bitcoin every 10 minutes.
Eventually, someone decided these virtual tokens were worth enough to accept in return for a real-world good.
On May 22nd, 2010, a developer named Laslo Hanyes paid 10,000 Bitcoin for two Papa John's pizza
at an exchange rate of 0.1 cents per Bitcoin. No one could have predicted that Laslo's pizza order would
one day be so costly. Today, this order is worth more than $500 million. Since the early days of
PC mining and the Silk Road, Bitcoin has become a global phenomenon. No one knows who Satoshi is,
but if their creation was a company, it would be one of the world's top 10 most valuable.
Its fan base has grown from a few pseudonyms on cypherpunk message boards to include the
likes of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Harvard professor Neil Ferguson,
Fidelity CEO, Abby Johnson, actress Lindsay Lohan, singer-soldier boy,
skateboarder Tony Hawk, and investor Paul Tudor Jones. It has its own unicorn character.
An industry conference held this month focusing on how to add Bitcoin to corporate treasuries
drew more than 6,000 companies. MIT boasts a research center contributing to long-term Bitcoin
security. Bitcoin markets have popped up in virtually every country in major urban area on Earth,
with local traders eager to buy Bitcoin in exchange for local currency, everywhere from Caracas to
Manila to Moscow. Millions of people in Nigeria, Argentina, Iran, Cuba, and beyond are now using
Bitcoin to escape their local currency system and opt into something with a better track record as a
store of value than the Naira, Bolivar, Real, or peso. They can control their Bitcoin with a private
key, think password, that they can store on a phone, USB stick, on paper, or even with memorized
word lists, and send the currency to family or friends anywhere on Earth in minutes, with no permission
from any authority required. The mainstream media typically portrays Bitcoin as a penitory.
any stock gone wild or a new kind of digital tulip mania. But the reality is Bitcoin is a political
project that threatens to fundamentally disrupt the Davos-led economic system, with everyone from
Janet Yellen to Christine Lagarde expressing fear about its rise and demanding it be regulated.
Governments retain their power in part by issuing and controlling money. Bitcoin is a new model
that Minson secures money without governments. So the big question is, why haven't governments or
Megacorp's stopped it. And if they try to attack Bitcoin in the near future, what would that look like?
There is an enormous amount of speculation on the internet about how Bitcoin might be attacked,
but few stopped to think about why it hasn't already been destroyed. The answer is that there
are political and economic incentives for more and more people to push the system forward
and strengthen its security, and strong political, economic, and technical disincentives that
discourage attacks. Certainly, Bitcoin isn't too small to draw the attention of governments.
previous attempts at parallel online digital currencies like Egold and Liberty Reserve were shut down
by the U.S. government before even making it to $10 billion in market capitalization.
Bitcoin now has a market cap north of $1 trillion.
Every day Bitcoin survives, it becomes stronger, and for many attack vectors, the windows
are rapidly closing.
One reason that Bitcoin is so tenacious is that it is a globally distributed phenomenon.
The vast majority of mining takes place outside of the U.S. in China and Central Asia.
but the vast majority of Bitcoin holders and buyers appear to be U.S. and EU entities.
And the software's core developers and node runners who host Bitcoin's servers are scattered
throughout the world. The most important person in Bitcoin, its inventor, is no longer
relevant and could even be dead. Coding, mining, infrastructure, and markets are all independent,
happening in competing jurisdictions and geopolitical rivals, often done by anonymous or pseudo-anonymous
actors, all with different philosophies and goals, but with one uniting motivation to keep Bitcoin
going. Unlike every other cryptocurrency, there is no central point of failure. Bitcoin has no
Vitalik Buterin, no Ethereum Foundation, no Deltech Bank like Tether, no fancy offices in San Francisco,
no team of lawyers, no governance token, no VC backing, no pre-mine, no small counsel, and no whales
able to manipulate the system. This decentralized architecture has already insulated Bitcoin
from attacks at the highest levels. No matter how much Bitcoin you own, you can't change the rules,
print more, censor, steal, or prevent others from using the network. Arguably the most powerful
financial force in the world, the U.S. government, led by then Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin,
just launched an attack on Bitcoin in December 2020. It was not a particularly strong one, but still
an attack nonetheless, which would have forced U.S. exchanges to gather more information about
individuals withdrawing their Bitcoin to wallets they control than even mainstream banks collect,
handing the surveillance state much more intricate knowledge of Bitcoin's flow of funds.
But the crackdown failed, stymied by a broad coalition of opposition, and Mnuchin is now gone.
The new U.S. regulatory regime might be less aggressive.
In fact, incoming SEC chairman Gary Gensler once taught a class about Bitcoin.
Cynthia Lummis, a freshly elected senator from Wyoming and passionate Bitcoin supporter,
has been named to the Senate Banking Committee.
That means one of the most powerful bodies in the U.S. financial system, now sports a member
who recently tweeted about Bitcoin,
I came for the store of value, I stayed for the censorship resistance.
Lummus joins Warren Davidson and others in Congress who have vowed to defend Bitcoin.
The biggest attack in Bitcoin's history came in 2017 at the software level.
That spring, a handful of the most important industry actors gathered and signed what it's called
the New York Agreement. The authors boasted more than 83% of the global mining hashpower, more than
50 total companies, more than 20 million wallets, and a huge share of the payment infrastructure.
It was an alliance between Chinese miners, Silicon Valley, and Wall Street, and their goal
was to change Bitcoin to allow it to process more transactions per second at the cost of sacrificing
decentralization and the ability of users to audit the monetary supply from home.
Despite the odds, a handful of grassroots activists ended up building a movement that stunningly
defeated this New York alliance. By November 2017, the corporate Segwit 2x plan was dead, and Bitcoin
remained decentralized. The lesson from these scaling wars is that neither miners nor corporations
control Bitcoin. Yes, miners process transactions, and developers propose upgrades to the software,
but tens of thousands of users running nodes actually decide what transactions are valid and what
software version is adopted. Even if a government took control of a majority of the Bitcoin
hash rate, this doesn't enable them to change the Bitcoin consensus rules or print more Bitcoin
or steal anyone's holdings. The worst they could do is use their power to mine new versions
of Bitcoin, which in the case of BCH or BSV has failed spectacularly, or burn billions of dollars
to temporarily damage the network in what's called the 51% attack. In such an attack, a majority
of miners could team up and use their superior hash rate to momentarily overwhelm the network. The
price of the hardware required would exceed $5 billion. Even if a government did want to risk that much
on such an exotic assault, it is unlikely they would divert the precious fabrication capacity of the
world's few semiconductor manufacturers to this very speculative purpose. For China or the U.S.,
disrupting existing semiconductor orders during a global shortage could put national security at
stake. An alternative would be to seize a majority of the world's mining equipment in a military
operation, but the logistics of trying to locate and violently capture hundreds of thousands of five-pound
machines owned by often suit anonymous actors across dozens of jurisdictions would be hugely prohibitive.
Speculation about other technical attacks on Bitcoin abounds. Mining pools censoring transactions.
Miners make more profit from not censoring can quickly switch to non-censoring pools and may adopt
software that makes censorship impossible. A global internet shutdown could be disruptive but not fatal.
Mining hardware back doors. This actually happened but was not exploited and the threat is now fading.
Quantum computers breaking Bitcoin's cryptography. Not to be taken seriously, according to experts.
and even bad actors making harmful updates to the codebase, this wouldn't stand a chance against
hundreds of watchful developers. The fact is, despite constant fearmongering about how Bitcoin could
fail, all users have always been able to transact. There have been no significant acts of censorship.
Attempts to disrupt the protocol or the network infrastructure would be incredibly difficult
and costly to attempt and have no guarantee of success. As we saw in 2017, even if powers
are able to amass a supermajority of the hash rate, they could be defeated by the network's
decentralized architecture. Far easier and far more likely are attacks on users themselves.
There are several nightmare scenarios that Bitcoiners fear that don't involve science fiction around
governments teaming up in a mission-impossible-style mission to seize billions of dollars
of energy and mining equipment. One such fear is four numbers, 6102.
Looking for the best way to stay on top of your investment game? Nexo.io has you covered in three
easy steps with their high-yield savings account for digital assets. Step one, create an account at nexo.io.
Step two, transfer assets to your secure NXO wallet with no minimum or maximum limits on funds deposited.
Step three, sit back, relax, and earn up to 12% compounding interest paid out daily on your crypto and fiat.
Your passive income made simple.
Get started at nexo.io.
In 1933, the FDR administration passed Executive Order 6102, which banned citizens from holding gold and force them to turn in any gold to the authorities.
The U.S. government, or any other government, could try doing the same, giving citizens a window to
to declare and sell their Bitcoin to the government or else face jail time. The Bitcoin community is already
preparing for such an attack. One reason 6102 was so successful is that the government could just
go to banks that held gold on behalf of their citizens and seize it at point of custody.
So every January 3rd, users celebrate Proof of Keys Day, where it is customary to withdraw any Bitcoin
they own on exchanges or in the custody of third parties to wallets that the end users control.
Not your keys, not your coins, first popularized by Bitcoin educator Andreas Antonopoulos, is a community mantra.
With more than 10% of the American population using Bitcoin, if enough people self-custody, then a 6102 attack would be of limited effect.
Given that the keys to your Bitcoin account are typically in the form of 24 seed words that can be written down, hidden, encoded, or memorized,
a military home-by-home raid couldn't work very well and would constitute a mass set of human rights violations.
Another regulatory threat would be a new, unrealized gains tax on Bitcoin, which would be devastating
to long-term savers or strict new know-year customer rules, making it a crime to buy Bitcoin through
an unauthorized issuer. But such rules have many obstacles. First and Fourth Amendment protections,
numerous senators and congressmen pushing for a more Bitcoin-inclusive policy, and a large and
growing cryptocurrency industry that would vigorously lobby against such rules. Governments could try
to marginalize Bitcoin by introducing a competitor, a central bank digital currency. Most central bank
worldwide are experimenting with the idea of replacing banknotes with digital tokens that citizens
could hold in mobile wallets. One argument that promoters of these systems make is that they could help
check the thirst for Bitcoin. Ultimately, however, CBDCs like China's DeSep can't compete because
their floating global price will be tied to the existing fiat currency, which will inevitably
fall in relative purchasing power. Meanwhile, Bitcoin's purchasing power continues to rise over time,
and it offers a level of transactional freedom and privacy from the state that no CBDC could ever boast.
Another attack vector could be a ban on the act of Bitcoin mining itself inside democracies.
Today, many mainstream media articles describe Bitcoin as an environmental disaster.
In reality, it relies heavily on renewable energies, estimates range from 39% to 74%,
consumes a lot of stranded or excess energy, and could very well have a mostly green future.
But given the poorly informed narratives around the subject, one could imagine a world in which
the Biden administration restricts Bitcoin mining as part of a Green New Deal.
The two-bitcoin problem is perhaps the biggest existing threat to Bitcoin users today.
If the top 25 global exchanges in the U.S., EU, and East Asia agreed to end user withdrawals,
then that would effectively bifurcate the system.
Bitcoin inside the bubble would be whitelisted and Bitcoin outside could be blacklisted,
meaning if a merchant accepts Bitcoin from you that is not on a certain list, they'd be running a risk.
No matter how private you are with your Bitcoin, it wouldn't matter.
You'd need to find people willing to accept your Bitcoin with no trail.
Such laws would force users into peer-to-peer markets where buyers don't care about coin history.
Even still, there are a lot of barriers to this attack.
Exchanges would lose millions of customers and billions of dollars of business.
The defy ecosystem would potentially collapse, given it relies on users being able to purchase
ETH with dollars on big exchanges and then withdraw to trading platforms like Uniswap.
Companies in this space would vigorously resist any change that would prevent citizens from withdrawing
Bitcoin or any cryptocurrency to self-controlled wallets.
As these examples show, there are plenty of kinds of regulatory attacks that should concern Bitcoin users,
and they are much more likely than cryptographic or hash rate attacks on the network.
But the reality is that many legal attacks have already happened, and they have been ineffective.
In 2017, the Chinese Communist Party restricted the ability of citizens to exchange R&B for Bitcoin.
Shortly thereafter, the Indian government did the same, followed by the Pakistani government
and several others.
In other words, the two largest governments in the world tried to cut off Bitcoin access to their
citizenry at the most obvious point, the on and off ramps were citizens exchange local currency
for Bitcoin through exchanges. Last year, the Indian Supreme Court reversed this rule,
and Bitcoin is no longer restricted. The government is again seeking to pass a bill
prohibiting Bitcoin in all non-state cryptocurrencies, while also launching a digital currency
to be issued by the Reserve Bank of India. But in the meantime, local usage grows. In China, after the
2017 restrictions, some companies moved to other countries in East Asia, but continue to do
business with Chinese customers. Two of the biggest exchanges for the Chinese market, Huobi and
Okkoyin, still service millions of Chinese. In Pakistan, Bitcoin is de facto banned, but adoption is
exploding. In Nigeria, the government is currently promising to freeze the bank accounts of any
citizens who are identified as buying or selling Bitcoin. This regime has tried similar tactics
before, but all have failed. What these actions actually accomplish is to drive citizens and do
harder to control peer-to-peer markets, and into the arms of risk-tolerant entrepreneurs committed to
helping their fellow citizens access a better financial system. In the United States, the recent last-minute
attack by Secretary Manuchin aside, American financial activity is increasingly monitored under laws
like the Bank's Secrecy Act. In line with this trend, cryptocurrency exchanges have introduced more
stringent identification requirements for their customers, as well as increasingly small withdrawal
limits. So far, though, Americans are still easily able to buy Bitcoin and withdraw it to wallets they
control, and this will be defended by new powerful allies. Senator Lummis and Congressman Davidson,
McHenry, Emmer, and Soto, as well as state leaders like Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, have all come out in support
of Bitcoin, whether by hosting the white paper on their websites, promising to fend off overly restrictive
regulation, or pledging to make their jurisdictions hotspots for Bitcoin entrepreneurial activity
and innovation. Mayor Suarez, for example, is pushing for employees of the city of Miami to earn a
percentage of their salary in Bitcoin, for residents to be able to pay taxes in Bitcoin, and to include
Bitcoin as part of the city's investment portfolio. Some argue that corporate America will try to
attack Bitcoin, but so far, it seems like big companies are instead trying to join the party.
In the past few months, Tesla, MicroStrategy Square, Grayscale, and others are buying up billions of
dollars more Bitcoin than the amount being produced through mining. And as savvy investors will
realize, ultimately, you can't separate Bitcoin from its cypherpunk nature. Bitcoin is only value
as an asset because of its decentralization, since no one can arbitrarily change its rules or decide
to print more. Driven by self-interest, Wall Street may ironically end up being one of the biggest
cheerleaders of this new technology that Washington can't control. So far, it seems that when governments
try to ban or restrict Bitcoin, it ends up merely accelerating the adoption of the currency
inside their countries. Governments that have failed miserably with their wars on drugs may find
stopping people from holding something that's invisible, borderless, and teleporting much more difficult.
governments will face major obstacles from the tech and financial industries, but also from the fact
that restrictions on Bitcoin ownership can clash with free speech, privacy, and private property
protections. Confiscation will require brutality, and it's not clear that all governments have
the stomach or ability. In the end, Bitcoin's biggest defense is human nature itself. We are
greedy and self-interested, and this applies to our governments. Already, some authorities are starting
to mine or encourage mining. This is happening everywhere from Beijing to Kentucky to Siberia to
Ukraine. As the price rises, more and more are buying into Bitcoin's value as a long-term store
of value and inflation hedge. Just as some governments with weak currencies have been forced
to dollarize, others in the future could be forced to accumulate Bitcoin. It's a rivalrous
planet. Why would a government attack Bitcoin if it could gain more from using its energy
monopoly or ability to print fiat to buy some? The rich and powerful will always design systems
that benefit them before everyone else. The genius of Bitcoin is to take advantage of that
very base reality and force them to get involved in help.
run the system instead of attacking it. In a world with friendly U.S. regulators, rogue regimes mining Bitcoin
to print dollars, and citizens of the world demanding an asset that can't be inflated away,
the incentive to attack Bitcoin is dwindling. In the end, the only way to kill Bitcoin may be
to make it so that people don't need it anymore. If no one wants a devaluation-proof,
censorship-resistant, permissionless, borderless, non-discriminatory, teleporting financial asset,
then no one will feed it energy and it will die. Perhaps humanity can come up with another
technology that addresses these needs. But until then, Bitcoin will thrive.
Hoo, officially a long read. And the only thing that I want to point out actually goes back to
my Thursday show about why Bitcoin investing is ESG investing. In that podcast, I made the
argument that one of the things that Bitcoin offers that's perhaps underappreciated is a
totally different approach to governance, right? A governance that is post-corporate and driven by
networks of stakeholders. Alex described as he talked about the scaling wars and the New York agreement
just how powerful that network can be and how it can in fact and has in fact beaten the traditional
way that power is allocated in traditional corporations. It strikes me that there's a lot to learn
and potentially a lot to model from that that transcends even the Bitcoin barriers.
Anyways though, for now, guys, I hope you enjoyed this essay. Thank you Alex for writing it. Thank you,
Colette for posting it, and until tomorrow, guys, be safe and take care of each other. Peace.
