The Good Tech Companies - Are Blockchain Communities Inevitable?
Episode Date: September 17, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/are-blockchain-communities-inevitable. Are blockchain communities inevitable? Explore crypto... sovereignty and post-nation-state governance with insights from Jarrad Hope & Peter Ludlow. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #blockchain, #crypto, #network-state, #books, #good-company, #cybergovernance, #blockchain-governance, #hackernoon-top-story, and more. This story was written by: @logos. Learn more about this writer by checking @logos's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Author: 'The picture of governance we are painting is radically different from the picture of Governance to which we are accustomed'
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
Are blockchain communities inevitable by Logos?
The following is an extract from Farewell to Westphalia, Crypto Sovereignty and Post Nation
State Governance by Logos co-founder Jared Hope and Peter Ludlow, author of Crypto Anarchy,
Cyberstates, and Pirate Utopias.
Now available in physical, e-book, and open-source editions.
In this book, we have made the case that autonomous blockchain communities can do many great
things for us. We argued that they could minimize human conflict by minimizing the phenomenon
of diverse groups being kettled together within the same nation-state. We have argued that they
can minimize corruption by introducing decentralized, immutable records and that they are resistant
to internal and external attacks through the deployment of Byzantine fault-tolerant strategies.
We have argued that they can avoid economic failures by relying on centralized blockchain currencies,
and finally, we have argued that blockchain communities can be harnessed for regenerative public
goods and positive externalities. By now, hopefully, they sound like a great idea. The question is,
are they even possible? Skepticism here is not surprising. The picture of governance we are painting
is radically different from the picture of governance to which we are accustomed. We are, after all,
accustomed to nation states that have established physical territorial boundaries and that are
granted sovereignty over that territory. We're accustomed to those institutions and other
centralized institutions, such as the United Nations and the Organization of American States
and the International Monetary Fund, calling the shots in our world. These are the institutions
that create the laws that govern us, that control our currencies and economies, that go to war,
that taxes, that control our movements on planet Earth, and so forth. Nation states are found
on every piece of territory on Earth. They are ubiquitous. We were born into this system,
as were our parents and grandparents. It is quite hard to imagine things being
any other way. Is all this talk of cyber states and sovereign blockchain communities not simply
two pie in the skyto be taken seriously? It is certainly true that none of us alive have known
another international order, but as we observed in the introduction to this book, this Westphelian
order was not always here. More importantly, changes in human governance often arrived in the
context of people not being able to imagine any other way. However, new ways of governing did
emerge, there was a time, not very long ago, in which monarchies gave way to democracies.
These shifts in governance may have seemed wildly implausible at the time.
Even the shift from an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy with minimal constraints
on the ruler was considered wildly implausible at the time. Of course, it seemed that way
because that was simply not the order of things that people were used to.
Kings had divine rights, until they didn't. Perhaps the most interesting element to all of this is
that when those great transitions in the form of human governance took place, the spark for change
was often something that might have appeared insignificant and trivial. However, the other remarkable
thing is that when change finally came, it seemed so obvious that it was almost as if the new order
already existed. And perhaps, in a way, it already did. If that sounds paradoxical, stay with us,
it should make sense be the end of this chapter. Seeds of cyber governance now. In 1847, in Paris,
a number of banquets were held. Each of them was a social and cultural event, but mostly what we might
call a vibe today. Within a year, King Louis Philippe would fall from power. These Parisian banquets were
copied elsewhere in Europe and ultimately contributed to the many revolutions that swept across
the continent in 1848. The banquets, although social gatherings, were considered subversive
and often banned. But why? Why ban a little party? Why ban a vibe? The banquets were
considered subversive because they brought people together under an attitude, an attitude opposed
to centralization of authority, an attitude opposed to the top-down imposition of cultural norms.
Thus, the very act of gathering socially was subversive as, of course, was the motive of the gathering.
Our point here is that the seeds of a new order of decentralized blockchain governance might not
be what you expect. They might stem from a series of social events rather than an organized political
movement. Let us consider a possible scenario to see why this might be so.
Bologi Srinivasan has argued that the NFT community friends with benefits, FWB, might be an
example of an organization that evolves into a more robust community and possibly even a cyber
state, what Srinivasaan calls a network state. The membership requirement for the group
consists of holding a certain number of the cryptocurrency FWB and answering questions about
your occupation and interests. The group members regularly maintain.
dialogue within chat platforms like Discord, and beyond this, there are regularly scheduled
Ask Me Anything, chats hosted by group leaders. There are informal meetings of group members
in various cities, but the big events are the large social gatherings in different cities
around the world. On the face of it, there is nothing more to it than that just people
chatting and organizing parties. But let us take a closer look. There is an actual governance structure
underlying the decisions about where to hold the next social events. It is an example of
participatory online democracy. More to the point, the community is not grounded by a shared interest
in parties so much as shared views about the importance of decentralized technologies in all
aspects of its members' lives. Indeed, if you dive deeper into the various archives within the
FWB platform, you will find plenty of writing about cyber states, using blockchain technologies
for regenerative public goods and so on. It is a group for holding social events, but even that
task can be highly political in and of itself. As Hakeem Bay wrote in his classic S-A-Z,
the temporary autonomous zone, let us admit that we have attended parties where for one brief
night a republic of gratified desires was attained. Shall we not confess that the politics of that
night have more reality and force for us than those of, say, the entire U.S. government,
or let us take a similar example, there is no overt political message to the board ape yacht club,
B-A-Y-C, which appears to be an NFT collection that ice-driven by online gaming and social events
like its annual ape fest. However, there is a message behind B-A-C culture, behind its vibe.
Indeed, it is arguable that the criticism of B-A-Y-C stems not from it being a scam,
but from its rejecting top-down culture. It is a nascent cultural movement that celebrates
community-based culture. Are we saying that these NFT-based communities will spawn the
blockchain communities and cyber states of the future? No, our point here is that no one knows
what the exact drivers of the new forms of human governance will be. Thosahoe attended the banquets of
1847 may have had no idea what these events we're leading to. They had a diverse set of political
views, but they shared a vibe. However, nothing is just a vibe. Nothing is just a party. Sometimes,
they are doors to the unimagined future. Keeping in mind that new forms of governance might
emerge from unlikely places, let us consider some alternative scenarios that follow a different
path. Let US imagine that current blockchain communities grounded in shared economic interests
evolve into something that takes on the roles that states hold today. Consider an example like
Uniswap and its Dow, membership of which is contingent in holding its Uni token. To be sure,
Uniswap is an important platform, and it may well become the largest and most important trading
platform in the world eventually eclipsing the NASDAQ and NYSE trading platforms. This could happen
because Uniswap provides a decentralized platform that cuts out middlemen and ice capable of hosting
any sort of trade. If you can tokenize an asset, you can trade it on Uniswap, and you can trade it without
any centralized authority or needless intermediaries. Just as significantly, because it is an automated
market maker protocol, it algorithmically determines prices based on demand and available resources
in its liquidity pools. If Uniswap does indeed become the largest trading platform in the world,
then its Dow will surely become a politically significant player on the global stage.
Of course, there is a big difference between being an important trading platform, even the most
important trading platform, and becoming as powerful as a state. Still, if you think about it,
if Uniswap becomes that important, it will render many of the key functions of the nation-state
Oceos. The code in the Uniswap Smart contracts will take on many of the responsibilities of the
state, including auditing transactions, and enforcement of trades will become automatic
agreed to trades will happen, whether you want them to or not. So far in this chapter,
we have been talking as if we are gazing into the future imagining scenarios that are
grounded in the present but still very much speculative. However, if we step back and take a
broader view of matters, we will find that this is not really speculation but rather an adjustment
of our way of understanding the present. If we know what we are looking at, we will find that
many blockchain communities are already here and already playing an important role in life today.
To see this, let us look closer at the Ethereum Protocol. As we write this, there are around
6,500 Ethereum nodes running around the world. All of Thassinodes have agreed to participate
in the network and, thus, have agreed to ITS technical requirements. They have also agreed to be
fair players in that they understand that bad actors will be penalized.
Now, one might say that this is not very impressive because Ethereum is nothing more than
a specialized network of computers, but the reality is that it is much more than that. It is also
a community already established, and its decisions, arrived to collectively, already play an
important role in the welfare of network participants as well as in the positive externalities
that network members are trying to achieve. Or to put it another way, the Ethereum community
seems to share a group consensus that it wants to build a better world, but Idis also here,
now, today, working on behalf of the interests of network participants in here, now, today,
it is building out positive externalities consistent with the values and ethical principles
held by community members. Perhaps this point needs further elaboration. Another way to put it is
that the Ethereum protocol is not merely like a blockchain community or a cyber state,
and it is not merely a platform that will give rise to such governance structures. It is already
such a governance structure, and it is already working on behalf of community members, and it is
already building out the new legal architecture for a post-nation state world. We sometimes think
that laws and computer code are very different things, but as Lawrence Lessig observed in his book,
appropriately titled code, and other loss off cyberspace, computer code can and should be thought of
as a form of law. More precisely, we should think of the moderation of behavior, whether by
governments or individuals, as being circumscribed by a number of conditions, of which traditional
law is just one. As Lessig points out, we do not pass laws against stealing skyscrapers because they
are too big for someone to snatch and run away with. The laws of physics constrain the set of
possible behaviors here. Similarly, certain cultural norms might constrain behaviors as maymarket
forces. Finally, architecture can constrain behaviors, walls, for example, can control where you
cannot walk, and bridges can allow you to walk over gorges that you otherwise might not be able to
pass over. However, there is also computer architecture and software code that play a very significant
role in our world. While such code is not law in the traditional sense, it is still functionally
equivalent to traditional laws. It directs the behaviors of individuals and organizations,
in some cases, restricting what can be done and, in other cases, enabling actions that might not
otherwise be possible. Lessig illustrates the situation with what he calls the pathetic dot.
Where the dot can and cannot go, and presumably what it can and cannot do, is not determined by a single
thing but by a confluence of factors, including the aforementioned laws, physical and legal,
norms, the architecture of its world, physical and computational, and market forces. For our
purposes, the important factor is the computational architecture of the world. On this last point,
the Ethereum protocol is not so different from any major internet platform. Google and Facebook are
also shaping the movement of the pathetic dot. The difference is that when traditional Silicon Valley
corporations do this, they do so in a top-down manner. There are our versions of the Westphalian
era kingdoms, imposing their will from a position of centralized authority. Recognizing that
code is going to shape our world for better or for worse, we much prefer that the reach of the
code should be limited to the community for which it is written and that it should be written
and understood and supported as a group effort within that community. Two points deserve to be
considered in isolation here. The first relates to the role that Silicon Valley corporations
currently play in shaping the legal order of our world, in determining the topology of the
spaces in which the pathetic dot can freely move. As we saw in Chapter 13, Major Jason Lowry articulated
an extreme version of this idea in his book Software, arguing that those with control over
our software technologies constitute a kind of tyrannical elite. Ash puts it,
Cyberspace is a globally adopted belief system that is radically transforming the way society
organizes itself, in much the same way that agrarian abstract power hierarchies did.
Just as agrarian society led to the formation of empires, so too does cyberspace appear to be
leading to the formation of cyber empires, complete with the threat of oppressive rulers
rising to the top of the hierarchy.
Does he have in mind people like Microsoft's Bill Gates and Metas Mark Zuckerberg as being
these oppressive leaders? Presumably, yes, although it needs to be noted that they are not
acting as traditional tyrants did, with police and armies doing their bidding, but with software
code being the shock troops for this new form of tyranny. Here, we are not endorsing Lowry's
conclusion, just attempting to articulate it. Lowry goes on to hypothesize that humanity is
going to become so tired of being systematically exploited at unprecedented scales by computer
networks by an elite, tyrannical, and technocratic ruling class, that they are going to
invent a new form of digital warfare and use it to fight for zero trust, permissionless,
and egalitarian access to cyberspace and its egalitarian resources.
Major Lowry is on active duty in the military and tends to view the world in fugilistic terms,
or at least more pugilistic than we do.
Many revolutions throughout human history have occurred without the use of warfare
or really anything metaphorically like warfare.
The agricultural and industrial revolutions come to mind.
Sometimes, people simply see a better way to live their life.
lives, and they adopt the new technology. We hope that is the case here. In fact, we can do more
than hope because we can see it happening around us today. This returns us to the second point
made above. Dow-based decentralized blockchain protocols are already shaping their communities,
thereby shaping the futures of their community members and, ultimately, shaping our futures
as well. What this means is not that platforms like Uniswap and the Ethereum Protocol will
become cyber states or anything closely resembling states. What it means is. What it means is a lot of
means ISTHAT platforms like Uniswap and their smart contracts, and protocols like Ethereum and
its infrastructure, will replace many of the functions of states. The result is probably not
something like a state, but rather something entirely new. For example, in previous chapters,
we discussed ways in which the infrastructure of a blockchain protocol can be designed so that
you can or should identify the source or destination of any message moving through the network.
Network nodes would, therefore, not be in a position to censor other nodes on the network or
even censor the transactions that individuals were attempting on the network. Now, this technology,
if implemented, would have far-reaching consequences for its network. It would effectively prevent
censorship, to measure, but it would also make it very difficult to economically isolate an opponent
on the network. When every packet of information looks the same, your options for censorship and embargo
are quite limited. Alternatively, the system could be engineered so that every transaction is
tagged with a source and a destination, and this would certainly make censorship an embargo possible.
If network was value aligned to be censorship happy, then one could expect quite a bit of such
activity. Our point here is that, to some extent, the future of blockchain networks is very
much open-ended and being determined today by active members of those communities. Those communities are
building out the architecture of their future. If we think of ourselves as being in a position
akin to Lessig's pathetic dot, then blockchain communities are today building out the computational
architecture that will determine the fate of those pathetic dots within their respective communities.
This sort of scenario is not just the case for DAOs on the Ethereum network,
but if you think about it, the same can be said about the Bitcoin protocol.
To Bezier, there is a very robust community surrounding the Bitcoin protocol,
and there are open debates about the future of the network that either go nowhere
a result in some form of consensus or, alternatively, a fork of the network. We previously mentioned
the ongoing dispute over whether the Bitcoin Protocol should allow ordinals, but such a debate is not
new to Bitcoin. Between 2015 and 2017, the Bitcoin community engaged in a debate that subsequently
became known as the Block Size War, and it was chronicled in a book by the same name. It is important
to recognize that the community surrounding the Bitcoin Protocol is very much like the blockchain
communities we have been discussing. Despite the hype, Bitcoin did not fall from the sky,
or even from Satoshi, an immutable form. There have been and continue to be robust debates about
the future of Bitcoin. Sometimes, these debates lead to stalemates and, in turn, to forks of
Bitcoin, for example, BSV, which stands for Bitcoin, Satoshi's vision. The key thing to note here
is the very thing we have been talking about throughout this book. The Bitcoin community,
like all good decentralized blockchain communities, has no single leader with decision-making authority.
Future changes to the protocol are the result of recorded debates and, hopefully, consensus.
When consensus cannot be achieved, members may freely exit and, if they so wish, create a new
protocol by forking the original. And behind it all, there is a set of values and vibes that guide
the contours of the debates. However, this is the situation today. What is coming tomorrow?
Eventually, enormous resources will fall into the lap of communities like the Uni Swap Dow,
and it will be up to the Tao to determine how those resources will be used.
For sure, some will be used for future development of the platform,
but is it implausible to think that Tao members might want to allocate resources to external concerns,
such as assisting refugees or developing renewable energy or fighting human trafficking
or supporting any other causes that might be of interest to Dow members?
If a Tao is capable of taking up external causes, it is also certainly capable of taking up
the personal concerns and interests of Tao members.
Is there any reason the individual rights of Tao members cannot and would not be protected
anywhere in the world?
You might think that the above scenario sounds plausible but object to the fact that there
is nothing inevitable about it, and for sure, there is nothing inevitable about a specific
scenario playing out in detail.
However, if we are content with thinking in terms of broad trends, then the inevitability
becomes apparent. New technologies do get adopted, although not always in the form that way expect.
Thomas Edison thought that the principal application of the phonograph would be for business
secretarial purposes, serving as a kind of dictaphone. He did, in fact, mention entertainment
and music as possible applications, but those were not the most significant potential applications
in his view. Similarly, Edison thought the future of electricity was direct current, but as we know,
Nikola Tesla's invention of alternating current carried the day.
The point is that no one is omniscient about details.
However, when you have a revolutionary new technology, you can see that something is inevitable,
even if you do not know the exact form or even the ultimate use of that technology.
Edison was correct in thinking that electricity would be ubiquitous.
What he did not know was the ultimate form of delivery.
He was similarly correct in thinking that the phonograph would be an important invention.
He simply did not know in what form.
Likewise, when the internet was initially developed by DARPA, few could see the form it would
ultimately take.
At its inception, the initial thought about blockchain technology was that its principal
application would be as an economic tool.
Indeed, in the very first sentence of the Bitcoin white paper, Satoshi describes Bitcoin
as a payment system.
And for sure, economic concerns drove the development of Bitcoin.
The economic troubles in 2008 were very much on Satoshi's mind and there is no doubt that
the problems surrounding centralized finance were very much a driving force behind his efforts.
We hope we have made it clear that we think that blockchain applications will be much more
extensive than Satoshi imagined, or at least, more extensive than articulated in their white
paper. For sure, financial uses of blockchain technology will be important, but financial
transactions are only one small piece of the puzzle that is human governance, and ultimately,
human governance writ large is going to be the most important application of blockchain technologies.
How we can nurture blockchain governance. Let us suppose you agree that blockchain governance
is a good idea, and we can now ready find nascent versions of these future governance structures
today. Is there something we can do to help them evolve into the governance structures we're
looking for? And if decentralized blockchain communities are indeed inevitable,
is there anything we can do to make their adoption as frictionless sauce possible?
clearly, any such effort is going to involve a heavy dose of community participation.
Simply by participating in a decentralized blockchain community,
one can put one's hand on the tiller at critical moments.
Using the cases we discussed in the previous section,
we can say that in each instance,
the task involves expanding the mission,
projects and strategies of the blockchain community
and moving them in a direction not initially envisioned.
For example, in the case of the FWB community,
we can imagine a scenario in which the documents
about cyber states, already archived and discussed by FWB members, are taken to be not just ideas
to be discussed but aspirational goals for the FWB blockchain community. This would be an aspiration
to evolve from a blockchain community that creates social events with positive vibes to a blockchain
community that has its heart set on evolving into a cyber state of some form, an organization that
does more than entertain its members, butinables their flourishing by providing many of the services
that nation states DO today. In a similar vein, a DAO designed for economic interests might
expand its portfolio as well. The Yearn finance community might decide that in addition
tovoting on creating vaults with investment strategies, they might take on the role of representing
the interests of their DAO members, stepping in for them as advocates in some cases,
becoming involved in the purchase of physical territory and the management of that territory
for their community members, and so on. The community could expand its portfolio to
international trade and manufacturing and, ultimately, the flourishing of their DAO members.
One can even imagine mergers between DAOs here. For example, a social-based NFT community might
merge with an economically based DAO. Alternatively, one might just build a community from scratch
that had all of these features. What then is the key to frictionless adoption? Participation seems to
be the crucial element. The more one can participate and, when needed, touch the tiller,
on these projects, the sooner they can mature into the robust decentralized blockchain communities that
we envision. Why the technology is doable. If you have reached this far in the book by reading the earlier
chapters, the N you already know that the technology is doable. We have the technology. Still, let us review
those technologies now that we have some aspirational goals in place and some hints at how we might
approach those goals. Recall that the principal needs for blockchain communities are secure archives,
decentralization with Byzantine fault tolerance, ways for people to collaborate in these communities,
transparent administration of these communities and corruption resistance. Meanwhile,
members have the rails to communicate privately with each other and their business partners,
and there are also economic rails, such as cryptocurrencies, in place for this to happen.
All of these technologies exist to some extent today, and in Chapter 14, we provided some very
specific open source versions of them. However, it is worth thinking about how these technologies
might be, more rapidly, adopted. In other words, how do we facilitate getting from here
to there, happily, for existing blockchain communities, the necessary technologies have
already been adopted or are at least familiar to community members. For example, let us
suppose that the members of FWB acquired the aspiration to be a full on cyber state or at least
a player on a global scale. What they already have is a blockchain-based Dow. What they need
to incorporate are robust voting mechanisms, a secure private communication.
system for their citizens and an official blockchain-based currency for their community.
Clearly, these are already off-the-shelf technologies. Thus, rather than finding the necessary
technologies, the real task is to direct those technologies towards the community's aspirational
goals. This direction does not require new technologies but instead new attitudes to go with
existing technologies. Communities need to want to use those technologies to expand the footprint
of their blockchain community. This is to say that they need to leverage the technology. This is to say that they
need to leverage the technologies that they have in order to contribute to the flourishing of their
community members, and this will ultimately lead them to-taque on many of the functions that
have historically been the province of nation-states and other levels of human governance.
We can already see this movement in the form of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, which
take over the role that government issued fiat currencies used to have. However, if communities
want their members to flourish, they will also work to secure their economic interests,
create conditions for shared culture to thrive, and provide social securities and services on a global scale.
Let us illustrate this with an example of what FWB members could do if they wished.
They could secure land, or if they had several members located in cities around the world,
they could represent the interests of their community members in those cities or with whichever
terrestrial authorities controlled the land where they lived.
They could formally arrange business relationships, this already happens informally, and agreements.
They could help citizens establish businesses in special economic zones.
They could facilitate members with security problems.
There is a lot that they could do.
Indeed, the bigger question is whether there is something they could not do.
We began this section by asking whether the technology was doable, but in the end,
we have seen that technology is not really the issue.
The issue is whether a blockchain community has the desire to leverage existing technologies
to provide progressively more robust services to its community members ultimately,
taking on roles that resemble those of existing Westphalian states.
In other words, the technology is here.
The question is whether we have the will to leverage it,
why people will try to develop blockchain communities?
We concluded the previous section by asking whether blockchain communities Ophani Stripe
are going to have the will to take on more and more services for their community members.
In this section, we are going to argue that they definitely will.
This is not to say that decentralized blockchain communities are a certainty,
but it is to say that people will try to develop them.
The kinds of decentralized blockchain communities that we have talked about in this book
are not merely inert academic ideas.
We do not know exactly what forms they will take or how they will take the forms that they do,
but people will keep leveraging available technologies to build them out.
This prediction does not flow from any special features of blockchain communities
or our vision of cyber states.
It rather flows from the simple fact that ideas for human organization,
no matter how foreign sounding in the beginning, eventually sound less foreign and, in the fullness
of time, are eventually implemented in some form, for better or for worse. This is not to say that
all of the ideas attempted have lasted or that they have been helpful. It is rather a point about
humans wanting to improve their lot in life and their willingness to try new things to accomplish
that. So strongest human desire to attempt new orders of political organization that they will
attempt them even faced with threats from the powers that be in the form of potential imprisonment,
torture and execution. It is an uncanny human trait to want to keep trying new social orders.
Now, there is clearly a competing human trait to preserve the status quo, and this is where
many conflicts are born, but in the end, new technologies for human organization are always
attempted. The events surrounding the French Revolution illustrate this capacity vividly.
When the French Revolution began, it was simply an attempt to get Louis the 16th T.O.
accept a constitution and not much more. However, when that request met with violent resistance,
the resulting cauldron of ideas generated many projects and theories of governance. Some of those
projects did not get very far, the Paris Commune being a case in point. Snuffed out early on in
1871, it lasted less than two months. It went on to inspire a number of thinkers, however,
and was inspirational to future governance structures well into the 20th century. The same is true
for individual thinkers. In 1755, Eddie N. Gabriel Morelli published the Code of Nature,
a pamphlet in which he proposed a utopia in which nothing in society will belong to anyone,
either as a personal possession or escapital goods, except the things for which the person has
immediate use for either his needs, his pleasures, or his daily work. This was well before
the French Revolution and in an era when the dominant political debate was between
absolute monarchists and constitutional monarchists. However, his ideas were noted. He was a
noticed by Engels, Marx and Proudhon, and they were eventually put into effect, for better or for
worse. It is very difficult to think of political ideas that have not made their way to adoption
eventually, and enough have been adopted so as to suggest that those that have not been attempted
will be adopted eventually. This brings us to what way consider one of the great advantages
of the framework we are advocating. It provides a substantially more friction-free way of incorporating
new political ideas and studying their success. While some may celebrate great bloody revolutions,
we have a strong preference for velvet revolutions, and cyber states and blockchain communities
provide a platform for these nonviolent social upheavals. If people wish to implement Morale's
utopia, they are free to try, so long as people within that utopia have the right and ability
to exit. Bending this discussion back around to blockchain technologies, people have been
willing to try anything to implement a new political or social order, even if that involves the
murder of millions of innocence. One hopes that they would take a path of lesser resistance if they
could. And this is yet another reason why blockchain technologies will be deployed. There are lots
of revolutionary ideas out there. They can incubate in blockchain communities and take full form in
cyber states, and this can be accomplished without spilling blood. We have the technology to attempt
to bring about the flourishing of different forms of governance. It seems
inevitable that it will be used as such. Of course, just because people will attempt to build
decentralized blockchain communities, indeed, just because they are attempting it now,
does not mean that these attempts are guaranteed to be successful. Nothing is guaranteed in this
world. As we saw in the previous chapter, the issue for any technology is thought if it is to be
successful, the technology must be aligned with our values. Thesis and issue of such gravity
that we dedicate our next and final chapter to it. Get, farewell to Westphalia, now.
Thank you for listening to this Hackernoon story, read by artificial intelligence.
Visit hackernoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.
