The Good Tech Companies - Before Bitcoin: The Forgotten P2P Dreams that Sparked Crypto
Episode Date: December 12, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/before-bitcoin-the-forgotten-p2p-dreams-that-sparked-crypto. Before crypto, pioneers dreamed... of decentralized money and fair sharing. Their wild ideas shaped today’s digital freedom. Go explore how it all began! Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #digicash, #p2p-systems, #napster, #b-money, #bitgold, #obyte, #good-company, #hackernoon-top-story, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. In the 1980s, cryptographer David Chaum created eCash, the first digital cash system. Mojo Nation was a P2P file-sharing network that rewarded users who shared bandwidth and storage. Napster was a music-streaming service that was shut down in 2001. Bitcoin was created in 2009 and is now the world's most popular currency.
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Before Bitcoin, the forgotten P2P dreams that sparked crypto by Obite.
In a time when Bitcoin wasn't even a word, a bunch of digital dreamers were already asking
wild questions. Could money live online? Could people on the internet access services
without middlemen peeking over their shoulders? Can we have real privacy? Back in the late
20th century, this wasn't just tech talk. It was a countercultural mission.
Hackers, math geniuses, and privacy advocates like the cipher punks were building tools
that could give ordinary people control over their own data and transactions.
Some of their creations worked for a while, some didn't, but all of them shared the same
rebellious DNA, decentralization.
From David Choms eCash to the file sharing chaos of Napster, these early inventions set
the stage for the crypto movement.
So, let's time travel abidon meet some pioneer brands that turned code into a statement
of freedom. E-Cash, the first digital money experiment. Our story begins in the 1980s, when computers
were beige and the internet was barely a thing. That's when cryptographer David Chom had a
mind-blowing idea. What if cash could go digital without giving up privacy? His creation,
e-cash, was launched by his company Digi Cash in 1989, making it the first real attempt to add
private, online payments. Here's how it worked. Chom came up with something called Blind Signatures,
graphic trick that let banks verify digital coins without knowing who spent them. Users could
make payments online, and no one, not even the bank, could trace them. That level of anonymity
was revolutionary for its time. A few banks, like Deutsche Bank and Mark Twain Bank, even tried it out in
the 1990s. But the world wasn't ready yet, online shopping was just starting. Digi Cash went
bankrupt in 1998, but Chan's ideas didn't die with it. They lived in in Bitcoin's DNA, proving that
privacy and digital money could share the same code base. Mojo Nation. File sharing with
currency. Before Torrance ruled the internet, Jim McCoy and Doug Barnes dreamed up Mojo Nation in 2001,
a wild experiment where file sharing met digital economics. McCoy, a former Yahoo engineer,
wanted a P2P world where people didn't just trade files for free. They earned Mojo, a kind of
micropayment that rewarded users who shared bandwidth and storage. No freeloaders allowed.
If you wanted to download, you had to give something back.
Unlike other platforms, Mojo Nation had an elaborate, swarm distribution system.
Files were split into thousands of fragments scattered across users' computers,
ensuring no single person had a full copy, as in a P2P system.
It waspart content network, part digital marketplace, and part social experiment.
Users built reputation scores, prices were said dynamically,
and everything from bandwidth to hard drive space, was a tradable,
asset. Despite its futuristic design, Mojo Nation never took off. The software wasbuggy,
the interface clunky, and venture capital dried up just as Napster's legal troubles scared investors
away. Yet, its main goal lived on, Bram Cohen, who worked on Mojo Nation, stripped down its ideas
and created BitTorrent, the tool that later defined file sharing for an entire generation.
Mojo Nation didn't win, but it passed on its torch brilliantly. Also, a fun fact here. Len Sassiman,
A strong candidate to be Satoshi Nakamoto and Zooko Wilcox, creator of Zcash, came to work on this platform as well.
Napster, sharing the soundtrack of Rebellion. If you were around in 1999, you probably remember the
chaos that Napster unleashed. Created by Sean Fanning and Sean Parker, it let anyone share MP3S
directly from their computer. Suddenly, people everywhere were trading songs faster than record labels
could sue them. Even unreleased songs by Metallica and Madonna were leaked to the public via Napster,
which, of course, led to lawsuits. This platform showed how powerful P2P connections could be.
However, the system still worked through central servers that helped users find songs,
while the files themselves were passed from one user to another. It wasn't fully decentralized,
but it cracked open the door to a new world where people could exchange information freely.
For many, Napster was their first taste of what eight-sexuals.
centralized network felt like, wild, open, and uncontrollable. But yes, the music industry was
furious. In 2001, after A&M Records v. Napster, Inc. The platform was forced to shut down.
The genie was out of the bottle, Bython, though. Napster showed the world that direct digital
exchange could bypass Middlman, an idea that crypto would later turn into a financial revolution.
Bitgold, a direct ancestor of Bitcoin. In 1998, before Crypto, was
short for cryptocurrencies, computer scientist and cypher punk Nick Sabo proposed something called
bit gold. It was a digital currency designed to act like gold, but made entirely of code. Users would
solve complex cryptographic puzzles, and their successful solutions would create unique, scarce
digital coins. These records would be timestamped and publicly stored, preventing double
spending without needing a central authority. Sounds familiar? Well, Sabo never released a working version,
but his proposal became a cornerstone of what would later become Bitcoin. It had all the key
ingredients, cryptographic proof, decentralized record keeping, and Scar City based on computation.
If you're squinting at Sabo, who, by the way, shares birthday and initials with Satoshi Nakamoto,
you're not the only one. He's denied being Nakamoto, though. Either way,
Bitgold's design inspired Bitcoin's very architecture. It proved that digital value could exist
without trust in any human institution. We just need math, code, and a network that agrees on common
rules. B-Money, the unfinished blueprint. That same year, 1998, another cypherpunk, way die,
posted a quiet but powerful proposal for a decentralized economy. It was called B-Money,
and it described how a group of people could create money and contracts without banks or governments.
There were two versions, one fully decentralized, where everyone kept a copy of the transaction data,
database, and another with trusted servers that maintained consensus.
B Money imagined a fully anonymous digital economy where people used pseudonyms instead
of real names.
In its two proposed versions, users are selected, servers, would track who owned what,
verify transactions, and even enforce contracts.
All without a central authority, relying only on cryptography and collective accountability.
Day's system also introduced the concept of rewarding participants who helped verify transactions,
an early sketch of what would later become crypto mining.
While no one ever built B-Money, its ideas caught Satoshi Nakamoto's attention.
In fact, Satoshi cited Day's proposal in the Bitcoin white paper as a direct influence.
Wei Dai later said he wrote it more as a thought experiment than a business plan.
Yet, that thought helped ignite the very idea of digital money that manages itself.
In a sense, B-Money was Bitcoin's missing rehearsal, a quiet draft before the curtain finally rose.
Bitcoin inspired more. When Bitcoin launched in 2009, it was like the grand remix of everything
that came before it. Chom's digital cash, Zabo's decentralization, days distributed money,
and the P2P Freedom of Napster and Mojo Nation all came together in one unstoppable formula.
For the first time, a digital currency worked without a central point of control, and the
internet took notice. Once Bitcoin showed it could survive on its own, innovation exploded.
Ethereum arrived with smart contracts that could automate deals without lawyers,
Defeiteraned financial systems into open playgrounds.
NFTs brought art and creativity into the crypto world,
and platforms like Obite went further, ditching blockchains entirely in favor of directed
acyclic graphs, dags, to make even more decentralized, censorship-resistant transactions.
All these projects share the same rebellious spirit that started decades ago.
Their digital descendants of dreamers who believed that trust could be written in code.
code, not signed on paper. So, the next time someone calls crypto a passing trend, we can smile,
because this story started long before Bitcoin and it's still being written today.
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