The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Oct. 12, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Sponsored by Welcome to The Node. Questions? Feedback? We'd love to hear from you! Simply reply to this email. –Daniel Kuhn Today’s must-reads Top Shelf PERSONNEL CHANGES: Payments company Stripe has begun assembling a crypto engineering team to chart its multi-coin future. Guillaume Poncin, Stripe’s former head of engineering for banking and financial products, will run the team of four, according to LinkedIn a jobs post. Sam Bankman-Fried is stepping back from his quant trading shop Alameda Research to make room for two co-CEOs: Caroline Ellison and Sam Trabucco. NFT DISRUPTORS: Companies including Disney, video game publisher Electronic Arts and Robinhood Markets are expected to benefit from non-fungible tokens (NFTs), according to a new report from Citi. “The advent of NFTs promises significant disruption to any/all sectors with exposure to IP (intellectual property), licensing and merchandise-related revenues,” an analyst wrote. CHINA CHAINS: Binance, the largest cryptocurrency exchange by daily trading volume, announced Tuesday that it had committed $1 billion to further boost Binance Smart Chain’s (BSC) growth, after it put up $100 million to support decentralized finance (DeFi) projects on BSC a little over a year ago. Separately, China’s Blockchain Services Network (BSN) is set to launch portals for its international versions in Turkey and Uzbekistan. ACROSS INDUSTRIES: Intel, unlike other chip manufacturers, doesn’t plan to include crypto mining limitations in its Arc graphics processing units (GPUs) due to be released in early 2022. Separately, Ripple has made a $44 million joint environmental, social and governance (ESG) investment with Nelnet Renewable Energy, a unit of Nelnet. Finally, cryptocurrency lender Celsius Network has raised $400 million in equity funding, the company said, following a bout of legal action in the U.S. A message from Nexo When it comes to buying, borrowing or earning on your crypto, you won’t find an easier, safer way to do it than Nexo. And right now, with its Referral Program you can earn $10 worth of bitcoin for each friend you refer. And the best part – your referral gets $10 in BTC, too. You can invite up to 100 friends – so you can get as much as $1,000 in bitcoin by copy-pasting a few links. And you can further bump that amount by earning up to 8% interest p.a. on your bitcoin, paid out daily. Now is the time to unlock the full power of your crypto. Join Nexo and start earning free BTC with your friends. As heard on CoinDesk TV... Sound Bites “Selective disclosure of information with specific counterparties is just a useful property to fight for.” –Justin Ehrenhofer, Monero Community Member, on CoinDesk TV’s “First Mover.” What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals Andreessen Horowitz's crypto team has hired two of the few people who know what's in Facebook's Novi wallet (Decrypt) Former Chancellor Philip Hammond: UK’s treatment of digital assets is a ‘huge risk’ for finance sector (The Block) Rari Capital Launches Permissionless Lending Pools to Become Uniswap of Lending (The Defiant) Polygon Hikes its Minimum Gas Price by 30x in Bid to Foil Spammers (The Defiant) Coinbase users slam new customer service phone support: ‘It was a joke’ (CNBC) Husband and wife use peanut butter sandwich to trade nuclear secrets for crypto (Protos) A message from Celsius Download Celsius and Get $50 in Free BTC Meet Celsius. The first and only platform that earns you up to 17% yield on your crypto, rewards you every week and lets you borrow cash at the lowest rates. Download Now. Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon Is a Dunce On Monday, speaking at an event hosted by the Institute of International Finance, JPMorgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon once again said the outlook for bitcoin is grim. At various times in the past Dimon has gone on record calling bitcoin “fool’s gold” and “a fraud.” Dimon is a dunce. “I personally think that bitcoin is worthless,” Dimon, “the bellwether of the Davoisie,” said most recently of the $1 trillion asset, the first cryptographically-derived currency that has kick-started an industry working to reinvent money, the internet and, yes, banks.
Of course, while Dimon has his own personal beliefs – they don’t quite measure up to the position of JPMorgan. In recent years, the largest bank in the U.S. by assets has rolled out its own digital currency, JPM coin, has moved hard into crypto asset research and, in August, has opened access to crypto funds for its wealthy clientele. It’s easy to write off Dimon’s comments as hypocritical – coming from someone willing to profit from an industry while also questioning its fundamental value. And, indeed, Dimon has regretted calling bitcoin a fraud. “I don’t want to be a spokesperson – I don’t care. It makes no difference to me,” Dimon the nihilist told the IIF. This mercenary attitude goes far in explaining why Dimon is routinely caught off guard by bitcoin, and why the industry seems to carry on and thrive despite his criticisms. Take his comments yesterday regarding bitcoin’s supply cap, theoretically locked in at 21 million BTC. "I'll just challenge the group to one other thing: How do you know it ends at 21 million? You all read the algorithms? You guys all believe that? I don't know, I've always been a skeptic of stuff like that,” he reportedly said. Although not at the center of his critique of bitcoin’s long-term viability – which tends to go back to regulatory risks and potential crackdowns – this question does penetrate the heart of bitcoin’s value proposition. A fool isn’t someone who asks dumb questions but fails to listen to answers, someone, somewhere at some time, may have said. The quick and dirty response is that bitcoin is the only monetary system that offers certain guarantees – including “ending” at 21 million coins. That’s what sets it apart from the fiat model. In a recent Forbes column discussing the rationale behind “bitcoin maximalism,” bitcoin influencer (and my former boss at CoinDesk) Pete Rizzo enumerated four “core rights” guaranteed by this unique economic system: an irrevocable right to money through holding private keys a right to audit the money supply by running a node the right to know bitcoin’s money supply and issuance policy (those “halvenings” you may have heard about) the right to dissent – both by rejecting changes made to the protocol, and, unstated, by dropping out of U.S. dollar hegemony. Some of these guarantees are technological, or embedded in the code that, as Dimon notes, is auditable. Others are socially directed. Bitcoin as a digital network will always enable the ability for users to hold their coins and transact peer-to-peer. Likewise, people will always be able to run a node and audit the money supply. It’s in the code. Dimon’s question about the supply cap gets into squishier territory. He’s right in saying that there’s no technological limit in place to prevent developers from changing that particular characteristic of Bitcoin. And, depending on how things go, there’s at least a possibility that there will be economic incentive to add more coins. As Blocktower Capital’s Ari Paul put it in response to Dimon on Twitter: “So really the question is, ‘will people change the code.’” Last month, former Bitcoin Core contributor Gavin Andresen wrote a bit of science fiction discussing one of those “possible” futures. There are essentially two bitcoins here: the version we’re running now that is slightly inflationary and secured by a mining subsidy – the network pays out a predictable amount of coins to those willing to expend energy to build the blockchain through a process called “proof-of-work” – and the one after the subsidy is gone.
Sometime in 2140, all 21 million BTC will have been issued to miners and the network will rely on fees to pay for security. It’s reasonable to ask what happens then, especially as others have noted bitcoin’s fee economy has yet to mature. Thankfully, most people in the bitcoin community have the humility to say that they don’t know. “We can't guarantee a fee market for Bitcoin will work. We simply don't have the data for this,” a well-regarded writer with a hardline stance on Bitcoin who I won’t name said. But there are still larger order rights that bitcoin can guarantee, even if the experiment fails. Chiefly, it’ll remain hard money. As Paul writes, anyone can change bitcoin’s code at any time they want. The trickier thing is getting people to use it, for miners to secure it and for developers to build on it. That’s the social technology that secures Bitcoin. As a matter of consensus, bitcoiners can change the 21 million cap. But it depends on what is in their economic interest. In the past, powerful groups sought to change a fundamental characteristic of bitcoin and were shot down. There have also been a number of altcoins that take bitcoin’s source code and change a few parameters. The 21 million cap may not be encoded into bitcoin permanently, but it’s become a definitional aspect of it. If it were to change, that wouldn’t be Bitcoin. It’s part of the brand, yes. But also what believers are buying into – that bitcoin separates itself from an inflationary economy that sees primarily the rich get richer. That’s precisely what Dimon fails to grasp. That bitcoin is not just code, but a community. He may not “care” about Bitcoin. But plenty of people do. Like, a lot. –D.K. The Chaser... The Node A newsletter from CoinDesk See Previous Editions Copyright © 2021 CoinDesk, All rights reserved. 250 Park Avenue South New York, NY 10003, USA Manage your newsletter subscriptions | Unsubscribe from all CoinDesk email |