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I came across this article while looking for reviews of Bitcoin Is Venice , which I have been re-reading. The author is a commercial lawyer and investment banker in New Zealand and England.
I encourage everyone to take the time to read this. Yes, it is a criticism of bitcoin, but it is thoughtful and raises important points. Here are a few:
Farrington believes that Bitcoin is an asset, not “just” a currency. As it has an independent existence, it is not “tethered to” or dependent on any intermediary or central institution for its existence. Assets need not “degenerate” the way fiat currencies do, thanks to central bank monetary policies and, er, investment bank grift. So whereas fiat currency implies indebtedness, Bitcoin does not. It is pure abstract, tokenised capital — the inverse of fiat currency: to actual capital what a non-fungible token is to the artwork it represents, only generalised. Whereas an NFT is a token representing a specific cultural artefact, Bitcoin is a token representing generalised, fungible “capital” in the sense of abstract value — this is a vision of capital as a shared community resource before it has been transmogrified into any specific form. Bitcoin shares this investable “fungibility” characteristic with fiat currency — and also other traditional tokens of capital like shares — but we should not be misled by that superficial similarity into treating them alike. In this way, Bitcoin is anticurrency.
The author disagrees:
In any case, the proposition, “Bitcoin is liberated capital” seems to make a similar category error. A cryptoasset is, and can only ever be, a token for the capital it signifies. You cannot imbue an electronic token with the productive qualities of plant, machinery, receivables and real estate. For if this is what Bitcoin had achieved, it indeed would be something wondrous. Alchemical, even: “capital” as never before experienced: a Platonic essence: a Midichlorian life force. You know, like the Force. An electronic token humming with radioactive energy, radiating bottled prosperity. This seems to be the argument Farrington is making — Bitcoin represents some kind of transubstantiation.
Finally, what the author seems to see as a positive development sums up why I don’t like or accept the current “financialization” of bitcoin as a good thing:
So Bitcoin may now be here to stay. But not because it has fixed anything. Rather, Bitcoin has been fixed: The traditional institutions have cemented it into the existing system, validating it and giving it institutional weight, heft and credibility. The young rebel has made good: Mick Jagger becomes a knight of the realm. (That took Jagger 41 years. It only took Bitcoin 15). When even the fraudsters are lobbying for regulation — a classic barrier to entry and defence against better fraudsters — the utopian dream is truly over.
The one thing the author seems to miss is that he is looking at bitcoin from within the system he has been immersed in for his entire life.
From Bitcoin Is Venice:
The complacent assumptions of the new economic consensus must be, and are, zealously and unrelentingly incepted into the public consciousness in order to obfuscate that finance has gradually shifted over the twentieth century from what we might call a peer-to-peer model to a client/server model. We used to be allowed to learn by experiment by having a good old scrap with our financial competitors. Now we are told what is to be done by decree. Client/server models of any kind of social organization are typically objectionable on the basis of fragility, single points of failure, lack of feedback, and simple unfairness: Who gets to be the server? Who guards the guards? Finance now has an aesthetically minded design that patently doesn’t work, and what’s more, nobody seems to be bothered that it doesn’t work, as if working isn’t even the point.
I have selected just a few quotes. There is a lot here to pick apart and spur discussion. Also, if you haven’t done so yet, read Bitcoin Is Venice.
277 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby 15 Jun
I love that Bitcoin that isn't abstract at all.
Satoshi wrote and released the code for software that allowed strangers to agree on the state of a ledger. Bitcoin started when he mined the first block and the network got going when someone started requesting the block history from him.
It's a voluntary system: no one compels you to use it. How much value you attach to your ability to make a specific change to the ledger is up to you...and whoever you can convince to trade with you.
One thing many of the obituaries of Bitcoin have had in common is their focus on Bitcoin in abstract. JC has written here another obituary for Bitcoin (" Bitcoin has been fixed...The utopian dream is truly over.") and I expect it will age as well as the rest for its inability to grasp the practical nature of Bitcoin.

A few notes:
Thus, the odd dissonance of Bitcoin: for all its technological novelty it still depends on mutual trust. An abstract token of value is no use between hostile strangers who do not agree on that value — who do not trust it.
There is no dissonance here. JC's gotcha (You have to trust someone else to think it's worth anything, so it's not trustless) is like saying "What if there is no electricity?" The only way one could achieve some ultimately trustless experience (as JC seems to imply Bitcoiners seek) would be in the abstract. In reality, we're swimming in trust and Bitcoiners are only looking for a way to avoid trusting our finances entirely to third parties who might turn on us at any moment (or at the compulsion of government).

At this point, I can barely resist an appeal to the midwit-bell-curve meme: left and right say having some cash under the mattress is good; midwit says
When, and while, you hold cash physically, for all intents and purposes, the money is withdrawn from the financial system. It is disengaged. You have an “indebtedness” to yourself. It cancels out. It is meaningless. Worthless. Valueless.

Just as they must for cash, people must believe in Bitcoin as a token of value.
This is true for everything. It is just to say: people must want a thing for it to have value.

Finally,
By transacting for an asset in a currency you commit to the metaphor
Bitcoin, the US dollar, euros are not fictions that works as long as people believe in them. Using money is not like the scene in Hook where Peter suddenly begins to believe and the magical food appears so all the lost boys can have a joyful food fight. Money is a network we use and, yes, it has more value the greater its extent (the more people who use it). But it doesn't feel like people believe in money. They use it because it works. The second it stops working, they stop using it. Belief on the other hand can continue for millennia without the return of Christ. Money is not a metaphor.
While I certainly admire JC's erudition, I can't say that it amounts to much. (His fiat version of not your keys, not your coins was interesting though).
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In reality, we're swimming in trust and Bitcoiners are only looking for a way to avoid trusting our finances entirely to third parties who might turn on us at any moment (or at the compulsion of government).
Excellent
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We should not want a trustless system. We should not build for system in which people do not have to trust each other, because of its corollary: if you don’t have to trust, nor must you be trusted. You do not have to behave in a trustworthy way.
I'm going to spend some time to simmer thoughts over this. There's a point there but there is also a deep, deep counter point, namely that even though I believe that most people are honest, prevention is always better than remediation. It saves time and allows us to focus on the important stuff. Productive things.
Bitcoin should be boring.
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I'm reading it but not sure I'll finish it, feels like an amass of patched rags stick together in order to make 'a book' but no coherent structure.
Just my 2 sats. I'm quite dumb and things need to be explained to me as clear as water for me to understand.
I think that's what I liked about 'The bitcoin standard' there are just a few ideas and they are thoroughly explained theoretically and with examples.
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100 sats \ 1 reply \ @seashell 15 Jun
every critique like this says more about fiat brain than bitcoin, the author is stuck in a world where capital has to be mediated by institutions. bitcoin doesn’t fit that model, so he calls it “alchemical”, but that’s exactly the point bitcoin isn’t trying to be capital as he knows it. it dissolves the need for permissioned capital altogether he’s calling the revolution a costume party because he’s still holding an invite from the old world
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Car 15 Jun
Are you talking about the author of the book or the writer of the review? Seems like it’s directed towards the author? Not the writer of the review? But it might be the author fault because it’s a bad take on Bitcoin?
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I read this book and I remember absolutely nothing about it
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Parts of it are a tough slog.
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I think it's good to hear the opposing view, even if it's often wrong. It helps us get better when we spot a problem.
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I agree
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not because it has fixed anything. Rather, Bitcoin has been fixed
Hard not to feel bad for people that stumble through life so confused. Like saying a tape measure doesn't measure a thing because the thing was there to be measured.
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sounds like verbal masturbation. it's peer to peer fixed supply energy money
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