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I think @bluematt does a nice job with this. But, Laura Shin comes off as really salty about Bitcoin culture -- and just not understanding in general that Bitcoin culture isn't any one thing. It seems to drive the shitcoiners (and normies) crazy that Bitcoin is just a mess (and that most bitcoiners are fine without any clear governance structure at all).

The premise of the episode is that Corallo reached out to Laura Shin to respond to Nic Carter's quantum fud of late (#1260675, #1295184, #1426664).

Shin keeps asking bringing up that Ethereum is doing all this centralized stuff to fix the threat to quantum. And she also keeps acting like there is a monolith called "the Bitcoin developers" and she is clearly not pleased with Corallo's responses.

Honestly, Shin sounds a lot like some other people who think there is something "official" in Bitcoin. Corallo clearly comes at it from the angle the only official thing is the market.

Here's an X link if you'd prefer to watch it there:

389 sats \ 1 reply \ @bluematt 3h

Honestly, the podcast with Livera on the same topic was much, much better. https://stephanlivera.com/episode/719/

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I'll give it a listen. Laura Shin reminded me strongly why I don't listen to her podcast very often.

Great answer here, by the way!

Shin: "Do you think that there would be value if the bitcoin core developers did something similar to what the Ethereum Foundation did where they said we've set aside these group of people to focus on this, we've set aside this amount of resources...you know, whatever it is. Just signal to the public that this is being worked on in a dedicated fashion with real timelines to hit?"

Corallo: "I think that kind of defeats the point of bitcoin? I don't know what. There's no one who can make a statement on behalf of other people."
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103 sats \ 2 replies \ @optimism 3h
Laura Shin comes off as really salty

I mean... did you walk far away from your phone/puter to not be in time to skip the opening ads? I did, and I was cooking dinner and I didn't want to mess that up. It's good that I'm in such a good mood today that I'm going to forget that I heard all that scammy shit.

The premise of the episode is that Corallo reached out to Laura Shin

If that's true, then why? Why Laura Shin? What does she bring? Whose ear does she have that is going to make a difference? Is she the Jack-whisperer or something?

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101 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby OP 2h

I've gotten so used to skipping ads that my default behavior now is press play, mash the 10s forward button until I hear interviewee's voice, listen from that point.

I strongly agree with Corallo's stance that price action really is not affected by quantum fud at this time (I find it very hard to believe that smart people are selling bitcoin because they're scared of quantum computers)...but if that's the case, one does wonder why he bothered to reach out to her (something she repeats at least twice). I assume the main advantage being on her show has is that her audience is probably more likely to share it with mainstream/suits. So then it does sound a little like trying to correct a narrative.

Maybe he just wanted to kick back at Carter and is trying to all the big podcasts?

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103 sats \ 0 replies \ @optimism 2h
price action really is not affected by quantum fud

Nope it's just people finding out that

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1 sat \ 0 replies \ @TimeToBuyBitcoin 3h -50 sats

Corallo's framing is exactly right: quantum is an engineering problem with known mitigations, not a crisis. The interesting part is watching Laura struggle with the fact that Bitcoin's 'mess' is intentional — there's no CEO to call, no governance board to pressure, no coordinated roadmap she can critique. After years of watching how these conversations play out, I've noticed that outsiders often want Bitcoin to have the decision-making structure of traditional systems, which is the one thing it explicitly avoids. That architectural stubbornness is the whole point.