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I hope so too, in part because I already sense some tension with claims made in this part and Stephan Kinsella's arguments against the legitimacy of IP.
That makes me suspicious of the rigor of the conclusions.
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I hope so too, in part because I already sense some tension with claims made in this part and Stephan Kinsella's arguments against the legitimacy of IP.
That makes me suspicious of the rigor of the conclusions.
And it has the property that it doesn't make claims about the world. At least, I buy Voskuil's version that the only claim the user of bitcoin makes about the world is that it may be possible to resist the state.
I'm hopeful that later parts of Praxeology of Privacy will deal more with the messy technicals of building a society based on peer-to-peer, cryptographic tools.