Morlock Elloi on Sun, 31 Dec 2017 00:08:19 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> Ten years in, nobody has come up with a use for blockchain


I more or less agree with this, not sure if others do.

Having gone through cycles of development, I see randomness - sheer luck, and not doing something utterly stupid as key factors, in that order. The original volume of proposals is high, people try everything, and only a tiny fraction gets a traction (rhymes!) The most dramatic successes are often accidental, the designers had something else in mind - which is to be expected, as the hardest thing when creating something new is unlearning the context, one simply doesn't invent on demand. Once the traction happens, it's attractive to re-create the narrative and 'explain' how it came to be, deep insights, talent, mystical powers, etc.

Moving ahead from the invention point, there is progressively more influence "culture, world view, and politics", reacting with invention in novel ways, and in the end that is the only factor that matters.

On 12/30/17, 14:04, Matt Nish-Lapidus wrote:
Do you see a possible scenario where it's not a nefarious plot, but
instead that technology is invented, iterated, and adopted based on
culture, world view, and politics that are often latent and/or are held
in complete obliviousness?

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