BlackOxford's Reviews > Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money

Digital Gold by Nathaniel Popper
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Read 2 times. Last read May 11, 2016.

Hacking the Central Banks

If there is only time to read one book about Bitcoin, this should be the one.

Bitcoin is not just a practical technology, it is also a philosophy and an economic ideology. Popper gives a reasonable nod to all three (Arguably it is the last which has proven essential in its initial successes but which has now run out of steam). But like all philosophies it has a problem.

As a self contained system Bitcoin is a masterwork of self-verifying logic. This logic is an ingenious combination of Kantian analysis (the blockchain is a giant double-entry ledger which automatically identifies errors) and Hegelian dialectics (any blockchain can only be integrated into the system through competitive trial and error toward the solution of a mathematical problem) and Lockean consensus (if there is disagreement about who wins in block competition, the consensus within the network rules). There is even a nod to Leibnizian monadology (the encryption of the blockchain allows an extreme compression of the entire ledger so that it an be stored simultaneously throughout the network of Bitcoin users). This combination of four philosophical solutions to the problem of integrity makes Bitcoin itself (but not necessarily its software) tamper-proof.

Economically this means perfect efficiency: zero fraud, virtually no transaction cost, and almost instantaneous execution of transactions (well, ten minutes). Ideologically, libertarians see this as a way to become independent of central banks which may be tempted either to debase the currency (the maximum Bitcoin supply is 21 million, an amount which will be approached only asymptotically at a predictable rate) or to control where and when it can be used (there is no effective way to control cross-border flows of Bitcoin since they never leave the ledger).

The problem arises not within the system but in the relation of the system to any other monetary system. This connection inevitably involves brokers and dealers and exchanges and traders which are not covered, as it were, by the Bitcoin guarantee of integrity or insulation from outside authority.

So to the extent Bitcoin is accepted as a convention it is indeed significant. But getting into it or out of it is fraught with the same dangers, inefficiencies, and regulatory arbitrariness as any other currency. And as long as governments don't accept Bitcoin in payment of taxes (which makes fiat currency currency), Bitcoin is a monetary sideshow mostly of interest to the underworld (not necessarily criminal) which is forced to hack the currently dominant monetary system to survive. This alone is likely to be sufficient to ensure Bitcoin a place in economic and social history.

Postscript: After posting this review, this one day conference at MIT was announced. The technology is clearly advancing way beyond Bitcoin. https://www.technologyreview.com/s/60...
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
Started Reading (Paperback Edition)
May 11, 2016 – Finished Reading
May 11, 2016 – Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)
June 26, 2016 – Shelved (Paperback Edition)
December 27, 2016 – Shelved as: economics (Paperback Edition)
January 20, 2017 – Shelved
January 20, 2017 – Shelved as: economics
November 8, 2018 – Shelved as: technology (Paperback Edition)
November 8, 2018 – Shelved as: technology

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Thank you for your review, I won’t read the book because I doubt I’d absorb as much meaning from it as I would by revisiting this clear and superb analysis. I read another book on Bitcoin years ago and kind of grasped the idea of the block chain and it’s utility but the point of “mining” still eludes me completely. The miners pay for the cost of maintaining the ledger by being rewarded with bitcoins? What happens when they run out of coins to be rewarded with? I’m sure there are short YouTube videos explaining all this (my go to for complicated sciencey things I don’t understand). Anyway thank you, I understand more about Bitcoin now from your short brilliant review than from countless articles and a book!


message 2: by Michael (last edited May 09, 2021 10:07PM) (new)

Michael Perkins Given that you're an Elon Musk fan, I know you have your money on Dogecoin. Mine's on bottle caps.


BlackOxford Jonathan wrote: "Thank you for your review, I won’t read the book because I doubt I’d absorb as much meaning from it as I would by revisiting this clear and superb analysis. I read another book on Bitcoin years ago..."

Jonathan, a big selling point is that they will eventually runout of coins. Thus making inflation impossible. Of course this also means that the value of the coins in relation to all other commodities, including currencies, will rise. But until you can pay your taxes with them, the big crash is a distinct possibility.


BlackOxford Michael wrote: "Given that you're an Elon Musk fan, I know you have your money on Dogecoin. Mine's on bottle caps."

Your sarcasm, Michael, is unbecoming. I’m waiting for the Next Big Thing Elon might suggest... and then shorting it.


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