CW
413 posts

CW
@GenericLedger
Views are solely my own and not intended to be good, right, or useful.


With all due respect to Chris, I completely disagree with this take. Chris argues that "web3," particularly crypto-powered gaming and media, failed due to scams and regulation, and that better regulation will unlock these non-financial cases. OK, think about this for a second. Does this pass the smell test? Do you think web3 gaming failed because of Gary Gensler? Do you think web3 media plays failed because the scammers crowded out the honest media innovators? Really? If this is true, why didn't they kill financial crypto, which had WAY more of both? Financial use cases were right in the crosshairs of the regulatory harassment, and they also attracted way more scams. Why shouldn't we instead accept the more obvious answer: non-financial use cases for crypto have failed because no one wants them. Let's just admit it. They were bad products. They failed the market test. It was not Gensler or SBF or Terra that caused these things to fail, it was that no one wanted any of it. Pretending otherwise is cope. Enormous sums of capital and talent explored these ideas, and we should acknowledge what we learned. That lesson is not "if we just had better laws, then finally people would finally be using decentralized Spotify" or whatever. Call a spade a spade. Every single use case in crypto that has worked at scale has been financial in nature. 2008: Bitcoin - non-sovereign store of value 2014: Tether - stablecoins 2015: Ethereum - programmable money 2017: ICOs - capital formation 2018: Prediction markets (Augur, later Polymarket) 2020: DeFi - literally finance is in the name 2021: NFTs - non-fungible financial assets (to the extent they worked) 2024: RWAs (the year BUIDL took off) All this stuff was adopted bottoms-up. We as investors discovered that people wanted to do these things with crypto. The web3 consumer stuff, on the other hand, was primarily conjured up by investors and pitch decks, ZIRP accelerationism, and "wouldn't it be crazy if" blog posts. This was the opposite of the "what smart people are doing on their weekends" thesis. In fact, if you go back to the Ethereum white paper from 2014, almost every single Ethereum use case Vitalik describes is financial in nature: token issuance, stablecoins, derivatives, on-chain treasuries/DAOs, on-chain savings, insurance, price feeds, escrow, gambling, prediction markets. It's all in there. This is nothing to be ashamed of. Finance is almost 10% of GDP. It's an enormous part of the world economy, and banks are some of the lowest NPS score companies in the world. People hate their banks and the outdated financial architectures their money runs on. It's literally why Bitcoin was created. There is so much to innovate in the realm of finance, and I truly believe we are only at the beginning of that displacement. You don't need to assume anything more to project the next 10x in crypto. The old saying goes "crypto will do to finance what the Internet did to every other industry." I respect Chris's optimism. But 18 years in, we should not be propagating this meme about consumer web3 use cases as though they're inevitable. If you are hanging around the rim hoping that crypto is going to disrupt media and gaming, you should know the history and look at it with clear eyes. Now if you as a founder believe that despite that, you know the secret to cracking this market--I respect that, and I certainly don't begrudge anyone to follow their convictions. But I think it's important that investors be honest that all the evidence points the other way.






I am increasingly convinced that crypto is not a speculative asset class, but an inevitable outcome of a broken global system of finance and IP. The institutional framework we have relied on for decades is weakening. Legal systems, treaties, and global institutions are struggling to coordinate behavior across borders. At the same time, software is becoming the primary mechanism for trust, enforcement, and organization. As this transition accelerates, market cycles matter less than structural direction. What comes next are digitally native organizations, ownership models, and coordination systems that are not anchored to any single state. The political and economic scaffolding we inherited was designed for an analog era. It does not scale to an internet native world. Nation states will not disappear, but their exclusive claim to legitimacy eventually will. Networks will increasingly take on roles once reserved for governments. If we care about open markets, individual autonomy, and private communication online, then crypto is no longer a speculative asset but a core infrastructure that powers the world. What a time to be alive.

codex 5.3 is terrifying.

for the past 2 years ive been deeply paranoid about my kids’ future in the post-agi era. things im increasingly convinced of -> ai will be smarter than the average human before my kids enter adulthood, possibly well before. -> therefore agency and taste r the only things that matter (old adage but obv true). -> the current school system which emphasizes compliance and repetition is already obsolete. -> so what do i need to do as a parent? 1. have them use ai as much as possible. 2. give them as much freedom as possible (agency). 3. expose them to as many things as possible so they know early on in life what they r naturally good at and interested in (taste). 4. give them a lot of time and love. that's it, 2-4 probably applied before ai, but certainly more-so in the next 10-20 yrs.





GM. All of the breathless hand wringing on market structure . . . Steady lads. Delaying the committee markup is actually good for crypto given the state of deliberations. It’s competent negotiation. Roger Fisher and William Ury — the Harvard Negotiation Project founders behind Getting to Yes — explained decades ago that power in any negotiation comes from “your Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement”. In simple terms, the side that can most easily walk away has the leverage. If you need the deal more than the other side, you get squeezed. Chris Voss, the former FBI hostage negotiator (@fbinegotiator ), says the same thing in modern terms: you don’t get leverage by wanting the deal — you get leverage by making the other side fear losing it. (Read his book! Enjoyable and eye-opening!) That’s exactly where crypto is right now. Pushing forward with a markup would have required further backsliding to achieve compromises that would permanently weaken U.S. crypto competitiveness. By slowing the process, the sponsors and the industry is signaling something critical: we’re not desperate. And we simply aren’t! We can live with the status quo longer than the other side can live with no coherent framework, regulatory ambiguity, capital flight, and innovation moving offshore. Congress is under pressure from constituents, markets, and global competition to get this right. Crypto, by contrast, already operates globally. It has alternatives. It has a pretty good couple of years ahead at the very least without this bill. That’s a strong BATNA. And it helps to pause and make everyone recognize that. So the delayed markup isn’t a failure — I see so many silly tweets sneeringly eulogizing the bill. It’s leverage, people. It tells lawmakers that some things aren’t able to pass right now. No one is desperate. The bill will finally move BECAUSE it’s clear the industry is willing to walk.








@Drew_Morris Lawyers shouldn't be on social media, period. Rookies.




