In The Stablecoin Saga I discussed the first of Datafinnovation's two series on (meta)stablecoins, about the mystery of where the backing for coins like USDT is. Now, below the fold, it is time to look at their second series, mostly about tracing the flows of stablecoins using data from their blockchains.
I'm David Rosenthal, and this is a place to discuss the work I'm doing in Digital Preservation.
Tuesday, November 29, 2022
Friday, November 18, 2022
The Stablecoin Saga
Starting in August, Datafinnovation has posted two series of posts about (meta)stablecoins, the first about Tether's reserves and the second about tracing flows of stablecoins. Below the fold, primarily for my own understanding, I try to summarize the first. I plan to return to the second in a subsequent post.
Friday, November 11, 2022
No Actual People Were Harmed In The Making Of This Market
FTX Token |
The modus operandi of the crypto-bros in responding to criticism and calls for regulation is to talk about "innovation" and gaslighting about hypothetical future benefits, to deflect attention from the actual current costs of their favorite technology (see also autonomous vehicles). Below the fold I point out an egregious example of the genre.
Thursday, November 10, 2022
Matt Levine's "The Crypto Story": Part 2
The first part of my discussion of Matt Levine's The Crypto Story covered the first two of its four chapters:
- Ledgers, Bitcoin, Blockchain, in which he lays out the basics of Bitcoin's technology.
- What Does It Mean?, in which he discusses generalizations of Bitcoin, such as Ethereum.
- The Crypto Financial System, in which he discusses financial technologies such as exchanges, stablecoins and DeFi.
- Trust, Money, Community, in which he discusses the social and societal impacts.
Tuesday, November 8, 2022
Matt Levine's "The Crypto Story": Part 1
Even if you're not a Bloomberg subscriber you can read Matt Levine's The Crypto Story with a free registration, or here, and I urge you to do so. It is long, about 40K words, but well worth the effort. It is remarkably good - lucid, comprehensive, balanced, accurate. It even has footnotes expanding on the details where he is oversimplifying for clarity of exposition.
Levine's magnum opus is in four parts:
Levine's magnum opus is in four parts:
- Ledgers, Bitcoin, Blockchain, in which he lays out the basics of Bitcoin's technology.
- What Does It Mean?, in which he discusses generalizations of Bitcoin, such as Ethereum.
- The Crypto Financial System, in which he discusses financial technologies such as exchanges, stablecoins and DeFi.
- Trust, Money, Community, in which he discusses the social and societal impacts.
Tuesday, November 1, 2022
Greater Fool Supply-Chain Crisis
Source |
Bitcoin’s doing fine, thanks for asking.Below the fold I look into this persistent failure to proceed moon-wards
Amid a shaky few months for markets, the world’s favourite cryptocurrency has been remarkably stable, trading in the narrowest range since late 2020
...
As might be expected, that lack of movement has coincided with a downturn in activity on most exchanges other than market leader Binance, which has cut fees to drum up more business and now hosts about a fifth of all volume
...
Stability looks good, at least relative to what’s happening elsewhere. But thinning volumes in a market that has no utility beyond store of value, where the actions of its few active daily participants are being determined by technical resistance and support levels, is not a symptom of robust health.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)