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by beaconstudios 1536 days ago
Given we're heading into environmental crisis, I don't think it's morally defensible to promote a system which actively attempts to maximise energy consumed to the point of restarting coal power plants, in order to explore industries that have primarily been used for greater-fool and pump-and-dump wealth transfer. I haven't seen any examples where NFTs actually have use that isn't just "collectibles + massive energy waste", and the only uses I've seen for crypto outside scamming are avoiding legal barriers ie transferring money over borders, selling drugs, that type of thing.

You'd need to put forward an argument for specific NFT or crypto tech that hinge on blockchains as a necessary component of the innovation, and I've literally never seen that. I've seen plenty of "thing X but on the blockchain", which is not innovation, it's branding.

The fact of the matter, as far as I can see, is that NFTs and crypto are popular because they enable you to make tons of money grifting, without having to go through the inconvenience of providing any actually-useful innovation, while contributing to environmental destruction. It's like boiler-room penny stocks, if they were fuelled by coal-rolling.

1 comments

There's quite a big elephant underneath this argument, which is the "zero utility in crypto" assumption. If utility exists then the question of energy use and externality is simply a matter of cost/benefit like everything else society does with resources.

And then you go back to why the stuff was invented, and it was for exactly the thing that you're dismissing, which is to evade authorities and enhance privacy through cryptography. That is the utility Satoshi identified, and it drove initial adoption, and continues to be pursued through privacy coins. A zero utility stance amounts to "Satoshi had no justifications". The rest is negotiation of the price.

Everything after that - copycat coins, distributed computation on Ethereum, NFTs and so on - is "what else can we do with this stuff", which is actually a much more challenging problem because it suggests no particular specification, hence the entire space is in the midst of a random walk in which features are developed with few concepts grounding our ability to determine whether they do the things we're imagining they do. The scams have a playground, but that's not actually different from capitalism in other times and places.

> There's quite a big elephant underneath this argument, which is the "zero utility in crypto" assumption. If utility exists then the question of energy use and externality is simply a matter of cost/benefit like everything else society does with resources. And then you go back to why the stuff was invented, and it was for exactly the thing that you're dismissing, which is to evade authorities and enhance privacy through cryptography.

Passing laws and then prosecuting offenders is a major way that society codifies what costs are acceptable and what’s unacceptable.

If you believe that offering an bypass around that control has utility (corrupt regimes, whatever), I don’t think it’s fair to handwave the really sticky part: how does society add controls so that we don’t destroy the planet through runaway energy consumption, or end up with the smartest, most ruthless, and least ethical folks controlling all the resources.

I'm aware that there is utility in crypto in being ungovernable (though ideologically I only partially agree with that utility - I think tax evasion is immoral under the current system, for instance) but I'm saying the cost/benefit weighs massively in the cost side: not only the positive feedback loop of energy consumption, but the fraud, the wasting of skilled engineers' time building ever more elaborate scams, the empowerment of ancap types like Buterin, the enabling of actual immoral crime like ransome ward, just so so many negative utilities. Proponents don't even invest what I consider the actual upsides like remittance or harm reduction in buying drugs - they invest in get rich quick schemes. That should tell you where their priorities lie.