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by jjoonathan 1456 days ago
But that's just it: bad choices in the social layer become nearly irrevocable once a self-interested, powerful elite emerges. The bad choices put them on top and they will do anything to stay there.
2 comments

> But that's just it: bad choices in the social layer become nearly irrevocable once a self-interested, powerful elite emerges. The bad choices put them on top and they will do anything to stay there.

I would argue that this trait is not unique to blockchain systems -- in fact, if you presented this argument without context, I doubt many readers would put blockchain in the top 5 potential referents. See: economic systems, political power struggles, social structures, etc.

Agreed 100%.

Satoshi thought bailouts were the problem, but concentrated power was the problem. The libertarian "cure" of stronger property rights only exacerbates power concentration because concentrated power is in the best position to exploit stronger property rights. Cue exponential growth.

Not at all. If a self-interested minority emerges, the majority can fork away anew (see: Steem & Hive).
lol. You forgot to weight by wealth.

Regular economics uses the same dirty trick when it talks about value creation rather than wealth-weighted value creation. It stuffs all its dirty laundry in that one weight term and then "forgets" to talk about it. Oops!

Weight by wealth? You are failing to understand the basic concept of a hard fork. Social consensus doesn't care what your number on the blockchain says.

Case in point, the Hive hard fork.

One very prominent and widely unliked individual purchased majority ownership of the STEEM token. Weighted by wealth, they could now control the chain, its governance, and most notably unlock tokens (20% of the supply) that were (per social consensus between Steem and its community) not supposed to be unlocked.

So, what did the Steem community do in response? They hard forked the platform, launching Hive. All STEEM holders could migrate their assets to Hive, except the individual in question who attempted to takeover Steem via wealth. The malicious elite was cut off entirely. Today, two years on, Hive is still gaining in activity and has more than twice the market cap of STEEM. Comparatively, Steem has become a ghost town.