Nick Szabo on Cypherpunks, Money and Bitcoin

Mr Obnoxious - Un pódcast de Peter McCormack

Categorías:

Location: San Francisco
Date: Monday, 21st October
Project: n/a
Role: Blockchain, cryptocurrency, and smart contracts pioneer

On October 31st 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto emailed the cypherpunk mailing list, telling them "I've been working on a new electronic cash system that's fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party." In the 11 years that followed Bitcoin has proven to be the most successful attempt at creating a censorship-resistant and trust minimised digital currency.

Bitcoin was not the first attempt at creating a trust minimised currency, and there were several proposals, implementations and technologies which led to Bitcoin:

In the 1990's DigiCash, headed by David Chaum, attempted to make online payments anonymous.

In 1997 Adam Back created HashCash using a proof-of-work system to reduce email spam and prevent denial of service attacks.

In 1998 Wei Dai proposed B-money to allow for an "anonymous, distributed electronic cash system".

In 2004 Hal Finney built upon the idea of Hashcash and created Reusable Proofs of Work.

And in 2005 Nick Szabo proposed Bit Gold. Where unforgettable proof of work chains would share properties of gold: scarce, valuable and trust minimised but with the benefit of being easily transactable.

When Satoshi released the Bitcoin whitepaper, rather than a revolution, Bitcoin was an evolution of all that had come before it with Bitcoin being the most trust minimised, censorship-resistant and hardest currency that has ever existed.

Among Satoshi's email recipients was Nick Szabo, a computer scientist, cryptographer, the designer of Bit Gold and Smart Contracts pioneer. In a rare interview, Nick joins me to discuss the cypherpunk movement, what money is, privacy and of course, Bitcoin.

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Connect with Nick:
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On Twitter @NickSzabo4
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On his blog Unenumerated
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Wikipedia

Mentioned in the interview:
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The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins
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DigiCash
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Bit Gold
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Wei Dai
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Hal Finney
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B-money
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Whitfield Diffie
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Ralph Merkle
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David Chaum
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Phil Zimmermann
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Pretty Good Privacy
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Tim May
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Eric Hughes
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Tor
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BitTorrent
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Julian Assange
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Wikileaks
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Moore’s Law
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Silk Road
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Casa
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Bitcoin whitepaper
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Cantillon Effect
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Zooko Wilcox
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Infura
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Gab
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Hungarian revolution
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Hong Kong protests
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Heisenberg principle
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Quantum computing
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Concorde
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ScramJet

Cypherpunks/cryptographers mentioned in the show:
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Wei Dai
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Hal Finney
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Whitfield Diffie
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Ralph Merkle
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David Chaum
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Phil Zimmermann
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Tim May
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Eric Hughes
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Zooko Wilcox

Other relevant WBD podcasts:
- WBD153:
Trace Mayer on Claiming Your Monetary Sovereignty with Bitcoin
- WBD150:
Erik Voorhees on Understanding Libertarianism
- WBD141:
Stephan Livera on Austrian Economics, Libertarianism and Bitcoin
- WBD127:
Saifedean Ammous on Understanding Bitcoin Economics
- WBD110:
Andrew Poelstra on Schnorr, Taproot & Graft Root Coming to Bitcoin
- WBD106:
Bitcoin Block Reorgs Explained with Adam Back and Bryan Bishop
- WBD070:
Privacy and Zcash with Zooko Wilcox
- WBD069:
Whitfield Diffie on the History of Cryptography
- WBD047:
Adam Back on a Decade of Bitcoin
- WBD036:
The Threat of Fractional Reserve Bitcoin from Wall Street with Saifedean Ammous & Caitlin Long
- WBD032:
Tuur Demeester on the Looming Debt Crisis and Central Banks for Bitcoin

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