> “In a blockchain like ethereum, everyone has to think the same,” he said. He plugs Ripple’s Interledger Protocol at the end, describing it as a more flexible and individualized way to send or receive payments.
It's a quid-pro-quo. Journalist gets their headline, Thomas gets his asset pumped.
> “Blockchains are a pain to work with,” wrote Thomas, the chief technology officer of Ripple Labs.
One thing to note is that he works for Ripple Labs, which created another protocol that is similar to Bitcoin/anything blockchain based... so it's pretty much a competitor calling their competition a bust.
Its worse than that he scammed many people with Ripple in past, then he proceeded to rebrand as Stellar (and somehow suckered in the guys from Stripe who are being very qiuet about it now) and is repeating the same steps as before.
> “Blockchain, the ledger software that makes the digital currency possible”
Huh? The blockchain is a name for a feature of the Bitcoin protocol. It's not a piece of software and it's not a proper noun.
But you'd be forgiven for not knowing that, given the constant hype about “blockchains” these days and their use as a hammer to try and hit every imagined nail. There's also a company named after it, which is a proper noun.
The blockchain, incidentally, is not mentioned in the Bitcoin white paper,[0] which refers to a “proof-of-work chain”. “Blockchain”, as a word, was merely internal jargon to refer to Bitcoin's specific implementation of this concept.
I'm already seeing people pile in here to call Stefan Thomas a business scammer and "a competitor calling his competition a bust" and whatever, so it's worth mentioning here that Stefan pioneered using Bitcoin with Javascript, and the most popular wallets in the world still use what he helped create today: http://bitcoinjs.org
Please have respect for the idea that his opinions on Blockchains aren't just biased in connection with his work and possessing of no technocratic merit. If you don't at least give him that, he will have received neither money nor respect for his hard work that definitely improved the Bitcoin space (because he sure wasn't getting paid to work on BitcoinJS).
That is a good point to add! With my comment "a competitor calling his competition a bust" I just wanted to make sure people took what he said with a grain of salt. If you hadn't read up on Bitcoin/blockchains/Ripple before it could be easily overlooked.
Blockchains are only useful when you need a decentralized system where nobody trusts anyone else, and where different actors need to be pseudonymous. Otherwise there are far simpler solutions.
Blockchains are so far really only effective at attracting venture capital to startups.
We're at the end of the mobile tech cycle, people are desperate for a new investment theme. IoT and blockchain are showing up everywhere but it feels like a contrived attempt to start another cycle.
Remember "push" technology and B2B exchanges? Two other keywords that popped up in contrived efforts to start new tech cycles after the first .com implosion.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 40.2 ms ] threadIt's a quid-pro-quo. Journalist gets their headline, Thomas gets his asset pumped.
One thing to note is that he works for Ripple Labs, which created another protocol that is similar to Bitcoin/anything blockchain based... so it's pretty much a competitor calling their competition a bust.
Huh? The blockchain is a name for a feature of the Bitcoin protocol. It's not a piece of software and it's not a proper noun.
But you'd be forgiven for not knowing that, given the constant hype about “blockchains” these days and their use as a hammer to try and hit every imagined nail. There's also a company named after it, which is a proper noun.
The blockchain, incidentally, is not mentioned in the Bitcoin white paper,[0] which refers to a “proof-of-work chain”. “Blockchain”, as a word, was merely internal jargon to refer to Bitcoin's specific implementation of this concept.
[0] https://www.bitcoin.com/bitcoin.pdf
Please have respect for the idea that his opinions on Blockchains aren't just biased in connection with his work and possessing of no technocratic merit. If you don't at least give him that, he will have received neither money nor respect for his hard work that definitely improved the Bitcoin space (because he sure wasn't getting paid to work on BitcoinJS).
I thought your claim was serious.
We're at the end of the mobile tech cycle, people are desperate for a new investment theme. IoT and blockchain are showing up everywhere but it feels like a contrived attempt to start another cycle.
Remember "push" technology and B2B exchanges? Two other keywords that popped up in contrived efforts to start new tech cycles after the first .com implosion.