I don’t know Europe’s polling. But in America, the majority is against [1][2]. (The only ones showing marginal favour ability are industry polls [3] by low-quality pollsters [4].)
> You just enjoy shitting on anything that has the word “web3”
I’ve made a lot of money from investing in companies that do things around crypto. Its users are a population willing to pay high fees for nebulous ideological points, almost uniquely so outside religion and politics.
Now show me what the majority thinks of “tech bros” commodifying everything and taking away everyone’s jobs, including and especially with OpenAI.
Oh wait that part is awesome and people should just atop worrying and learn to love the bomb…
I just don’t like the selective double standard of these arguments. Far less people are worried about blockchain than about AI, and the public is CORRECT. Because with Web3 even with the shittiest of shitcoins people only stand to risk what they voluntarily put at risk. While AI can harm millions of people who never opted in, and wanted nothing to do with it, across the entire world, their lives are going to change kicking and screaming, and you say “they should get used to it”.
It is the politicians and banks looking to ban things because they are worried about competition to, say, CBDCs. And if you cheer them on then don’t get upset when they ban end to end encryption by the same reasoning. People actually want the freedom to choose their own digital assets. They aren’t sneaking around, they just want choice and the Republican party has come around to supporting crypto for instance. Even DT.
> Now show me what the majority thinks of “tech bros”
Declining but better than crypto, though the recency of the polling leaves much to be desired [1][2].
> taking away everyone’s jobs, including and especially with OpenAI
Honestly, an AI that writes and launches web3 projects would be hilarious.
Also, I’d single out AI—and Altman, specifically—as demonstrating that same unlikeability. The two industries currently clamouring for harsh regulation are AI and crypto.
> politicians and banks looking to ban things because they are worried about competition to, say, CBDCs
Banks lobby for crypto. It’s insanely profitable compared to regulated fare.
Who do you think has been pushing the ETF and custody rules?
> While AI can harm millions of people who never opted in
The entire thread is about crypto trashing everyone’s privacy.
Agreed about Altman, and once again I am trying to point out the key difference: AI can impose massive negative externalities on billions of people who have never opted in, whether they like it or not — while even the shittiest of shitcoins in crypto can only lose you what you voluntarily chose to put at risk. For many people that was under $1000, and for even more it was $0.
To me that is why I consider AI far more dangerous than cryptocurrnecies of any kind. And smart contracts can do far more than cryptocurrencies… while decentralized byzantine-fault-tolerant networks can do even more.
The public fears AI far more than they fear Web3. As for the banks, they couldn’t have exposure to these assets until the ETFs came about, because of laws. And these assets only became interesting because millions of regular people around the world bought into that ecosystem and started using it. The innovation in DeFi was far greater than in regulated FinTech, and without all the arcane needs for interoperability with legacy stuff that still uses fax machines and COBOL. Similarly to how packed switched decentralized VoIP completely eclipsed switchboard operators and legacy telephone networks and trusting the operators like Ma Bell! The costs dropped nearlh overnight to zero and the quality increased, while decades of government antitrust couldn’t achieve anything close to that!
I don’t know Europe’s polling. But in America, the majority is against [1][2]. (The only ones showing marginal favour ability are industry polls [3] by low-quality pollsters [4].)
> You just enjoy shitting on anything that has the word “web3”
I’ve made a lot of money from investing in companies that do things around crypto. Its users are a population willing to pay high fees for nebulous ideological points, almost uniquely so outside religion and politics.
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/07/just-8percent-of-americans-h...
[2] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/04/10/majority-...
[3] https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/pollster-ratings/ Harris
[4] https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240507551232/en/DCG...