Archive

Papers I have contributed to


My latest

Medium, John Griffin is an Academic Fabulist (Mar. 2024)
In which I take academic John Griffin to task over his studies on Tether and illicit use of crypto

Bankless, The Second Bitcoin Civil War (podcast) (Feb. 2024)
What Bitcoin Season 2 is, and why it’s changing everything for Bitcoin

Medium
, Setting the Record Straight on Bloomberg’s Stablecoin Coverage (Jan. 2024)
Why Bloomberg is wrong to tar all new interest-bearing stables with the Terra-Luna brush

Fortune, The crypto industry is embracing self regulation. It’s time Washington gets on board (July 2023)
Why Congress needs to consider Proof of Reserve initiatives in Federal Legislation


Favorite appearances

Good intros to my worldview:

Lex Fridman Podcast, Bitcoin Core Values, Layered Scaling, and Blocksize Debates, with Lex Fridman
Lengthy, beginner-friendly discussion of Bitcoin’s underlying values and the key conflicts that marked its history.

The Times Podcast, What if Bitcoin Hits $1m? with Asya Fouks
A concise, beginner-friendly introduction to Bitcoin

What Bitcoin Did: Beginner’s Guide, Altcoins, a History of Failure and Bitcoin FUD
Beginner-friendly introductions to the history of altcoins and bitcoin critiques


Debates against Bitcoin critics

Debates against strident critics of Bitcoin:

What Bitcoin Did, Critiquing Bitcoin with Frances Coppola & Nic Carter
Featuring economist Frances Coppola

The Grant Williams Podcast, Both Sides of the Coin: A Civilized Bitcoin Debate
Featuring HF manager Mike Green

The Verge Podcast, Is There A Future For Bitcoin?
Featuring Prof. Steve Hanke


Notable essays

A selection of my most popular essays:

A Most Peaceful Revolution (Sep. 2019)

This is undoubtedly the most popular essay I’ve ever written. It’s a call to action, a manifesto, and a reality check for Bitcoiners. This phenomenon we’re a part of is a deeply political process, and it’s not going to be an easy road. But we fight because our cause is true and just.

What Explains Bitcoin’s Resurgence (Jan. 2021)

Written for NY Magazine, this piece covers the developments in Bitcoin since 2017 and what distinguishes its rally in 2021. I focus on developments in market infrastructure, narrative shifts, novel market participants, and the stunning macroeconomic backdrop which is now powering the market. This piece is written for a mainstream audience, assuming no prior knowledge of Bitcoin.

How Much Energy Does Bitcoin Actually Consume? (May 2021)

For the Harvard Business Review. Written for a general audience, this essay considers the Bitcoin energy question and looks into the challenging epistemic dynamics of the debate.

Bitcoin at 12 (Oct. 2020)

On the occasion of the twelfth anniversary of the publication of the Bitcoin white paper, I reflect on how that remarkable document changed the course of my life, and the course of history. I discuss, for the first time, what supporting Bitcoin means to me.

Bitcoin’s Existential Crisis (Oct. 2018)

Originally titled ‘What is is like to be a Bitcoin’ as a nod to Nagel, this essay argues that Bitcoin’s apparent shortcoming – its constant struggle to retain a unitary and consistent identity – is one of its greatest strengths.

Bitcoin Mining is America’s Most Misunderstood Industry (Jan. 2022)

For Newsweek, I consider new developments in North American Bitcoin mining. I note the stark contrast between the transparency, sustainability, and grid benevolence exhibited by Bitcoin miners, and the way the press and policymakers describe the industry.

How to scale Bitcoin (without changing a thing) (April 2019)

I personally consider this one of the most important things I’ve ever written. I lay out an expanded vision for Bitcoin as a settlement network for banks, building on the ideas of Saifedean Ammous, Hal Finney, and Selgin and White. I explain how ‘institutional scaling’ through intermediaries is not only possible but desirable; and how Bitcoins superior auditability makes it a superior reserve asset as compared with gold. For this to work, reintroducing Proofs of Reserve is a necessity. Since I wrote this, PoR has gained considerable currency in the industry.

It’s the settlement assurances, stupid (July 2019)

I explain that while it’s trivial to copy Bitcoin, it’s impossible to replicate its settlement quality, which is a function of revenue accruing to miners. I compare Bitcoin to alternatives on that basis, using a variety of analogies to explain the nature of finality in public blockchain systems. I encourage users to think critically about confirmation thresholds and develop some simple heuristics to assess settlement quality.

Visions of Bitcoin (July 2018)

Coauthored with Hasu. Based on a diagram idly scrawled in the space of about 15 minutes, we argue in this article that popular interpretations of Bitcoin’s teleology – its core purpose – have changed dramatically over the course of its existence. This essay is frequently cited in critiques of Bitcoin (oops!).

Bitcoin Bites the Bullet (June 2019)

In this piece, I methodically walk through five tradeoffs that Satoshi faced when designing Bitcoin, explaining one by one how it ended up with a set of apparently suboptimal tradeoffs. Invariably, there’s a good explanation for why Bitcoin is the way that it is – and why deviations from those choices are not necessarily improvements.

Après Le Déluge, Bitcoin (April 2020)

For American Mind. Written for a general audience, this essay makes the case for the existence of crypto-financial infrastructure as a neutral alternative to our existing, highly politicized financial rails.