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Comment by nakamoto_damacy

4 hours ago

How did his books PREDICT crypto when we had eCash way before any of his books? SMH.

Most of his books are also dystopias, not operating manuals.

  • a16z seems to view turning society into a dystopia as a goal, so that makes sense. Their portfolio includes:

    - DoubleSpeed, a bot farm as a service provider, allowing customers to orchestrate social media activity across thousands of fake accounts to create artificial consensus on the topic of their choice. Never pay a human again!

    - Cheddr, the TikTok of sports gambling, whose differentiating feature is allowing users under 21. Place live in-game bets with just a swipe!

    - Coverd, a new type of credit card where you can wipe off bills by betting on your favorite gambling games in their app. No VPN required!

    • Wow, I just checked the doublespeed website and it is comically evil. The footer says — verbatim, and in huge letters — "never pay a human again." (I'm not selectively quoting; it's a full sentence, despite their weird capitalization.)

      If Neal Stephenson tried to write a villain this on-the-nose, his editor would tell him to tone it down.

  • Can A16Z tell the difference? Insert that meme "At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus, from the classic sci-fi novel, Don't Create the Torment Nexus".

  • a16z and others like them never met a dystopian warning they didn't interpret as a titillating invitation to an uncomfortably exciting and inevitable future!

Yeah, which book are we talking about? Reamde features crypto heavily, but I remember having bitcoins at the time it came out.

  • I imagine this is intended (though if it's AI-generated "intended" doesn't really apply) as a reference 1999's Cryptonomicon https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptonomicon

    From that Wikipedia summary:

    > Their goal is to facilitate anonymous Internet banking using electronic money and (later) digital gold currency