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1/10 or 1/4 doesn’t really matter if they manage to keep up 300% growth for a year or two. And there is still a lot of room for growth.

As for where Coinbase can go - it can take the Wallstreet on in terms of trading securities (security tokens) and derivatives - the whole DeFi market which is what Internet was to publishing companies.



Except the internet made things easier. Trading stocks isn’t expensive or error prone. We’ll see.

Is the premise that every mom and pop will list shares in their company somewhere? The problem with that isn’t technological. It’s regulatory. And the regulations were created for good reasons.


The problem is very much technological - traditional stock market is based on opacity and exclusivity. Blockchain is based on permissionlessness and transparency.

Internet didn’t succeed because it allowed illegal stuff to be published. It succeeded because anyone could begin publishing, and if it was illegal then it was their responsibility.

With blockchain it’s similar - you can create financial instruments without gatekeepers. It is your responsibility to uphold the laws.

Such approach leads to far greater innovation. Just look at what UniSwap is doing - they are pioneering a system to exchange low volume tokens without an order book. This is something that stock exchanges tried to solve for many years and failed. Or flash loans - a concept that is virtually impossible to do on the traditional markets, and makes the whole financial system way more resilient in the end.


Disagree. The gatekeepers exist for a reason. You can make a pink sheet stock. There was a time when anyone could issue their own stock or currency. It was not better. It's why securities laws were made.

There is not a lack of lenders and loans for people to access.

These are still solutions in search of problems


I didn’t argue for the need of regulations, and I don’t argue with the reasons. I argue with the solution.

You could use your argument for reintroducing gatekeepers to information economy.

If we banished social media and independent blogs, and got back to a bunch of government-approved publishers, we would get rid of fake news, anti-science and populism within a day.

But the cost is too great and we are looking for other solutions.

Ditto with arxiv and Elsevier. You can say a lot of bad things about Elsevier, but not in terms of the quality of papers.

Gatekeepers stiffle innovation in exchange for safety. And there are other ways to arrive at safety than through gatekeepers. (e.g. by punishing people who abuse the system post-facto).




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