The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Oct. 12, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Sponsored by Welcome to The Node.
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Today's must-reads Top Shelf PERSONNEL CHANGES: Payments company Stripe has begun assembling a crypto engineering team to chart its multi-coin future. Guillaume Poncin, Stripe's former head of engineering for banking and financial products, will run the team of four, according to LinkedIn a jobs post. Sam Bankman-Fried is stepping back from his quant trading shop Alameda Research to make room for two co-CEOs: Caroline Ellison and Sam Trabucco.
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As heard on CoinDesk TV... Sound Bites "Selective disclosure of information with specific counterparties is just a useful property to fight for."
–Justin Ehrenhofer, Monero Community Member, on CoinDesk TV's "First Mover."
What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals
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Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon Is a Dunce On Monday, speaking at an event hosted by the Institute of International Finance, JPMorgan Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon once again said the outlook for bitcoin is grim. At various times in the past Dimon has gone on record calling bitcoin "fool's gold" and "a fraud." Dimon is a dunce.
Of course, while Dimon has his own personal beliefs – they don't quite measure up to the position of JPMorgan. In recent years, the largest bank in the U.S. by assets has rolled out its own digital currency, JPM coin, has moved hard into crypto asset research and, in August, has opened access to crypto funds for its wealthy clientele.
This mercenary attitude goes far in explaining why Dimon is routinely caught off guard by bitcoin, and why the industry seems to carry on and thrive despite his criticisms. Take his comments yesterday regarding bitcoin's supply cap, theoretically locked in at 21 million BTC.
Some of these guarantees are technological, or embedded in the code that, as Dimon notes, is auditable. Others are socially directed. Bitcoin as a digital network will always enable the ability for users to hold their coins and transact peer-to-peer. Likewise, people will always be able to run a node and audit the money supply. It's in the code.
Sometime in 2140, all 21 million BTC will have been issued to miners and the network will rely on fees to pay for security. It's reasonable to ask what happens then, especially as others have noted bitcoin's fee economy has yet to mature. Thankfully, most people in the bitcoin community have the humility to say that they don't know.
As a matter of consensus, bitcoiners can change the 21 million cap. But it depends on what is in their economic interest. In the past, powerful groups sought to change a fundamental characteristic of bitcoin and were shot down. There have also been a number of altcoins that take bitcoin's source code and change a few parameters.
He may not "care" about Bitcoin. But plenty of people do. Like, a lot.
–D.K.
The Chaser...
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