I'm still mulling over yesterday's one-two punch of Venezuela's devaluation and Iran's Central Bank switching to yuan from USD on it's rate reporting platform.
This AM I re-read this paper from June, about future of the international monetary system, with fresh eyes. (Thread)
High level summary: the authors posit that there are four potential paths the IMS can take, depending on a) whether a systemic crisis serves as a catalyst for change or not (revolutionary vs. evolutionary) and b) whether nation-states will cooperate or compete in either scenario.
If no systemic crisis serves as catalyst, the authors postulate that either a) dollar hegemony will continue (cooperation, first screenshot) or b) competing monetary blocs will spontaneously emerge (competition, second screenshot).
If a systemic crisis *does* serve as a catalyst, then options the authors identify are either a) a new international monetary federation (Bretton Woods II: Electric Bugaloo, first screenshot) or b) 'monetary anarchy', which is about as organized as it sounds (second screenshot).
Why this came to mind after yesterday: what if there's a fifth option? A systemic crisis in emerging market economies - e.g. what Turkey, Venezuela and Iran have been experiencing on a much wider and longer scale - wouldn't necessarily have an effect on developed markets...
I'm starting to consider what happens when option 1b - no crisis, no cooperation - only applies to DM economies, and option 2b - crisis, no cooperation - only applies to emerging market economies.
One thing I'm sure of: the 2b diagram looks more likely today than it did in June.
Caveat lector: It's hard to draw conclusions from three basket case economies - and two of them petro-rentier states under sanctions, no less! - and all of a week's worth of data...
...but like I said, yesterday's news has me re-reading the IASS paper from June 2018 with fresh eyes. Here's the URL if you're into that sort of thing: publications.iass-potsdam.de/pubman/item/es…
TL,DR: what if the future of the international monetary system is already here, and it's just not evenly distributed? (With apologies to @GreatDismal)
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Embed details for a fidelity bond and associated list of TLDs in nameserver's SOA record; client resolvers can compare age and amount locked in fidelity bond to decide which NS is authoritative for a given TLD
That's it, that's the tweet
(Whether offering alernatives to the root nameserver is enough to count as 'decentralizing the Internet' is an open question, but it's at least a step in the right direction IMHO.)
Every attempt (that I know of) to compete with current ICANN / IANA root servers - Namecoin, Handshake, OneName, OpenNIC, and so on - ends up running into the land rush problem.
Namely: how do you stop squatters from ruining your new namespace?
I need to put all of my networking protocol rants into one place for b̶o̶r̶i̶n̶g̶ ̶m̶u̶t̶u̶a̶l̶s̶ ̶t̶o̶ ̶d̶e̶a̶t̶h̶ ̶i̶n̶ ̶t̶h̶e̶ ̶D̶M̶s̶ easy access. Brace yourself:
Tell me what you do at $DAYJOB writing software, and I'll tell you what food service industry job you'd be comfortable working at.
Thread!
You work at a nameless Fortune 500 company, churning out updates to the internal homegrown CRM software. You desperately want to leave but you have student loans to pay and this was the first temp-to-hire gig you could find.
You're working at McDonalds, and you effing hate it.
You work at a seed funded startup, desperately churning out code to grab more and more total addressable market share. You declined the Fortune 500 gig cuz you're cooler than that.
You'd be at a "hip" fast-casual spot like QDoba. You think it's better than McDonalds. It's not.
It's days like this I wonder - is it time for the ground up beetles, or the wheat poultices?
(Thread on how George Washington died. Mostly.)
On the evening of Dec 12, 1799, Washington came down with a nasty cough. It progressively worsened over the next 36 hours, until he woke up in the middle of the night on the 14th in severe respiratory distress.
The laypeople around him - the estate overseer and his personal secretary - first made him an elixir of molasses, vinegar and butter to treat his sore, swollen throat.
Was it the State that vouched for the money, or was it money that vouched for the State? On the Lydians vs. the Abbasids:
"...the sekka, the right of the ruler to have his name inscribed on coins, and the ḵoṭba, his right to have his name mentioned in the sermon at the congregational worship service on Friday, were the two formal prerogatives of sovereignty....."
Tired: when the money vouches for your head of state
Wired: when the money vouches for your prophet
Constantinople vs. Caliph Abd'Al-Malik in the coin wars: