If there’s one thing that Bitcoiners and other cryptocrypto folks don’t like, it’s Big Brother.
But the former CTO of the popular US cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase thinks that’s exactly what the American public may need to put up with to help stem the spread of the new coronavirus.
“I’m in favor of crypto and decentralizationdecentralization, but I am also a pragmatist,” Balaji Srinivasan told hosts Michael Casey and Laura Shin during an interview at Coindesk’s Consensus Distributed conference today.
Srinivasan used his time to mainly speak about COVID-19, which will not be surprising to anyone who follows the angel investor on Twitter. Srinivasan has for months been relentlessly warning people to take the coronavirus seriously.
“It was the lockdown at Wuhan that made me, as well as other people, aware that this could be a very big deal, because the Chinese government doesn’t usually do things like that,” he said.
Many countries have already contained COVID-19 in a few weeks.
Not infinite lockdown. Nor reopening too soon. Get new cases to zero and then keep the reproduction number below one.
These green zones will have better economies and healthier populations in the long run. pic.twitter.com/m1ZvwwUZR1
The next step in getting the virus under control? Aggressive testing and tracing, said Srinivasan, which is something for which the government of South Korea has been applauded. That is only because the country accepts a heavy use of surveillance technology, notably CCTV and the tracking of bank cards and mobile phone usage. More liberal countries such as the US may be much less willing to accept these types of measures.
Srinivasan thinks we may have to swallow the bullet. And he doesn’t see a quick blockchain fix to the problem.
“It is easy to get a centralized solution up and working in a short period of time in a pandemic and an emergency,” he said. And the surveillance apparatus is already in place.
The coronavirus lockdown has led to a surge in the use of video conferencing apps and streaming services. But as people flock to these centralized platforms, it’s highlighted their underlying weaknesses.
Zoom, once the darling of the quarantined remote worker, has been slammed for poor privacy, and has suffered a data breach in which 500,000 user accounts were offered for sale on the dark web. Meanwhile, Google and Apple have pooled their resources for contact tracing, highlighting the amount o...
The NSA is already surveilling Americans, said Srinivasan, and has been since at least 2014—that was after NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden exposed the agency's data collection tactics. “So at least, we should get some benefit out of that,” he said.
He argued that the key is not to position contact tracing as a bad choice in a vacuum. Instead, the public ought to consider it a less bad choice, given the spectrum of bad choices that are available.
“It is basically like fighting a war,” he said. “Once you are in peacetime, you can hopefully back off on these kinds of policies—and if not use crypto to decentralize.”
He didn’t spell out how cryptocurrency would help people backtrack from heavy surveillance, however. But then again, it was a short interview.
Daily Debrief Newsletter
Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.
Crypto's best minds are heading east, and it's gaining at a pace that other regions are finding hard to catch up to.
Asia was responsible for 32% of global crypto developer activity in 2024, according to a report from venture firm Electric Capital. The firm recently published its comprehensive annual report, analyzing over 900 million code commits across the crypto industry.
The transformation represents a nearly threefold increase from Asia's 12% share in 2015, while North America's position de...
Google's announcement of its breakthrough Willow quantum processor has reignited debates about crypto security, with some observers suggesting quantum computers could break Bitcoin's encryption.
The tech giant claims its new quantum computing chip can complete certain calculations in five minutes, which would take traditional supercomputers an impractical amount of time to process.
Quantum computing is a new type of computing that uses the strange properties of quantum physics, where small part...
Dimo, a platform for developers to build apps and enable car drivers to monetize their data, is migrating between Ethereum scaling networks, the developers exclusively told Decrypt—from Polygon to Coinbase’s Base. Co-founder Rob Solomon believes the move opens doors for valuable partnerships ahead.
The project is a “global API layer for cars” that is aiming to make every car on earth smart and programmable. This could manifest, the company says, in a future full of AI car mechanics and smart par...