(The fourth post in the meta-experiment series of the Broken Money book club, part 5. Check out the third.)
Lyn talks a number of times about the tradeoffs made by technologies in general, and btc in particular. The most well-discussed of these tradeoffs is probably the block size, where you trade the number of transactions you can fit into a block against the cost to run a full node.
Another tradeoff comes with privacy. Unless you're deep into the technical side of btc, you might not realize the full extent of what's at stake in these tradeoffs:
To increase privacy, some degree of auditability needs to be sacrificed. One of the key things about Bitcoin is that any node can tell you the exact bitcoin supply and maintains the entire history of transactions and the full state of the ledger. That’s not possible to the same degree in a privacy-based blockchain. Cryptocurrencies that are private at their base layer make it easier for undetected inflation bugs to occur. In addition, if a privacy-based system doesn’t have a serious network effect, its privacy likely isn’t as good as advertised because the anonymity set is very small and is therefore somewhat trackable. (p. 337)
Those tradeoffs make sense, even if they're not immediately apparent to all users. Although Lyn doesn't frame it this way, there are other kinds of tradeoffs that come with privacy, too. For instance:
Income taxes within the current system rely on ubiquitous financial surveillance to be enforceable. If it becomes commonplace for people to send money peer-to-peer, including globally, and there are a large variety of privacy tools to make transactions hard to track, then it may become untenable for governments to tax incomes as their primary source of revenue. (p. 333)
Most stackers are probably thinking to themselves: fuck the state, I can't wait till they can't get any tax revenue! But I wonder if btc's notoriously bad privacy -- which its advocates occasionally loudly pretend to champion -- is more consciously-chosen than we're used to thinking?
In other words: if btc was as private as Monero, could it possibly have achieved the penetration it has, without the full-on opposition of the state? Has awareness of this tradeoff -- between privacy and courting clear and direct hostility from the government -- informed its development trajectory? What does this privacy tradeoff portend for its future?