overseers (in the form of a human-
subjects research Institutional Review
Board). 190 Other self-regulating
industries include movies, video games,
and comic books.
There is the possibility that the entire
blockchain industry could just collapse
(either due to already prognosticated
problems or some other factor as yet
unforeseen). There is nothing to indicate
that a collapse would be impossible.
The blockchain economy does have a
strong presence, as measured by diverse
metrics such as coin market
capitalizations, investment in the sector,
number of startups and people working
in the sector, lines of GitHub code
committed, and the amount of
“newspaper ink” devoted to the sector.
Already the blockchain industry is
bigger and better established than the
previous run at digital currencies
(virtual-world currencies like the
Second Life Linden dollar). However,
despite the progress to date and lofty
ideals of Bitcoin, maybe it is still too
early for digital currency; maybe all of
the right safeguards and structures are
not yet in place for digital currencies to
go fully mainstream (although Apple
Pay, more than any other factor, may
pave the way to full mainstream
acceptance of digital currencies). Apple
Pay could quite possibly be enough for
the short term. It will be a long time
before Bitcoin has the same user-
friendly attributes of Apple Pay, such as
latency of confirmation time.
Government Regulation
How government regulation unfolds
could be one of the most significant
factors and risks in whether the
blockchain industry will flourish into a
mature financial services industry. In the
United States, there could be federal-
and state-level legislation; deliberations
continue into a second comment period
regarding a much-discussed New York
Bitlicense. 191 The New York Bitlicense
could set the tone for worldwide
regulation. On one hand, the Bitcoin
industry is concerned about the
extremely broad, wide-reaching, and
extraterritorial language of the license as
currently proposed. The license would
encompass anyone doing anything with
anyone else’s Bitcoins, including basic
wallet software (like the QT wallet). 192
However, on the other hand, regulated
consumer protections for Bitcoin
industry participants, like KYC (know
your customer) requirements for money
service businesses (MSBs), could hasten
the mainstream development of the
industry and eradicate consumer worry
of the hacking raids that seem to plague
the industry.
The deliberations and early rulings of
worldwide governments on Bitcoin raise
some interesting questions. One issue is
the potential practical impossibility of
carrying out taxation with current
methods. A decentralized peer-to-peer
sharing economy of Airbnb 2.0 and Uber
2.0 run on local implementations of
OpenBazaar with individuals paying
with cryptocurrencies renders traditional
taxation structures impossible. The usual
tracking and chokehold points to trace
the consumption of goods and services
might be gone. This has implications
both for taxation and for the overall
measurement of economic performance
such as GDP calculations, which could
have the beneficial impact of drawing
populaces away from being overly and
possibly incorrectly focused on
consumption as a wellness metric.
Instead, there could be an overhaul of
the taxation system to a consumption-
based tax on large-ticket visible items
such as hard assets (cars, houses).
Chokehold points would need to be
easily visible for taxation, a “tax on
sight” concept. A potential shift from an
income tax–based system to a
consumption tax–based system could be
a significant change for societies.
A second issue that blockchain
technology raises with regard to
government regulation is the value
proposition offered by governments and
their business model. Some argue that in
the modern era of big data, governments
are increasingly unable to keep up with
their record-keeping duties of recording
and archiving information and making
data easily accessible. On this view,
governments could become obsolete
because they cannot fund themselves the
traditional way—by raising taxes.
Blockchain technology could potentially
help solve both of these challenges, and
could at minimum supplement and help
governments do their own jobs better,
eventually making classes of
government-provided services
redundant. Recording all of a society’s
records on the blockchain could obviate
the need for entire classes of public
service. This view starkly paints
governments as becoming redundant
with the democratization of government
features of the blockchain.
However, just as there might be both
centralized and decentralized models to
coordinate our activities in the world,
there could likely be roles for both
traditional government and new forms of
blockchain-based government. There
might still be a role for traditional
centralized governments, but they will
need to become economically
rationalized, with real value
propositions that resonate with
constituencies, shrink costs, and
demonstrate effectiveness. There could
be hybrid governments in the future, like
other industries, where automation is the