Jaromil on Wed, 6 Jul 2016 18:35:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Ethereum: DAO - "The Attacker" |
On Tue, 05 Jul 2016, Fenwick Mckelvey wrote: > Hi, > Just looking over Morlock's comments now and, Jaromil, I'm wondering if > you had any more comments or links about criticisms of Popper's book > about BitCoin. It comes up a lot as a reference and I'd appreciate some > more perspective. That book is a sanitized history seen from the point of view of the winners, paraphrasing his words in this one. I have zero interest reading a book written like that. so will just disclose here our post-book exchange. I believe his book is one of many marketing operations to synthesize a different glorification of Bitcoin. It boils down to the question: should writers come from different contexts? Bitcoin has already its collective process of writing, let it be not perfect but at least a decent attempt, which is lead by Andreas Antonopoulos. about China: yes true OK and there is Russia and there is Poland, so what? ze planet iz zpherical. Bitcoin perfect? I doubt anything is. But deception is bad taste. I conversed in person with Nathaniel Popper. We met on the 15 May 2014, he introduced himself as interested in doing Amir's biography (which somehow did not surprise me, after Amir was listed on Fortune 100 and wonderful stuff like that). I did gave him historical digital footage of Bitcoin Amir and colorful stories of the Bitcoin scene in 2009 and 2010. He did mention the result would be a bit fictional, but now he negates that so its his word against mine. I saw a newyorkeese Gustave Flaubert in front of me. Ruined by hundreds of years of marketing schools of course. May 24 Jaromil Rojo hi NAthaniel, just leaving a note about how deluded I am after helping you retrieve some materials to be completely excluded from your book acknowledgments. Will keep in mind for next time. bye Nathaniel Popper hey jaromil -- thanks for the note. i wasn't able to get enough to write about amir in the book -- but i've looked back in my emails and you are right that you were a May 25 Jaromil Rojo well, omitting Amir from the history of Bitcoin is a big mistake. He is as relevant if not even more than Gavin and his contributions are important in one of the best wallets (Electrum) and the libbitcoin. What comes to me in mind is that the exclusion is of political nature. I have not read your book yet. I'm just gathering notes on my own version of this stories and I'm open to hear your interpretation. You also admitted since the beginning that your work was partly fictional. --- (here of course is my word against his. I recall clearly the episode) --- Nathaniel Popper i did not admit that my work was partly fictional -- and it is not. i wanted to include amir, but unfortunately in explaining the rise of bitcoin his story diverged from that of bitcoin too many times and i ultimately determined that he didn't have much impact on the development of bitcoin, i think he's a fascinating guy -- and wanted to include him for that reason. but the decision to exclude him was not political. Jaromil Rojo His contribution to the technical and social rise of Bitcoin was crucial to say the least, this is my independent assessment. Acknowledging you eliminate him and my contribution to your research I do believe your exclusion is political. I also clearly recall the day we met in the Rijksmuseum park in Amsterdam you introduced me your research for a book that would fictionalize aspects of Bitcoin. The history of Bitcoin is still unfolding and manipulations of it are fairly relevant to understand the placement of all actors. As of today and based on facts, I do consider your book a political manipulation of such history. I'm writing this directly to you because I'm not hypocritical and I don't like playing silly games, also to leave open a channel of communication. I will include the above assessment in the public and private documentation I produce. May 30 Nathaniel Popper i certainly think amir is a fascinating and smart guy, and some of the points he made have been borne out in time (he was one of the early folks calling for multiple implementations of the core software, which would have potentially helped avert the current disagreement). but my research led me to the conclusion that his contribution was not crucial in determining the direction bitcoin ultimately took. my book was about how bitcoin got to where it ended up -- and that certainly meant that i focused more time on the "winners" in the various bitcoin debates. i don't think that was political. that was just how i approached the story. one thing i held from the beginning was that this would be a true story. i wouldn't have told you that i intended this to be fiction because i never wanted it to be that. in any case, happy to discuss more. thanks for returning to me with your questions. Of the many materials which I've given to Nathaniel Popper that he never published, my favorite I'll paste below, is a poem by Jamileh, Amir's sister. They co-organized the first 2 Bitcoin conferences. A few similiar regimes 6 billion different dreams Stored, scripted, dispersed ,encrypted my heart is 64 kilobytes dear .tmp it writes Bits of code come and go Dream amongst the data flow But God bless our ISP’s Sedate the Refresh rate Repository forgets to update The world crumples Enjoy your iplayer The internet gets greyer Speak in sigh Each will die Before the tv even blinks Suddenly, one catalyst node The world overflowed with code The dictionaries recant their definition of citizen x The axiom of transitivity forgets the world is irreducible to the core and complexity, has been, selected for. ciao -- ~.,_ Denis Roio aka Jaromil http://Dyne.org think &do tank "+. 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