Design by committee, rather than bosses, VPs, and armies of
the able, was the philosophy behind Nupedia, but apparently they did not go far
enough. It wasn’t until the whole system was thrown to the wind and
decentralization became the lay of the land that Wikipedia started to flourish,
and now it is a daily destination for most of the world’s 3 billion Internet
users.
The fact that with a few tweaks something like a wiki-based
encyclopedia could go from a stalled, somewhat idealistic effort to a
world-changing repository of knowledge may be reason for us all to have faith
in other decentralized technologies.
The blockchain is one that comes to mind, and one about which
I learned more at a recent Meetup. Blockchain, perhaps best known as the technology backbone of BitCoin, was
looked at in an earlier blog post, as a potential solution to many of the music industry’s
legacy system problems that send dollars to layers of the business that aren’t
necessarily needed in today’s digitally connected marketplaces.
The blockchain is also behind something called the DAO, which stands for decentralized autonomous organization.
Click to enlarge |
The objective of the DAO, a single app running on the blockchain, is to eliminate the need for
organizational decision making apparatuses, such as formal managerial positions
and hierarchical structures. And note: Decentralization does not mean an absence of control, but, rather, no single person or entity is in control. It sounds kind of crazy until you think of, say,
Wikipedia.
In the words of one of the Meetup speakers, Jeff Coleman of
Ledger Labs, the blockchain enables “super secure, super awesome decentralized
organizations that can give you more security for less work than any other
system out there."
Ledger Labs’ Jeff Coleman schools the crowd on the great DAO hack of 2016 |
Coleman then walked the Meetup crowd of 100+ through the architecture of the DAO, explaining how, when a funding window in the DAO was opened on April 30th, 2016, over 10,000 people poured in about $100 million in funds, making it the largest crowdfunding endeavour in history. The idea was that it that this would be a relatively low risk investment where you could invest and withdraw funds at will.
All good. Really really good in fact, until the hack.
Coleman called the hack, in which $60 million was drained
from the DAO, “the largest cash heist in the history of the world”. (As you can see lots of firsts and biggests
here.) The problem, it was explained, came down to issues with the smart
contracts, pieces of computer code that represent contract-like agreements
between other pieces of code built on the blockchain. (I’m not a lawyer so for
an actual lawyer’s perspective on smart contracts, click here.)
The short version of the story is that despite two years of due
diligence, including bug bounties -- essentially crowdsourced security -- it was assumed the
system was good to go. Who performed the due diligence? Not the DAO, pointed out Coleman, but the underlying platform, Ethereum.
Coleman continued: "Thanks to this careful due diligence, Ethereum, the platform, remains uncompromised. But the DAO opted for just a few short weeks of public viewability and no serious testing, audits, or bounties, and that's why it was successfully attacked."
In other words, this wasn't a blockchain problem, but a negligence problem. If there's a problem with a single website you don't blame or impugn the entire Internet. Same thing here.
How the Ethereum platform works Source: https://www.ethereum.org |
Coleman continued: "Thanks to this careful due diligence, Ethereum, the platform, remains uncompromised. But the DAO opted for just a few short weeks of public viewability and no serious testing, audits, or bounties, and that's why it was successfully attacked."
In other words, this wasn't a blockchain problem, but a negligence problem. If there's a problem with a single website you don't blame or impugn the entire Internet. Same thing here.
And the icing on the cake, in Coleman’s view: “It’s
exceedingly likely that the attackers didn’t plan on actually getting the $60
million.” In fact, the cash is still yet to be released to the attacker, and Coleman thinks it may never be.
The moral(s) of this story? That’s hard to say, as this is a
story that is only beginning to be written, and is one that changes
dramatically from week to week. Not only do technologies move at unfathomable
speeds and take on increasingly complex functions, but they also bring with
them enormous flows of capital, and along with those flows trust invested in
systems that are built and operated outside of the usual standards and
structures that have formed the basis of our economy for decades.
Related Post:
Will the blockchain free music from being free?
Related Post:
Will the blockchain free music from being free?
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