The Economics of Privacy with Max Hillebrand

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That meatspace layer between the computer and your brain is unencrypted…if this last mile is not encrypted, then all of the securities that we can gain in cyberspace are null and void. Now, because you type in your 24 words, and the camera picks it up, all of a sudden, your super awesome anonymous money is no longer anonymous nor secure. And that’s a really, really big issue.
— Max Hillebrand

SHOW DESCRIPTION

Max Hillebrand is an economist and open-source entrepreneur who runs Agora Towards Liberty. In this interview, we discuss fiat money’s fundamental weaknesses, the teachings of Austrian Economics, the importance of privacy, and how nano cameras mean privacy technology will need to keep evolving.

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Whilst the Bitcoin innovation was primarily predicated on the technical needs for enabling permissionless and uncensorable digital peer-to-peer transactions, its development was heavily influenced by the Austrian school of economics. At its root, Bitcoin is tied to the ethics of money production, where money production should be decentralized and not subject to the whims of a central authority.

The long-held fear of Austrian economists was that centralized control of money production would result in monetary inflation: governments would be unable to resist the temptation to print money as quick fixes to crises. This obviously impacts the value of the money being inflated, violating one of the core principles of money to be a reliable store of value. The problem for governments, as we’re seeing, is that the power to print money becomes an uncontrollable force.

Despite the inevitable fragility of fiat currencies, an alternative sound monetary system can hasten the collapse of fiat currencies during periods of loose monetary policy. This incentivises governments to constrain or ban access to such alternatives. See Executive Order 6102. This means that privacy for such alternatives is paramount. This is why Bitcoin privacy is vital. Because, when fiat currencies collapse, governments will come for people’s Bitcoin.


TIMESTAMPS

00:01:43: Introductions
00:05:17: Mike's background
00:07:39: The problem with fiat, money printing and inflation
00:15:58: The Cantillon effect
00:21:14: Austrian Economics and Bitcoin
00:30:15: Fractional-reserve banking
00:32:58: Solving the double-spending problem
00:42:28: Nostr
00:45:02: The Ethics of Money Production by Jörg Guido Hülsmann
00:54:30:
What is Bitcoin?
00:56:47:
Anonymity and privacy with Bitcoin, and Wasabi Wallet
01:08:06: Future predictions leading to hyperinflation
01:13:41: Nano cameras
01:20:13: Final comments


 

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SHOW NOTES

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