"Many fans think it will. But it might end up creating some
new problems.
Crypto could use a bit of good news these days. And on
Wednesday, it got some.
Ethereum, the most popular crypto platform, appears to have
successfully upgraded its software architecture from a type of blockchain known
as “proof of work,” which it has run since its inception in 2015, to a type of
blockchain known as “proof of stake.”
This upgrade, which came to be called, simply, “the merge,”
is already being heralded as a watershed moment in the history of crypto.
Early Thursday, as the first proof-of-stake transactions
were verified, dozens of Ethereum developers gathered on a celebratory Zoom
call hosted by the Ethereum Foundation.
“This is the first step in Ethereum’s big journey towards
being a very mature system,” Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum’s founder, told the
group. “To me, the merge symbolizes the difference between early stage Ethereum
and the Ethereum we’ve always wanted.”
And many crypto fans hope that it will turn things around
for the crypto movement, which has been besieged in the past year by trillions
of dollars in losses, a string of major scams and hacks, and a new wave of
regulatory scrutiny.
I’m not so sure it will. But before I tell you why, let’s
review some of the reasons that crypto supporters are celebrating.
First, it was far from a given that the merge would work.
Switching a blockchain’s so-called consensus mechanism — the way that it
processes and verifies new transactions — is terrifyingly complex. (Some crypto
developers have compared it to swapping out a spaceship’s engine midflight.)
Before the merge, nobody had tried such a maneuver on a crypto platform
anywhere near Ethereum’s size, and it took years of testing and research (and
many, many delays) for developers to get confident enough to attempt one.
Ethereum, which is open source, hosts hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of
cryptocurrency transactions, NFT collections and DeFi protocols, all of which
could have been irreparably broken if the merge hadn’t gone according to plan.
Something could still break in the coming days. But the
merge appears to have gone as smoothly as Ethereum fans could have hoped.
The second reason crypto fans are happy about the merge is
that the new Ethereum blockchain is much more environmentally friendly than the
old one. Ethereum used to be secured by a network of high-powered computers
that competed against one another to solve cryptographic puzzles, burning vast
amounts of energy in the process.
Now, it will be secured by a process known as “staking,”
which involves investors agreeing to deposit their crypto coins in a shared
pool in exchange for a chance to earn financial rewards. (Staking means investors can freeze up their tokens for some time to receive a profit. (K))
There are other benefits to the merge — it’s expected to
make Ethereum faster and more efficient in the long run — but the environmental
footprint is the big, immediate improvement.
According to crypto researchers, the new Ethereum blockchain
will consume 99.95 percent less energy than the old one. That’s a huge change —
comparable to the entire nation of Portugal going off the grid, according to
Digiconomist, a website that tracks crypto's energy consumption. And it should
help industry advocates make the case that crypto can be green.
Third, many crypto fans are optimistic that the merge will
be good for the value of Ether, Ethereum’s native cryptocurrency. For reasons
that are too complicated to get into here, running the Ethereum blockchain
requires destroying (or “burning”) billions of dollars’ worth of Ether every
year. The new Ethereum blockchain will still burn Ether, but it won’t need to
create as much new Ether to pay out rewards to participants. That means that
the overall supply of Ether could shrink, increasing the value of existing
coins. In addition, miners — the people who ran those giant, energy-guzzling
server farms under the old proof-of-work system — will no longer be forced to
sell some of their Ether to pay their electricity bills, which could result in
more stable prices.
I’ve talked to a number of crypto industry leaders about the
merge, and the general feeling they express is one of cautious optimism. It’s
been a brutal year in crypto, but now that Ethereum has neutralized one of the
most common objections to crypto — the enormous environmental toll — they hope
that at least some skeptics will come around. Regulators won’t object as
strenuously to Ethereum 2.0, they believe, and companies that experiment with
NFTs and other Ethereum-based technologies won’t face as much backlash.
But I’m doubtful that the merge will solve crypto’s problems
overnight — and it may introduce some even thornier ones.
For starters, it’s not clear to me that Ethereum’s energy
use was the biggest obstacle to mainstream crypto adoption. It’s true that a
lot of people who are opposed to crypto on principle tend to cite environmental
concerns as a strike against it. But these days, a lot of people are skeptical
of crypto for reasons that have nothing to do with energy. Maybe they know
someone who lost a fortune betting on Dogecoin or Luna. Maybe all the stories
of hacks and scams have scared them away. Maybe they’re intimidated by crypto’s
complexity, or put off by the lack of obvious uses for it. Or maybe they’re
just philosophically opposed to a new form of money that doesn’t have the backing
of a government.
Right now, the biggest threat to crypto — in the United
States, at least — is that the people who are in charge of regulating the
industry seem to want to ban it. These regulators are worried about
stablecoins, Ponzi schemes, state-sponsored ransomware attacks and investors
losing their money to opaque crypto-lending schemes.
The merge doesn’t address any of that. And while you might
be able to change some politicians’ minds about crypto by telling them that
Ethereum now uses 99.95 percent less energy, I’m not sure it will move the
needle at all with the people whose opinions matter most. For example, Gary
Gensler, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, didn’t mention
environmental concerns at all in an opinion essay he wrote for The Wall Street
Journal last month about why the crypto industry should be more tightly
regulated.
The merge could also stoke internecine tensions within the
crypto community. Already, there are some Bitcoin fans — “maxis” — who believe
that Ethereum’s switch to a proof-of-stake algorithm was a calculated P.R. move
designed to make Ethereum look good while throwing Bitcoin under the bus.
(Bitcoin, which runs on a proof-of-work system, has no plans to switch to a new
consensus mechanism, so its energy consumption is likely to stay high, at least
for the foreseeable future.)
Because it is secured by investors staking large pools of
Ether, rather than by networks of puzzle-solving computers, the new Ethereum
could also increase the crypto industry’s overall centralization, giving more
power to large firms like Coinbase, Kraken and Lido — and potentially making it
easier for governments to crack down on Ethereum itself, by pressuring those
firms to censor certain transactions. (Coinbase’s chief executive, Brian
Armstrong, has already said he will shut down the company’s Ethereum-staking
business rather than comply with government censorship requests, if it comes to
that.)
And, of course, the merge won’t put money-losing crypto
investors back in the black or recover the assets lost by investors in failed
crypto projects like Luna and Celsius Network.
Make no mistake, the merge was a technological marvel, a
genuine boon to the environment and a testament to the power of cooperative
open-source development. I’m glad that it happened, and the developers who
toiled away for years to make it work should feel proud of how smoothly it
went.
But crypto will need more than a successful merge to turn
its fortunes around. Sorry to take the fizz out of the champagne."
More importantly, transactions will be processed faster. Convenience will appear, more small transactions will be possible, and users will like it. And in capitalism, the opinion of consumers is more important than the opinion of any power-hungry bureaucrats.
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