Today, I’m making a symbolic stop at the Kickstarter Headquarters in Brooklyn, New York to launch my 2 upcoming books as a Kickstarter campaign.
These book ideas have been percolating in my head over the past several months, and I have finally put the final details and structure behind them to the point that I can announce them.
Here’s me at the Kickstarter office, after slugging through some Brooklyn snow.
There is a reason why I am splitting this work into two books, and not just one. The first book is focused on the Blockchain specifically and its use cases, and I feel there’s a need to get that book out asap, in April 2016. I have already written about 70% of that book, and the rest will be finished in the next 6 weeks. Decentralization is a bigger topic. It is one of the outcomes of blockchain-enabled implementations, and it deserves a longer treatment. I’m coining this new term, Centerless to emphasize the emerging trend of decentralization.
The main benefits of supporting this campaign is that you’ll be the early recipients of these books at lower prices (Amazon’s prices are expected to be 50% higher), while helping me to produce them with the highest possible quality.
I’m not going to repeat what I’m laying out in the Kickstarter campaign, but if you’d like to learn more and support my work, please head over the campaign page and pledge any amount you feel comfortable with. For large companies, I would recommend the quantity option (50 or 100). That way, you’ll be able to educate your organization accordingly.
Thank you for your support, and I look forward to delivering these 2 books to you.
Here is the campaign link.]]>
Tag: peer-to-peer
via shutterstock[/caption]
The Peer-to-Peer revolution really started in 1999, inspired by the Napster technology for music file sharing. In 2001, I used to run a website called Peer Intelligence that chronicled and tracked over 100 P2P related technologies across a variety of application areas.
But it took at least another 10 years before we saw significant progress in the application of peer to peer technologies. With the recent advent of the blockchain, peer-to-peer is getting a boost in popularity under the “decentralization” moniker. What started as an anomaly could become a solution to many ailments we have in business, society, technology and politics.
The blockchain also has peer-to-peer distributed technology characteristics. Today, we have the perfect storm forming between these 4 trends:
- Decentralization of power
- Distributed technologies
- Peer-to-peer interactions
- Unbundling of everything
I’m going to focus on Decentralization as the most significant concept among the above list of four trends.
Decentralization is a powerful concept, because the role the center is being re-defined. The center controls less, but it facilitates more.
Decentralization is going to touch every corner of our world. But to understand it, we need to break it down into its various components and focus on where it’s going to be impactful. Think of the following areas that will be impacted by decentralization:
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Markets and marketplaces
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Currency and the monetary system
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Information and data
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Provisioning and discovery of Services
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Technology innovation
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Industry players
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Countries and their governments
The network that was the main attraction and a linkage to everything is now self-effacing itself in favor of being an enabler of a multiplicity of one-to-one relationships, instead of a controlling choke point. That (new) center isn’t as visible. Its rules and rituals of engagement and participation are changing.
But it’s not just the network. Society itself is being reconfigured, because control is eroding central organizations, in favor of edge power.
The “network is attacking itself” – its central pieces are getting de-fragmented and re-purposed autonomously.
Unbundling is rising. The more internal pieces are unbundled, the more the center gets weakened, and some of its intrinsic pieces become new enablers on their own.
Devices, processes and people that needed a center to interact are now communicating and connecting with each other directly.
Old paradigms are being shattered. Central trust is shifting to distributed trust, i.e. trustless transactions, contracts, interactions.
This means that:
- Centers are changing their roles
- Edges have more power
Collectively, more can be done, and collectively more is enabled, and more is re-configured. The participants are at the edges, but not only do they participate, they also reap the benefits.
In conclusion, I realize that I’ve dumped a lot of (unfinished) thoughts in this post, and not provided examples. But this was my first attempt to articulate what’s been in my head in the past 6 months.
- What are you seeing in decentralization?
- Is it a fad or a reality?
- What will be the impact?
- What additional areas are being impacted?
- Why should we care about this?
- Is this one of the more significant trends of this decade?
- What are the risks and perils?
- What are the obstacles?
- What are the opportunities and benefits?