Most digital platforms are inherently versatile partly because their
software code can be modified, but primarily because they are designed
as open-ended modular stacks whose affordances increase with the variety
of functionalities provided by the upper layers, without needing to
rewire or reprogram the lower layers. This is plainly true of platforms
that were specifically designed to be versatile - e.g., the Internet,
the Web and the iPad - but it can be no less true of platforms that were
initially designed to be rigid and specialized. This paper argues that
frequent dismissals of the Bitcoin
project by economic and business analysts reveal a failure to grasp
this important property of modular stacks. As we shall see, recent
developments in the Bitcoin ecosystem are transforming Bitcoin
into a much more versatile and consequential platform than was
originally intended, by enabling a wide variety of modular application
layers to be superposed on the Bitcoin infrastructure. If successful, this reinvention of Bitcoin could turn the controversial currency and its blockchain into pillars of the emerging cryptoeconomy.
Read more > https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2922656
No comments:
Post a Comment