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Bitcoin => Bitcoin Discussion => Topic started by: charleshoskinson on May 29, 2015, 11:37:31 PM



Title: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: charleshoskinson on May 29, 2015, 11:37:31 PM
http://hoskinsoncharles.blogspot.com/2015/05/thoughts-on-ross.html

Thoughts on Ross

From time to time, I enjoy investing an afternoon considering politics and the state of affairs here in the United States. Our country is the first hyperpower forcing all other nations to consider us in whatever policy happens to be the day's grock. This reality is divorced from ethical or moral metrics and the war on drugs is no different.

For whatever reason (religious, practical, dystopian, etc), policymakers in the United States have continuously decided to label a behavior or substance as dangerous to the social fabric™ of our society. Prohibition is the standard example and its spectacular failure is somehow forgotten. We saw and acknowledge the rise of the modern mafia. We saw the decentralized nature of resistance through bootleggers (some say one who's kid become president) and the FBI form to stop the bootleggers empowering J. Edgar Hoover to terrorize two generations of Americans via illegal spying and blackmail (including Martin Luther King). Yet why have no lessons been learned?

The war of drugs is a leviathan that has imprisoned millions of Americans (vastly disportionate for minorities), formed massive bureaucracies such as the DEA and their state equivalents, and like Hoover's FBI slowly transformed society to both militarize the police and make their actions somehow ok. Where in this process have we asked what the goal exactly is? Why are we as a country destroying families, imprisoning millions and treating addicts as hardened criminals? Why have we created an industry that robs us of our constitutional rights and turns our police force into something resembling the Stasi?         

I honestly don't have a good answer. There is perhaps an historical context that could be explored and used to synthetically explain why we are somehow comfortable as a nation using a plato like ideal social fabric™ to justify incarcerating millions for non-violent crimes. Yet this leaves a putrid taste in my mouth.

The United States drug policy is simply put immoral to the core. If drug use results in damage to one's relationships, then hold people accountable for their actions. But instead we say that Heroin somehow is more damaging than alcohol? Marijuana is a gateway to personal destruction (except for when our presidents smoke it [1][2])? I guess Colorado is doomed then :).

Now enter Ross Ulbricht the dread pirate roberts. He isn't a very nice person. No one running a drug cartel really is a nice person. But he isn't a Zetas Cartel kingpin proudly displaying the heads of his enemies. He is a programmer who saw an opportunity to use emerging technology to enrich himself without regard to the current egregious law. He believed that he could stay hidden thanks to the nature of Tor and Bitcoin. He also believed that a decentralized marketplace could reduce the violence associated with the drug trade (which is fair considering that violence comes from the prohibition not the other way around).

And the fruits of his labors were a modest marketplace that was the safest and lowest violence drug exchange in the world. It also allowed suppliers to directly sell to consumers cutting out the middleman who usually end up being pretty evil. Compared to the Golden Triangle, a relatively small amount of funds changed hands and consumers got their substances. The vast majority didn't go crazy and grab chainsaws for some Tony Montana action. The vast majority didn't destroy their families and social networks. The vast majority are still living their lives amongst us going to work, church or vacations. Somehow the social fabric™ the government must protect hasn't been torn.

Yet Ross now gets to spend the rest of his life in prison as a living symbol of the war on drugs. He has effectively become its Nelson Mandela. The Silk Road won't go away. Those who are knowledgeable about cryptography and the nature of the internet will cite technology like Openbazaar and other such systems as the bittorrent moment of online drug trade. Ross's imprisonment will send no message contrary to what the prosecutor suggests, it just increases the stakes for anonymity and the amount of potential profit from the trade.

The countermeasures will inevitably be a war on cryptography (I should trademark that one) and internet anonymity. To protect the social fabric™, the United States must rob us of our privacy and autonomy. We must accept that all packets need to be inspected. Secrets are illegal. And no doubt massive government budgets must be increased. Think of your children!

I'm really done with this madness. We supposedly have a republic and have the right to change things. At this moment, I'd like to divide the bitcoin space into two groups. Those that complain about the injustice of Ross's sentence and those that do something about it. I'm going to do something about it. My company is going to build some great tools to preserve personal privacy (that thing we have a constitutional right to) and make sure they are open source and well distributed.

I'm also going to ask everyone in this space to be in the second bucket. Do something about this injustice. Think about the software you could write. Organize meetups and spread the word. We didn't like our money or the banks so we made new money. Is in inconceivable that we can make a new society with a social fabric that's actually worth protecting?

Charles


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Kyle1836 on May 30, 2015, 02:53:09 AM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: melody82 on May 30, 2015, 05:00:09 AM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Blackbird0 on May 30, 2015, 02:31:03 PM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

Skype is easily monitored. It is centralized.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Kyraishi on May 30, 2015, 02:38:58 PM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

Skype is easily monitored. It is centralized.

Of course it is.
It belongs to Microsoft, doesn't it?

Also, what about using the IRC?


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Amph on May 30, 2015, 02:53:24 PM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

you mean something like open bazar, but they clearly stated that their intent isn't to run a silk road 2.0, but we know that criminals will use it too, so i wonder how they can mantain their promise...


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: redsn0w on May 30, 2015, 02:58:35 PM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

you mean something like open bazar, but they clearly stated that their intent isn't to run a silk road 2.0, but we know that criminals will use it too, so i wonder how they can mantain their promise...

Make something of decentralized is nearly impossible, because the people are used to be 'controlled' and use something of centralized. It will be really shocking for them to see/use something of decentralized (this is what I think).


My thought about silkroad is : the marketplace was good but the items were illegal and this is the unique problem but in a point of view of 'function' it is really working.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: bornil267645 on May 30, 2015, 03:19:52 PM
Mt.gox incident will remain a benchmark for the new bitcoin users in terms of using a bitcoin exchange service. as Silk Road will remain a benchmark for the users in terms Darknet.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Krang on May 30, 2015, 04:00:13 PM
Op, you should actually post the content of the article in the op because this just seems like blogspam to me.

Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

Skype is easily monitored. It is centralized.

Agreed. It's hilarious that he thinks skype it decentralised, epsecially because it is easily monitored and the NSA already have access to Skype chats. Pretty much the only thing they can't get their hands on are encrypted messages. I'm all for more decentralized systems in both instant messaging and markets and hope they become widespread soon as they're massively needed with the recent darknet takedowns and all the NSA spying revelations.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: thejaytiesto on May 30, 2015, 04:04:45 PM
Op, you should actually post the content of the article in the op because this just seems like blogspam to me.

Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

Skype is easily monitored. It is centralized.

Agreed. It's hilarious that he thinks skype it decentralised, epsecially because it is easily monitored and the NSA already have access to Skype chats. Pretty much the only thing they can't get their hands on are encrypted messages. I'm all for more decentralized systems in both instant messaging and markets and hope they become widespread soon as they're massively needed with the recent darknet takedowns and all the NSA spying revelations.

Yeah, i don't think he gets what the concept of decentralized means. Skype runs on servers somewhere, which means it's centralized as hell.
They are never going to give a fuck about what you say over there tho, unless you are a serious criminal.
I think Tox was a project aiming at being some sort of decentralized anonymous Skype.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Kyle1836 on May 31, 2015, 03:28:40 AM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

Skype is monitored, the only way to stay somewhat protected is to use a proxy, and be behind a VPN. IRC is the best form of communication.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: melody82 on May 31, 2015, 03:34:49 AM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

you mean something like open bazar, but they clearly stated that their intent isn't to run a silk road 2.0, but we know that criminals will use it too, so i wonder how they can mantain their promise...

I haven't heard of that site, but I am guessing it is like megaupload was.  Sure a lot of pirates used it, but also a lot of legit people like musicians, who would earn some income form letting people download their music from there.  Unfortunately everyone lost.  I hope this does not become the case with open bazar.


"Yeah, i don't think he gets what the concept of decentralized means. Skype runs on servers somewhere"

I said LIKE skype, NOT skype itself.  I think its hilarious that you don't know how to read.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Light on May 31, 2015, 03:39:04 AM
Agreed. It's hilarious that he thinks skype it decentralised, epsecially because it is easily monitored and the NSA already have access to Skype chats. Pretty much the only thing they can't get their hands on are encrypted messages.

That is an assumption that I wouldn't be so quick to make. Historically, it is known that the US and NSA had backdoors in various past encryption algorithms meaning that while they were portrayed to be secure they were in fact far from it. For modern algorithms we don't know for a fact that the NSA doesn't have various backdoors that they engineered in the first place (after all they hire quite a few top mathematics/cryptographers every few years) and they would be incredibly frustrated if they couldn't break modern encryption. In all likelihood, I'd think they some encryption has already been broken - they just don't want to say anything and instead use it to gather data.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: charleshoskinson on June 01, 2015, 02:22:07 AM
Quote
Op, you should actually post the content of the article in the op because this just seems like blogspam to me.

Lol, I've made three posts in like four years. But I posted the text here


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: BIT-Sharon on June 01, 2015, 02:51:54 AM
Criminals make proits earlier, but can ruin the fame in one night. If the silk road can recover with bitcoin, that is hard to say, and i think it mainly depends on the prospect of bitcoin but not the silk road any more.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Daniel91 on June 01, 2015, 06:15:24 AM
I think that in any decentralized marketplace it depends primarily on the customer whether all transactions comply with the law, and not on the system.
Accusing the entire bitcoin system to be criminal or bad because of criminal activities of a few does not make much sense.
Those who have done something wrong should be accountable before the law and the bitcoin should remain what it has been so far: a decentralized, anonymous and open to all.



Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Amph on June 01, 2015, 06:23:43 AM
Well, some aspects of this story are really true, such as "Silk Road will never go away". As long as Bitcoin/Altcoins exist, things can be purchased relatively anonymously and it let's criminals get hold of "money" easier.

I think the lesson learned by silk road is that having a large center of business is a bad thing.  It makes it vulnerable to shut down.  So I imagine that anyone doing something illegal would turn to non-centralized communication, maybe something like skype to communicate.  So certain black market dealers would become known for their specialty and if one of them got caught then the rest would still be out there dealing.

I have no experience with this stuff so I could be way off base here.

you mean something like open bazar, but they clearly stated that their intent isn't to run a silk road 2.0, but we know that criminals will use it too, so i wonder how they can mantain their promise...

I haven't heard of that site, but I am guessing it is like megaupload was.  Sure a lot of pirates used it, but also a lot of legit people like musicians, who would earn some income form letting people download their music from there.  Unfortunately everyone lost.  I hope this does not become the case with open bazar.


"Yeah, i don't think he gets what the concept of decentralized means. Skype runs on servers somewhere"

I said LIKE skype, NOT skype itself.  I think its hilarious that you don't know how to read.

i don't remember that megaupload was decentrilized, so they are actually quite different, open bazar is more like a decentralized ebay, or decentralized silk road if you want, it just depend on who will use it

but there will be more control for criminal in comparison to silk road


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: nikona on June 01, 2015, 06:47:33 AM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Kakmakr on June 01, 2015, 09:20:11 AM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .

The goal is not to create a NEXT Silkroad, but to create something that is truly private. Until recently I have thought Switzerland was neutral, but I learned that they are working with the USA to infringe on people's privacy.
You cannot shift anything to a single country, and think they will stay neutral forever. It has to be open source and it has to be decentralized for it to work.
I am all for internet privacy, but not for a NEXT Silkroad linked to Bitcoin.   


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: LFC_Bitcoin on June 01, 2015, 09:54:18 AM
Silk Road never bothered me, I wasn't a user but it just never bothered me at all.
I think in a way it was cleaning up the streets, purer drugs were sold away from the streets which lowers gamg feuds & violence.
I think Ross got a way too long sentence, he never handled any of the drugs himself, just created a platform for people to too illegal stuff.
A young man has now got a longer sentence than you can get for murder, ridiculous really.
Somebody needs to develop a new Silk Road that the feds can't crack, I have no expertise to speak about that in detail so I'll stop here.....


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: bri912678 on June 01, 2015, 10:45:36 AM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .

If someone did it in Russia and was caught they would pay a heavier price than Ross. The Russian jail system sounds much more harsh than the American one. Some of the members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot did time in some extremely brutal prisons that sounded like they were previously Gulag camps.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: OrientA on June 01, 2015, 04:04:42 PM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .

If someone did it in Russia and was caught they would pay a heavier price than Ross. The Russian jail system sounds much more harsh than the American one. Some of the members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot did time in some extremely brutal prisons that sounded like they were previously Gulag camps.

What if the black market is run by North Korea government? I heard they export drugs.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: rocoro on June 01, 2015, 04:11:13 PM
Now that bitcoin is dying and the original reason for its success went to jail..
   
             Time for the next gen

https://i.imgur.com/7WQly5P.jpg


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: trafficolaa on June 01, 2015, 04:46:06 PM
Now that bitcoin is dying and the original reason for its success went to jail..
   
             Time for the next gen

https://i.imgur.com/7WQly5P.jpg

dreaming with open eyes is not a good thing in real life ::) or you are drunk that is why is you are talking like this, sling is just a shit coin that kind of clones has no more future and will disappear from the screen after few time  bitcoin is the only thing who will stay in the market.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: amiryaqot on June 01, 2015, 04:53:25 PM
Now that bitcoin is dying and the original reason for its success went to jail..
   
             Time for the next gen

https://i.imgur.com/7WQly5P.jpg

dreaming with open eyes is not a good thing in real life ::) or you are drunk that is why is you are talking like this, sling is just a shit coin that kind of clones has no more future and will disappear from the screen after few time  bitcoin is the only thing who will stay in the market.

yes that is true that is just crappy advertise to shit coin who have just eye catching road map but never will deliver and on the other hand Bitcoin is pure invention with largest adoption and market share and widely accepted by big merchants really that guy in deep sleep.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: nikona on June 01, 2015, 08:34:36 PM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .

If someone did it in Russia and was caught they would pay a heavier price than Ross. The Russian jail system sounds much more harsh than the American one. Some of the members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot did time in some extremely brutal prisons that sounded like they were previously Gulag camps.

Maybe not Russia then , however a country where the laws are such that US government will have no jurisdiction to take action in that country. I just said Russia, because Snowden is there and I thought somehow it has more lenient laws and would not allow US to intervene or arrest someone facing charges in US.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: charleshoskinson on June 02, 2015, 06:45:21 AM
I truly love the way conversations fork on bitcointalk. Good to be back


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Gibbs187x on June 02, 2015, 06:56:54 AM
Maybe if ross was using shadowcash he wouldnt be in this mess lol


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: AGD on June 02, 2015, 07:53:04 AM
Maybe if ross was using shadowcash he wouldnt be in this mess lol

The list of errors he made is very long ....

edit: What did the feds do to convince Ross to give them the private keys for all of his Bitcoins? ???


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Gibbs187x on June 02, 2015, 02:38:32 PM
Maybe if ross was using shadowcash he wouldnt be in this mess lol

The list of errors he made is very long ....

edit: What did the feds do to convince Ross to give them the private keys for all of his Bitcoins? ???
ross did not even get a fair trial ! did you see deep web?


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: Unbelive on June 02, 2015, 08:45:44 PM
Why can't somone just run Silkroad or any of its alternatives from a country where US has almost no jurisdiction to arrest someone ? Someone probably could do it in Russia, and do it without making any mistakes like what Silkroad did. If I was Ross, I would definitely would have gotten out of the country if I could .

If someone did it in Russia and was caught they would pay a heavier price than Ross. The Russian jail system sounds much more harsh than the American one. Some of the members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot did time in some extremely brutal prisons that sounded like they were previously Gulag camps.

I really doubt you would get life sentence for such crimes. 
In my country max sentence is 20 years. Do you know how much time that is? Have you been somewhere far from home for a year? 20 years is more then enough for any crime.

But to get life sentence for not paying taxes. That is hilarious.If system allow this it should get changed. If system was abused those that did it should pay greatly.





Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: gentlemand on June 02, 2015, 09:03:18 PM

And the fruits of his labors were a modest marketplace that was the safest and lowest violence drug exchange in the world. It also allowed suppliers to directly sell to consumers cutting out the middleman who usually end up being pretty evil.


I can't see that being the case for harder drugs. Maybe you could buy weed, mushrooms, meth directly from the good old boys who made it, but even that's doubtful. The heroin and coke you'd obtain from there would possibly be only slightly less soaked in blood than the stuff you'd obtain from any street corner.

Most of the real horrors occur in the supply chain, not the point of sale. Silk Road was a small step towards cutting out all the scum but as DPR's alleged actions demonstrate, it might just open up new avenues for violence.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: moriartybitcoin on June 03, 2015, 04:05:12 AM
This is one of the best and most thoroughly thought-out 'defenses' of Silk Road and Mr. Ulbricht I have yet seen .. good job OP, and I fully agree.


Title: Re: Some Thoughts on Silk Road
Post by: bumpk1nK on June 03, 2015, 04:06:27 AM
http://hoskinsoncharles.blogspot.com/2015/05/thoughts-on-ross.html

Thoughts on Ross

From time to time, I enjoy investing an afternoon considering politics and the state of affairs here in the United States. Our country is the first hyperpower forcing all other nations to consider us in whatever policy happens to be the day's grock. This reality is divorced from ethical or moral metrics and the war on drugs is no different.

For whatever reason (religious, practical, dystopian, etc), policymakers in the United States have continuously decided to label a behavior or substance as dangerous to the social fabric™ of our society. Prohibition is the standard example and its spectacular failure is somehow forgotten. We saw and acknowledge the rise of the modern mafia. We saw the decentralized nature of resistance through bootleggers (some say one who's kid become president) and the FBI form to stop the bootleggers empowering J. Edgar Hoover to terrorize two generations of Americans via illegal spying and blackmail (including Martin Luther King). Yet why have no lessons been learned?

The war of drugs is a leviathan that has imprisoned millions of Americans (vastly disportionate for minorities), formed massive bureaucracies such as the DEA and their state equivalents, and like Hoover's FBI slowly transformed society to both militarize the police and make their actions somehow ok. Where in this process have we asked what the goal exactly is? Why are we as a country destroying families, imprisoning millions and treating addicts as hardened criminals? Why have we created an industry that robs us of our constitutional rights and turns our police force into something resembling the Stasi?         

I honestly don't have a good answer. There is perhaps an historical context that could be explored and used to synthetically explain why we are somehow comfortable as a nation using a plato like ideal social fabric™ to justify incarcerating millions for non-violent crimes. Yet this leaves a putrid taste in my mouth.

The United States drug policy is simply put immoral to the core. If drug use results in damage to one's relationships, then hold people accountable for their actions. But instead we say that Heroin somehow is more damaging than alcohol? Marijuana is a gateway to personal destruction (except for when our presidents smoke it [1][2])? I guess Colorado is doomed then :).

Now enter Ross Ulbricht the dread pirate roberts. He isn't a very nice person. No one running a drug cartel really is a nice person. But he isn't a Zetas Cartel kingpin proudly displaying the heads of his enemies. He is a programmer who saw an opportunity to use emerging technology to enrich himself without regard to the current egregious law. He believed that he could stay hidden thanks to the nature of Tor and Bitcoin. He also believed that a decentralized marketplace could reduce the violence associated with the drug trade (which is fair considering that violence comes from the prohibition not the other way around).

And the fruits of his labors were a modest marketplace that was the safest and lowest violence drug exchange in the world. It also allowed suppliers to directly sell to consumers cutting out the middleman who usually end up being pretty evil. Compared to the Golden Triangle, a relatively small amount of funds changed hands and consumers got their substances. The vast majority didn't go crazy and grab chainsaws for some Tony Montana action. The vast majority didn't destroy their families and social networks. The vast majority are still living their lives amongst us going to work, church or vacations. Somehow the social fabric™ the government must protect hasn't been torn.

Yet Ross now gets to spend the rest of his life in prison as a living symbol of the war on drugs. He has effectively become its Nelson Mandela. The Silk Road won't go away. Those who are knowledgeable about cryptography and the nature of the internet will cite technology like Openbazaar and other such systems as the bittorrent moment of online drug trade. Ross's imprisonment will send no message contrary to what the prosecutor suggests, it just increases the stakes for anonymity and the amount of potential profit from the trade.

The countermeasures will inevitably be a war on cryptography (I should trademark that one) and internet anonymity. To protect the social fabric™, the United States must rob us of our privacy and autonomy. We must accept that all packets need to be inspected. Secrets are illegal. And no doubt massive government budgets must be increased. Think of your children!

I'm really done with this madness. We supposedly have a republic and have the right to change things. At this moment, I'd like to divide the bitcoin space into two groups. Those that complain about the injustice of Ross's sentence and those that do something about it. I'm going to do something about it. My company is going to build some great tools to preserve personal privacy (that thing we have a constitutional right to) and make sure they are open source and well distributed.

I'm also going to ask everyone in this space to be in the second bucket. Do something about this injustice. Think about the software you could write. Organize meetups and spread the word. We didn't like our money or the banks so we made new money. Is in inconceivable that we can make a new society with a social fabric that's actually worth protecting?

Charles

Great read. It's a sad day. That kid has to do the rest of his life in jail and its due to this impossible to win war on drugs. I donated 1 btc to ross after I heard the news. I almost cried.