Abstract

The blockchain technology promises to transform finance, money and even governments. However, analyses of blockchain applicability and robustness typically focus on isolated systems whose actors contribute mainly by running the consensus algorithm. Here, we highlight the importance of considering trustless platforms within the broader ecosystem that includes social and communication networks. As an example, we analyse the flash-crash observed on 21st June 2017 in the Ethereum platform and show that a major phenomenon of social coordination led to a catastrophic cascade of events across several interconnected systems. We propose the concept of “emergent centralisation” to describe situations where a single system becomes critically important for the functioning of the whole ecosystem, and argue that such situations are likely to become more and more frequent in interconnected socio-technical systems. We anticipate that the systemic approach we propose will have implications for future assessments of trustless systems and call for the attention of policy-makers on the fragility of our interconnected and rapidly changing world.

Highlights

  • The current debate on centralisation versus decentralisation often overlooks the complexity of the socio-technical ecology we inhabit, and the fact that it is dominated by human behaviour

  • The technology offered by Bitcoin [3] and other digital currencies – the blockchain – allows Alice to transfer her money directly to Bob, without centralised intermediaries

  • The Ethereum technology is quickly gaining consensus among developers as the reference platform for the implementation of a socio-technical ecosystem where technological applications and services are no more based on trust among parties

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Summary

Introduction

The Internet and World Wide Web have been saluted as a major decentralising forces for at least two decades. The technology offered by Bitcoin [3] and other digital currencies – the blockchain – allows Alice to transfer her money directly to Bob, without centralised intermediaries. Networks based on digital currency are distributed, because transactions are processed by multiple nodes, and decentralised, not relying on any authority or middleman.

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