Lettera indirizzata allo US Congress
  https://concerned.tech/
Tra i firmatari: Grady Booch, Cory Doctorow, Kelsey Hightower, Bruce Scnheier

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Dear U.S. Congressional Leadership, Committee Chairs and Ranking Members,

We are 26 computer scientists, software engineers, and technologists who have 
spent decades working in these fields producing innovative and effective 
products for a variety of applications in the fields of database technology, 
open-source software, cryptography, and financial technology applications.

Today, we write to you urging you to take a critical, skeptical approach toward 
industry claims that crypto-assets (sometimes called cryptocurrencies, crypto 
tokens, or web3) are an innovative technology that is unreservedly good. We 
urge you to resist pressure from digital asset industry financiers, lobbyists, 
and boosters to create a regulatory safe haven for these risky, flawed, and 
unproven digital financial instruments and to instead take an approach that 
protects the public interest and ensures technology is deployed in genuine 
service to the needs of ordinary citizens.

We strongly disagree with the narrative — peddled by those with a financial 
stake in the crypto-asset industry — that these technologies represent a 
positive financial innovation and are in any way suited to solving the 
financial problems facing ordinary Americans.

Not all innovation is unqualifiedly good; not everything that we can build 
should be built. The history of technology is full of dead ends, false starts, 
and wrong turns. Append-only digital ledgers are not a new innovation. They 
have been known and used since 1980 for rather limited functions.

As software engineers and technologists with deep expertise in our fields, we 
dispute the claims made in recent years about the novelty and potential of 
blockchain technology. Blockchain technology cannot, and will not, have 
transaction reversal mechanisms because they are antithetical to its base 
design. Similarly, most public blockchain-based financial products are a 
disaster for financial privacy; the exceptions are a handful of emerging 
privacy-focused blockchain finance alternatives, and these are a gift to 
money-launderers. Financial technologies that serve the public must always have 
mechanisms for fraud mitigation and allow a human-in-the-loop to reverse 
transactions; blockchain permits neither.

By its very design, blockchain technology, specifically so-called "public 
blockchains", are poorly suited for just about every purpose currently touted as a 
present or potential source of public benefit. From its inception, this technology has 
been a solution in search of a problem and has now latched onto concepts such as 
financial inclusion and data transparency to justify its existence, despite far better 
solutions already in use. After more than thirteen years of development, it has severe 
limitations and design flaws that preclude almost all applications that deal with public 
customer data and regulated financial transactions and are not an improvement on existing 
non-blockchain solutions.

Finally, blockchain technologies facilitate few, if any, real-economy uses. On 
the other hand, the underlying crypto-assets have been the vehicle for unsound 
and highly volatile speculative investment schemes that are being actively 
promoted to retail investors who may be unable to understand their nature and 
risk. Other significant externalities include threats to national security 
through money laundering and ransomware attacks, financial stability risks from 
high price volatility, speculation and susceptibility to run risk, massive 
climate emissions from the proof-of-work technology utilized by some of the 
most widely traded crypto-assets, and investor risk from large scale scams and 
other criminal financial activity.

We implore you to take a truly responsible approach to technological innovation 
and ensure that individuals in the US and elsewhere are not left vulnerable to 
predatory finance, fraud, and systemic economic risks in the name of 
technological potential which does not exist.

The catastrophes and externalities related to blockchain technologies and 
crypto-asset investments are neither isolated nor are they growing pains of a 
nascent technology. They are the inevitable outcomes of a technology that is 
not built for purpose and will remain forever unsuitable as a foundation for 
large-scale economic activity.

Given these vast externalities, together with the-at best still-ambiguous and 
at worst non-existent-uses of blockchain, we recommend that the Committee look 
beyond the hype and bluster of the crypto industry and understand not only its 
inherent flaws and extraordinary defects but also the litany of technological 
fallacies it is built upon.

We need to act now to protect investors and the global financial marketplace 
from the severe risks posed by crypto-assets and must not be distracted by 
technical obfuscations which mask an abject lack of technological utility. We 
thank you for your leadership on financial technology and regulation and urge 
you to consider our objective and independent expert judgments to guide your 
legislative priorities, which we remain happy to discuss anytime.







-- EN

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Prof. Enrico Nardelli
Presidente di "Informatics Europe"
Direttore del Laboratorio Nazionale "Informatica e Scuola" del CINI
Dipartimento di Matematica - Università di Roma "Tor Vergata"
Via della Ricerca Scientifica snc - 00133 Roma
home page: http://www.mat.uniroma2.it/~nardelli
blog: http://link-and-think.blogspot.it/
tel: +39 06 7259.4204    fax: +39 06 7259.4699
mobile: +39 335 590.2331     e-mail: [email protected]
online meeting: https://blue.meet.garr.it/b/enr-y7f-t0q-ont
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