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Popping the Crypto Bubble

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The story of cryptocurrency is a history of the modern world reflected in technology. It is based on the different narratives that have shaped the economic and political reality of a world spinning out of control. It is also the story of a financial revolution that carries the seeds of its own destruction. Once intended as a peer-to-peer medium of payment, crypto has today morphed almost exclusively into a speculative investment asset. How can we decode crypto, learn from its mistakes, and predict what the future holds for this new currency? In Popping the Crypto Bubble, we uncover the truth about the technology behind cryptocurrency, its political ideations and the narratives that drive the biggest economic bubble in the history of mankind. A bubble waiting to explode, and already exploding.

306 pages, Hardcover

Published June 17, 2022

20 people are currently reading
160 people want to read

About the author

Stephen Diehl

4 books6 followers

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5 stars
23 (42%)
4 stars
17 (31%)
3 stars
11 (20%)
2 stars
1 (1%)
1 star
2 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
212 reviews2 followers
August 20, 2022
As Stephen Diehl shows, the crypto 'industry' - if it can be called that - is based on the slim technology of blockchain (which is too slow to ever be useful) and the libertarian hype that fiat money is a government scam and needs to be replaced by decentralised money systems (like Bitcoin).

In between, the linked world of the internet has provided connectivity to such ideas via the marketing hype of Facebook and similar and the ever-present scams. In crypto, the scams are huge and varied.

Popping the Crypto Bubble is a book of enormous learning and education. Just like a mountaineer needs extensive training and equipment before daring to climb Everest, so investors need (and are rarely provided or bother to be provided) with knowledge and awareness to climb in risky investments. The danger of mountaineering is death or injury. The danger in high-risk investment is losing all one's money.

As Diehl rightly shows, the world of crypto is not even investment but a one-sided gamble where the punters have little or no idea what they are doing or the risks of placing their money in a zero-benefit enterprise where sharks are the norm and are everywhere.

This book is far more than a book about the nonsense of 'investing' (gambling) in crypto. It is about the psychology of 21st Century money, investor stupidity and reluctance to learn before jumping in and some reasons why - e.g. a youth that feels it has nothing to lose.

In many ways, this is a depressing read but it captures the zeitgeist in a highly readable and hugely informative way. Stephen is totally committed to helping people learn something of the reality of crypto craziness and why it makes no sense to enter the cauldron of scam investments where only the scammers know what they are doing and everyone else will lose unless they are very lucky.

Brilliantly written, thoroughly researched, massively important.
30 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2022
Superb presentation

The title hardly encapsulates the breadth and depth of the message. I wanted to gain a grasp on just what all the hubbub about cryptocurrency is and I think these authors have supplied a very good starting place. Super well documented, which points to a wealth of further reading. Bravo!!!
Profile Image for Simone Scardapane.
Author 1 book12 followers
July 19, 2022
<< We can create an entire industry speculating on the volatility of nothingness and turn every fictional thing into a tradable token, but should we? >>

Four stars because this is a much needed scathing indictment of the crypto world. I appreciated how the book covers more than just the technical side to delve into the underlying philosophy and social milieus (including a well-known type of technolibertarianism) which were instrumentals in pushing certain claims. Some argumentations are clearly made ad-hoc for their conclusions, which is to be expected and in general it's nice to finally have a book to counterbalance all the absurd positive claims made otherwise.

I am removing a star because the book has skipped its editing phase and it has been released with an absurd amount of typos, poorly worded sentences, repetitions of material and more. If a second edition is forthcoming, I suggest to wait a short while to read it.
Profile Image for Padraic.
57 reviews4 followers
July 5, 2022
Blistering takedown of a complete Ponzi scheme
Profile Image for Liquidlasagna.
2,981 reviews110 followers
September 6, 2023
bitcoin is the world
i think for the clueness

and some of the blockchain fanatics
on those financial radio shows
are total fruitcakes.....



Jeff Kaye's review on here is so well worded in places, i need to quote something

"the crypto 'industry' - if it can be called that - is based on the slim technology of blockchain (which is too slow to ever be useful) and the libertarian hype that fiat money is a government scam and needs to be replaced by decentralised money systems"





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Amazone

covers all the bases and is very up-to-date

i went full circle regarding crypto. started in 2011 and thought it was great tech and relevant for everybody's future. after more than 10 years and literally no application for the average joe and his life i arrived at the conclusion it is in fact meaningless. this book was a very informative and surprisingly well written and researched work to find closure on my assumptions. a fool and his money are soon parted. buy this book, sell your crypto and be happy. great work guys.

Void

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Excellent, Comprehensive, Interdisciplinary Critique
(with Horrendous Typos and Missing Phrases)

Stephen Diehl has written a comprehensive, multi-faceted polemic against the technology, political-economy and sociology of cryptocurrency. He makes use of a rare dual expertise in computer science and finance, as well as historical knowledge and a sophisticated political understanding, to dismantle the claims of cryptocurrency advocates across all domains.

He classifies cryptocurrencies as unregulated securities and exchanges as casinos, and situates the broader ecosystem in the historical-financial context of bubbles, speculative manias and scams; he explicates the crippling technical tradeoff inherent to blockchain technology (induced by a combination of absolute consensus and decentralisation); he dismantles the Austrian-school-influenced economic claims for cryptocurrencies; and more.

The critique is meticulous, technically rigorous, erudite, original, and devastating.

I wish I didn't have to make this criticism, but it must be said that I may have never read a book with more typos or, frankly, ungrammatical sentences. It genuinely seemed as if some sections of this book were first drafts that weren't even read over by the author. The reason I was able to mostly look over this is that most of the book didn't suffer from this flaw, only certain sections. An immediate bad sign when I first held the book was that the blurb on the back had random chunks of extra whitespace. Hopefully, these aspects are fixed up in future editions.

Tom


2 reviews
December 9, 2022
Great breakdown of the challenges of Crypto especially technical design flaws that are not resolvable. This is a good read for non-techy people too, I told my Dad to read this and he will never touch Crypto :)
1 review
January 13, 2023
Terrible book, full of factual inaccuracies. The author displays his lack of understand like a badge of honour.
7 reviews
February 27, 2023
The content is great, but needs editing. Lots of typos and stuff ms word should catch.
Its comprehensive, and I love the analysis of crypto as compared to other speculative bubbles.
Profile Image for Martijn Stolze.
1 review
March 16, 2023
How was this book allowed to go to print? Shockingly full of errors, misprints and bad formatting. Awful.
Profile Image for Harshil Mehta.
98 reviews28 followers
May 2, 2023
There is fraud. Here is manipulation. And then this is crypto, a combination of both.

In year 2021-22, when the interest rates were historically low in a decade, there was easy money in the market, looking to get invested, or speculated. This was the exact time when the global stock market saw the bull run, although the companies' fundamentals and the crash before the covid-19 pandemic could justify it.

But that was not the case with cryptocurrencies (technically, they are not even currencies). Crypto was sold as the solution for everything.

"Did government become defunct in Venezuela?"
"Crypto is the solution."

"Want a hedge against the dollar?"
"Here is your crypto, sir."

"Want an alternative currency."
"Crypto, bruh."

"Do you want to own assets?"
"Why not crypto?"

A purely speculative activity was being labelled as a legitimate activity because, hey, everyone is doing that. The asset's intrinsic value doesn't come because everyone is doing that.

Diehl has done exemplary work to lay out how Crypto was labelled as everything. Still, it was nothing but a sophisticated Ponzi scheme, having a political ideology behind it for speculation. The book is good documentation of the crypto's history, the claims and their concrete counters, and what to do now. However, in the end, it becomes a bit tedious. It is recommended to readers who have speculated or want to speculate in the crypto market.
Profile Image for Anja Konter.
18 reviews1 follower
February 19, 2023
Clear explanation of the various aspects of crypto and its risks, everyone should read this.
3 reviews
December 22, 2023
A wide-ranging and detailed expose of crypto/DeFi/Web3

The selfish motivations of the various players in the industry are clearly set out.

The uselessness and counter productiveness for society of the new technology is explained in very specific and detailed manner.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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