In liberland, everybody basically has their merit account. That means how much they have contributed to the society ta they are living in. But in our system of centralized justice that we are planning together with clerals, that i owe, you can actually antake people's merits away. So ok, it's possible that i steal your bit coins. I know i hek into your computer, but if you can prove it in a system of liberal ande centralized justice, we just put on the on my account a liability in the same value as as of the stolen bit coins. There'll be always list of criminals. And by the way, it's growing also every day with liberal there
Blockchain technology has gone mainstream. It earns huge amounts of column inches and airtime. Stories abound of Bitcoin millionaires and multimillion-dollar ICOs (Initial Coin Offerings). New cryptocurrencies are launched every week. People who don’t entirely understand what they’re buying are rushing to purchase Bitcoin for fear of missing out, and recently the UK's Royal Mint announced its first ever blockchain-based non-fungible token, an NFT. Back in 2018, Intelligence Squared gathered crypto specialists to debate whether blockchain technology has a legitimate future or not, including Jamie Bartlett, author and analyst on the politics of the internet, blockchain expert Primavera De Filippi, Vit Jedlička, President of the micronation Liberland, and crypto journalist David Gerard. The host for this discussion was journalist, author and former BBC News Editorial Director, Kamal Ahmed.
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