We would like to solve most of thedisputes witin liberline, through our system of merits. And we want to also include some sort of du buy financial district ultimate resolution system, but it's very costly. Brogrso people will pay tax in liberland. All they do payme ats, a voluntary tax. If you want to acquire more merits, musically, more shares of liberland, you have to masically exchange yor currency for merits. Youv o to see them. Is there a revolutionary aspect, which is a reasonable one, to what block chain can do around governance? Yes.
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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