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The Ethereal Summit Shows Blockchain’s Transformative Potential

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One Ethereal’s first sessions was led by the founders of Viant, a ConsenSys project designed to disrupt supply chains. Attendees nibbled on yellowfish tuna that had been tracked using Viant’s blockchain app all the way from Fiji, where it was caught. It’s heartening to think of a future where you can know exactly where your food came from, but also hard to see how Viant’s tech differs entirely from, say, what UPS uses to track packages. Even if entries into the blockchain are permanent and verified, it’s not clear what would stop bad actors in the supply chain from fudging them in the first place.

Ethereal also featured speakers from outside of ConsenSys, like Yorke Rhodes, a blockchain engineer from Microsoft, who spoke about the power of blockchain tokens, and Amber Baldet, a bonafide cryptocurrency celebrity and the former blockchain lead at J.P. Morgan, who primarily discussed the importance of privacy.

Ethereal’s attendees, by design, were not fully insulated from skeptics cautious of blockchain’s power to transform the world. During one session, Ronny Chieng, a correspondent from The Daily Show, debated Lubin over the hype and promises of the cryptocurrency industry. It was the second time the pair had sparred; Lubin came on Chieng’s show in December.

Chieng argued that decentralized technologies have long existed, like BitTorrent, a file-sharing platform developed in 2005. Lubin retorted that the platform had been stigmatized, and that now was the right time for decentralized tech to really flourish. Chieng wouldn’t relent. “This is either the biggest scam or the most undervalued asset in humanity. It could still be either way,” he said.

The conference also offered ample distractions, including a meditation session lead by Deepak Chopra, a prominent alternative medicine guru. “Blockchain is a construct,” Chopra said to an audience of 75 or so attendees. In fairness, he later added that everything else in the world is a construct too, aside from our “awareness.” Chopra gracefully answered a question from one audience member, who asked whether he saw connections between the Ethereum blockchain, yoga, and awakening one’s chakras. “I like the idea that blockchain can address all needs,” he responded, in part.

Lubin spoke last at Ethereal, before the event’s closing art auction. In a t-shirt reminiscent of something one would wear to Burning Man, Lubin explained how blockchain technology will allow all of us to become “well-educated, festival-going gamers.” Once the tokenized-utopia arrives, he said, everyone will have more time to develop their personal interests as well as socialize. That’s been the promise of nearly every iteration of new technology, but so far, it hasn’t come to fruition.

‘Blockchain is a construct.’

Deepak Chopra

Ultimately, we’ll expand our species beyond Earth, according to Lubin’s vision. The entrepreneur, who is in his 50s, spoke in short, endearing sentences, sprinkled with plenty of “ums.” He said ConsenSys was an “experiment,” and that after Web 3.0 will come Web 4.0, in which artificially intelligent agents will enter into contracts on our behalf.

The audience acted mostly unsurprised by the speech, though it booed at the mention of some of today’s leading tech platforms, like Uber and Airbnb. “They’re just resource aggregators,” Lubin said, dismissing them.

“He’s Steve Jobs times times 100, when this is all said and done,” an attendee nearby said of Lubin as his speech was closing.

The closing auction was hosted by Codex, a platform that uses—what else—the Ethereum blockchain to register and catalog art. Proceeds from the event went to the Foundation for Arts & Blockchain, a group that funds artists whose work incorporates blockchain tech. One piece, a white canvas with HODL—a term that signifies holding onto cryptocurrency instead of selling it—printed on it in red went for $8,000.

The final item up for bid: an exclusive Cryptokitty designed by Guilherme Twardowski, director of art for the game Cryptokitties, which is kind of like the digital equivalent of Beanie Babies. Users trade and breed digital cats on the Ethereum blockchain. More valuable kitties have rare traits, like say, green eyes. Getting a rare kitty is kind of like capturing a rare Pokémon in Pokémon GO.

As bids for the Cryptokitty crept above $100,000, a group of attendees wearing shirts that read “ARTISTS DESERVE MORE” cheered and hugged one another. The digital feline sold for $140,000.

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Source: https://www.wired.com/story/ethereal-summit-blockchain-art/

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