Information wants to be free - Bram Cohen on BitTorrent, content, copyright & crypto
Guest:
Bram Cohen
Why you should listen:
The BitTorrent protocol was a catalyst for the golden age of file-sharing in the early 2000s. Bram says it was never about being a crusader against copyright, he was simply interested in moving data from point A to point B. Listen to Bram’s memories of being a childhood programming prodigy, his early start-up failures, and his impressions of Hal Finney and Satoshi Nakamoto during the early years of Bitcoin.
Key takeaway:
At its peak, BitTorrent had hundreds of millions of users and accounted for 40% of all internet traffic. At the core of this was the idea that information wants to be free - and the tension behind that idea is still at the root of what it means to be extremely online today.
BitTorrent is the world’s largest decentralized protocol. Bitcoin is the second largest. Bitcoin is a revolutionary idea but miners are too centralized and the energy footprint is growing. Bram’s vision for Chia addresses these two perceived weaknesses.
Supporting links:
United States of America Mathematical Olympiad
[Mojo Nation ](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mnet_(peer-to-peer_network)
OhNoCrypto
via https://www.ohnocrypto.com
Andy Pickering, Khareem Sudlow