June 22, 2026

Capitalizations Index – B ∞/21M

After Midterm Elections, ‘Experts’ Vehemently Oppose Blockchain Voting

Bitcoinist.com
After midterm elections, ‘experts’ vehemently oppose blockchain voting

After Midterm Elections, ‘Experts’ Vehemently Oppose Blockchain Voting
In wake of midterm elections, 'experts' vehemently oppose blockchain in voting

After this week’s highly-fraught midterm elections, some commentators believe that blockchain is more useless than ever for voting.

After Tuesday’s crucial midterm elections, commentators — many of them academics and researchers — reinforced the importance of traditional voting methods, offering a strong critique blockchain.

Midterm Voices  

NBC’s Jasmin Boyce reported on a number of voices that emerged in response to social media debate regarding the merits of blockchain in polling places. Princeton professor Arvind Narayanan singled out the “[…] Avacado” argument in the tweet below:

Here's the deal, blockchain boosters. We know you're desperately pushing "X on the blockchain" ideas. If you're trying to convince Walmart it needs blockchains to track avocados or whatever, be our guest. But if you're messing with critical infrastructure, you've crossed a line.

— Arvind Narayanan (@random_walker) November 7, 2018

Despite stern warnings about crossing the proverbial ‘line,’ the dialogue continued. Dr. Angela Walch, a law professor at St. Mary’s University in San Antonia Texas, was quick to respond on social media.

Walch holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School, on top of a law B.A. from the same institution. Walch is noted for her intensive research and publications regarding blockchain tech. Her academic page reads:

Walch was nominated for “Blockchain Person of the Year” for 2016 by Crypto Coins News for her work on the governance of blockchain technologies and her influential article in American Banker arguing that the coders and miners of public blockchains should be treated as fiduciaries.

This is ridiculous. Please stop pumping #blockchain tech for critically important use cases like voting in public elections when all actual voting experts disagree. Misleading policy makers and the public on this is irresponsible. https://t.co/avrc3psrA0

— Angela Walch (@angela_walch) November 7, 2018

Like Walch’s response to the tweet above, Narayanan maintains similar feelings. He similarly remarks on the journalistic integrity and irresponsibility of outlets like the New York Times. Narayanan cites an August 7th Vanity Fair piece, describing “[…] people who’ve actually studied the topic.”

The New York Times published an amazingly irresponsible op-ed calling for blockchain voting, and election security experts responded with a giant facepalm. Here's why. Let's start with this roundup of opinions from people who've actually studied the topic: https://t.co/5hhoqByPq7

— Arvind Narayanan (@random_walker) November 7, 2018

NBC‘s Boyce also noted UPenn professor Matt Blaze’s sentiments. Blaze called out the “charlatans” who act as though blockchain is the electoral equivalent of a “cure” for cancer:

The charlatans pushing for blockchain elections and online voting are doing the equivalent of advocating a healthcare policy that assumes we’re about to cure cancer. Maybe we will, but best not to bet on it. https://t.co/JXQmUy6luq

— matt blaze (@mattblaze) November 7, 2018

The Voting Debate Rages On

This week’s midterm elections constitute an ongoing conversation regarding the role of blockchain tech in the electoral process. The trend towards this dialogue extends beyond the U.S. alone.

On September 4th, Bitcoinist reported that in the Japanese city of Tsukuba, “[…] a new online voting system that incorporates blockchain has been introduced to let citizens vote for different social contribution project proposals.”

Later in September, Bitcoinist wrote about a U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report similarly criticizing blockchain’s role in voting.

Despite optimistic outlooks from some, it appears that blockchain tech has quite the hill to climb before it gains mainstream acceptance electoral process.

What are your thoughts on the midterm elections, as well as the scholarly and ‘expert’ takes on blockchain in voting?

Images and media courtesy of Shutterstock, Twitter (@angela_walch, @random_walker,)

The post After Midterm Elections, ‘Experts’ Vehemently Oppose Blockchain Voting appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

Previous Article

The Daily: BCH Outpaces LTC, Where Next for DEXs?

Next Article

Grayscale Report: Institutional investors commit 70% of new money in Q3

You might be interested in …

Bitcoin [Insert Name]: You Can Now Fork Your Very Own Bitcoin

Users can now create a bitcoin fork for less than $100 as Blockstream CEO Adam Back forecasts a “huge fork explosion” for 2018.


Fork For bitcoin Market Dominance, Suggests Back

In comments on Twitter Tuesday, Back speculated on the likelihood of a plethora of bitcoin hard forks diverting investor attention away from altcoins, potentially increasing bitcoin’s market share.

The forecast comes as bitcoin’s hold on the market fell dramatically this week after bitcoin Cash controversially surged in value and altcoins saw massive price gains.

From a high of over 67% earlier this month, bitcoin is now at just 44% of the total market cap, which has itself reached unprecedented highs of almost $650 billion.

“[M]an 2018 is going to be a huge fork explosion. [I]f it sucks money out of alts and then onwards to bitcoin maybe we’ll get back to 75% bitcoin dominance on the way to 95%,” Back wrote.

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

‘Fork It Till You Make It’ (For $90)

The sudden popularity of bitcoin hard forks in December has seen variations of an increasingly unlikely nature, including so-called Super bitcoin, bitcoin Uranium and even bitcoin God, due for release December 25.

The phenomenon, which coincided with the previously fervent ICO market cooling somewhat, looks set to increase in the near future, due in part to the relative ease with which anyone can now fork the bitcoin network.

A company calling itself ForkGen Tech appears to be leading the trend, releasing what it describes as a “point-and-click easy” tool for creating a bitcoin hard fork, costing as little as $90.

Capitalizing on the price successes of bitcoin Cash (BCash), developers are even offering discounts using the code ‘rogerverified.’

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

“Fork it till you make it,” the project’s website announces by way of a slogan.

Covert criticism of BCash is not in short supply, with a wry explanation of the impetus to create the forking tool gracing the homepage.

“Forkgen was created to allow innovation to break free of the central planning stranglehold of ChainCodeLombroBlockstreamMIT Core,” it reads.

Inspired by successful forks like bitcoin Gold, bitcoin Diamond and BCash, and the visionary leadership of Craig Wright, Forkgen is the embodiment of Satoshi’s True Vision™ where if big blocks are good for scaling then many chains are even better.

What bitcoin hard fork would you like to issue? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Twitter, Shutterstock

The post Bitcoin [Insert Name]: You Can Now Fork Your Very Own Bitcoin appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

Bitcoin legality explained: global status and restrictions

Bitcoin Legality Explained: Global Status and Restrictions

bitcoin Legality Across Different Continents and Jurisdictions Across North ⁢America, bitcoin adoption varies significantly, with countries like ⁢the United States and Canada‍ embracing it within regulated frameworks ⁣that promote⁣ innovation⁣ while⁤ deterring illicit activities. The […]