NOVA: Crypto decoded | KPBS public media
Premiere Wednesday 9 November 2022 at 21.00 on KPBS TV + Sunday 13 November at 21.00 on KPBS 2 / PBS Video App
NOVA “Crypto decoded“ takes a deep dive into one of the most talked about technologies of the moment – cryptocurrency and the blockchain technology that makes it possible. From Bitcoin to NFTs, cryptocurrencies are making headlines and claiming a slice of global financial activity. But what exactly are they and how do they work?
NOVA examines how and why cryptocurrency came to be, with a wide range of experts going beyond the hype and skepticism to uncover the social and technological underpinnings of “crypto,” and explores the possibility that this new technology can change much more than just money.
NOVA: Crypto Decoded: Preview
To fully understand the revolution that some say crypto promises, “Crypto Decoded” seeks to answer a deceptively simple question – what is money, anyway? Currency has been around in one form or another longer than written history, and the film looks to experts like Ellen Feingold, curator of the National Numismatic Collection at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History—home to the world’s largest historical collection of money—to unpack this complex past . Feingold explains that anything can be used as money as long as a community agrees on the value. All money is a necessary fiction – built on shared trust.
While banks and credit card companies are largely trusted to track payment flows and keep detailed, centralized records, some believe this gives these financial intermediaries – and the authorities that oversee them – too much power. This lack of confidence spurred computer programmers and mathematicians to search for an alternative.
For Mark Miller, a computer science student in the late 1970s, George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel “1984” seemed prophetic, as trust in government diminished in the wake of Watergate and the Vietnam War. The film looks at the invention of public key cryptography – one of the fundamental components of cryptocurrency – and its promotion by Mark Miller and others.
Computer scientists and mathematicians, envisioning that this new form of communication could give governments unprecedented power, raced to create a way to keep online communications private and secure. What they created is something that had eluded cryptographers for millennia: an almost unbreakable code.
Today, public key encryption is central to digital communication and especially the electronic transfer of money. It’s what allows us to shop online with relative confidence that our credit card information won’t be stolen with every transaction.
On Halloween 2008, the game changed again, when an article written under the name Satoshi Nakamoto appeared on the internet. Satoshi introduced Bitcoin, “a peer-to-peer electronic cash system” which revolutionized the cryptocurrency industry. To this day, no one knows who Satoshi Nakamoto is – one of the most significant technologies in recent human history was created by someone who remains completely anonymous.
The first of many now popular cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin removed “intermediate goal” replacing them with a technology known as “blockchain,” an immutable record of transactions, distributed among all users and secured by public key algorithms.
NOVA: What is Blockchain?
The film highlights factors that lead to Bitcoin’s success, such as encouraging users to maintain the blockchain. Those who contribute computing power to the system are rewarded in newly minted bitcoin, making it the first truly autonomous system, run solely by users with no central authority.
Inspired by this innovation, an early Bitcoin adopter saw another potential. What if crypto could decentralize not just money, but everything? “Crypto Decoded” highlights the creation of Ethereum – now the largest blockchain in the world, running 10 times more transactions per day than Bitcoin.
Unlike the Bitcoin blockchain, which only maintains a ledger of ownership of coins, Ethereum allows users to write “smart contracts” computer programs that run on the blockchain. Ethereum allows anyone to mint and program coins with additional functionality – doing for the blockchain what the iPhone’s app store did for the mobile phone. One type of smart contract has taken the world by storm – NFTs (non-fungible tokens).
A newer smart contract we see in “Crypto Decoded” is EquityCoin. Vernon J, a real estate investor from Brooklyn, and his partner, computer programmer Akil Ash, hope to use crypto to transform a vacant lot into affordable housing in East New York. This largely lower-income neighborhood is one of many where banks have long been reluctant to finance development, so Vernon and Akil’s project – EquityCoin – aims to remove banks from the equation.
The goal is to replace the bank with a community — for cryptocurrency to give a group of people the ability to create their own systems. EquityCoin is rooted in this concept “decentralization” — remove the powerful institutions that dominate many areas of modern life, especially related to money.
Quotes from filmmaker:
“Crypto Decoded aims to demystify this new technology – looking at how and why it was created, and its potential impact on our society,” said Pangloss Films producer Edna Alburquerque. “I hope viewers will come away with an understanding of why this is important to learn about – whether you actively engage with crypto or not, it has the potential to shape your future to some extent.”
“There is a lot of discussion about the current state of the crypto industry and the market has changed drastically during the production of our film,” said Pangloss Films director Peter Yost. “But the technologies around which crypto is built have the potential to impact far more than just the financial sector.”
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As “Crypto Decoded” looks at crypto’s technological foundations, utopian dreams, practical promises and potential dangers, it tries to answer the question: Is crypto just hype? Or could it usher in a revolution that goes far beyond money?
Many compare the state of crypto today to the state of the early internet – strong parallels are seen as the film takes us through crypto’s invention and transformation over the last few years. New coins, blockchains and decentralized apps are launched with staggering frequency. But in this thinly regulated and wildly volatile environment, it’s hard to know which projects will crash and burn and which will go, in crypto parlance, “to the moon.”
But as crypto’s popularity increases, so do its complications. As big business gets in on the action and crypto transactions draw the attention of financial regulators, there is a risk that crypto’s original promise of independence will be compromised. As our lives become increasingly digital, many believe that crypto is here to stay. But big questions remain. “Crypto Decoded” unpacks the big questions: What is the underlying technology? What is it good for? And what could the future of crypto be?
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This episode will be available on demand at pbs.org/nova, NOVA’s YouTube channel and the PBS Video app
Credit:
A NOVA production by Pangloss Films for GBH. Written, produced and directed by Peter Yost. Produced by Edna Alburquerque. Co-produced by Alex Clark. Edited by Ralph Avellino. Executive producers for NOVA are Julia Cort and Chris Schmidt. NOVA is a production of GBH. Ddistributed internationally by PBS International.
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