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The Truth Machine: The Blockchain and the Future of Everything Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.1 out of 5 stars 357 ratings

"Views differ on bitcoin, but few doubt the transformative potential of Blockchain technology. The Truth Machine is the best book so far on what has happened and what may come along. It demands the attention of anyone concerned with our economic future." (Lawrence H. Summers, Charles W. Eliot University Professor and President Emeritus at Harvard, former Treasury Secretary)

From Michael J. Casey and Paul Vigna, the authors of The Age of Cryptocurrency, comes the definitive audiobook on the Internet’s Next Big Thing: The Blockchain.

Big banks have grown bigger and more entrenched. Privacy exists only until the next hack. Credit card fraud is a fact of life. Many of the “legacy systems” once designed to make our lives easier and our economy more efficient are no longer up to the task. Yet there is a way past all this - a new kind of operating system with the potential to revolutionize vast swaths of our economy: the blockchain.

In The Truth Machine, Michael J. Casey and Paul Vigna demystify the blockchain and explain why it can restore personal control over our data, assets, and identities; grant billions of excluded people access to the global economy; and shift the balance of power to revive society’s faith in itself. They reveal the disruption it promises for industries including finance, tech, legal, and shipping. Casey and Vigna expose the challenge of replacing trusted (and not-so-trusted) institutions on which we’ve relied for centuries with a radical model that bypasses them.

The Truth Machine reveals the empowerment possible when self-interested middlemen give way to the transparency of the blockchain, while highlighting the job losses, assertion of special interests, and threat to social cohesion that will accompany this shift. With the same balanced perspective they brought to The Age of Cryptocurrency, Casey and Vigna show why listeners must care about the path that blockchain technology takes - moving humanity forward, not backward.

Product details

Listening Length 10 hours and 24 minutes
Author Michael J Casey, Paul Vigna
Narrator Sean Runnette
Audible.com Release Date February 27, 2018
Publisher Macmillan Audio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B07B4MLBW8
Best Sellers Rank

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4.1 out of 5 stars
357 global ratings

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Customers find the book provides a good overview of complex blockchain technology, with one customer noting it includes interesting case studies. The book receives positive feedback for its readability, with one customer describing it as an easy-reading survey of all things blockchain.

21 customers mention "Information quality"15 positive6 negative

Customers find the book provides a good overview of a complex topic, with one customer noting its well-researched content and interesting case studies.

"...a current snapshot of industry developments and a thoughtful review of the challenges, risks, and opportunities that now present themselves...." Read more

"A very good introduction to the Blockchain and the many benefits of it. I had heard about it many times and was glad I read this book." Read more

"These two authors have managed to cover a topic of great complexity with the ease of the great journalists they are -- and never let us forget that..." Read more

"...Unfortunately, it does not provide a clear technical explanation about these non-currency applications as to how the validity of the records is..." Read more

11 customers mention "Knowledge of blockchain technology"11 positive0 negative

Customers find the book provides a good overview of blockchain technology, with one customer describing it as an easy-reading survey.

"This book is a primer on blockchain technology written by two experienced financial journalists with a ringside seat...." Read more

"A very good introduction to the Blockchain and the many benefits of it. I had heard about it many times and was glad I read this book." Read more

"...You learn the concept and technologies that make a blockchain so powerful. You learn some important names to watch...." Read more

"...I really did. The authors did an adequate job of explaining how blockchain technology works and how it can be applied to many areas of life...." Read more

8 customers mention "Readability"8 positive0 negative

Customers find the book readable, with one describing it as an impressive and approachable read.

"...I may be wrong. I dearly hope I am. At any rate, it’s a very good book and you will do yourself an injustice if you don’t read it." Read more

"...Excellently written and worth the time to read." Read more

"An impressive and approachable book on the short history and profound future of Blockchain technologies...." Read more

"Great information. Well worth reading." Read more

Very good overview of Blockchain Technology.
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Very good overview of Blockchain Technology.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2018
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    This book is a primer on blockchain technology written by two experienced financial journalists with a ringside seat. They previously wrote a book about Bitcoin, the first, but far from only, application of blockchain technology, also known as distributed ledger technology. It’s the basic technology behind “token economics” and is conceptually associated with peer-to-peer and decentralized processing.

    The authors provide a current snapshot of industry developments and a thoughtful review of the challenges, risks, and opportunities that now present themselves. One of those challenges is scalability. For reasons I won’t try to explain here, that one issue has fractured the industry into permissionless (e.g., Bitcoin, Ethereum) and permissioned segments, the former behaving more like the original ideal of the democratized digital economy and the latter being a variation of the gatekeepers model (think banks) we have today.

    But why should you care if you are outside the universe of tech investors, banks, entrepreneurs, and engineers? Because tech exists to serve a larger purpose. And that larger purpose, in this case, as the authors point out, extends, at a minimum, to the Internet of Things, but may ultimately impact not just our economy, but our society and our democracy. It could, as one example the authors offer, eventually lead to the commercialization of your personal reputation. (Admittedly a long way off.)

    This is not a book about Bitcoin, although it does come up a lot. The relevance is that Bitcoin uses blockchain technology. And whether you think Bitcoin is fool’s gold or not, the underlying technology has worked pretty well. In nine years, no one has hacked the system.

    The Internet and its digital revolution have one over-riding problem: digital data can be replicated. In essence that means that any digital system can be compromised. And as we’ve discovered there is no shortage of people in the world who will make every attempt to do so. It’s easy money and some people, for some perverse reason, consider it “fun.” (Or payback, perhaps.)

    Protecting the integrity of the digital world, as a result, has proven to be a monumental task. It’s expensive, requires a lot of people, and ultimately fails. In part, this has contributed to the reality that the Internet, once perceived to be the ultimate egalitarian state, is now the ultimate monopoly. A handful of giant companies, whose names you can easily identify, now control it. And while no one really knows what that will mean longer term, the yellow flags are starting to be hoisted, particularly following the 2016 presidential election.

    The easiest way to think of blockchain, perhaps, is that it goes back to the original digital ideal of the pure democracy, but incorporates security protocols that reduce the forces favoring consolidation of the gatekeepers. In short, it is the architecture that makes good on the original vision. Maybe.

    There are a few hurdles, however. The first is that you have to accept that the system is better, but not perfect. Before you can evaluate that decision, however, you must accept that the current system of accounting that governs our banks and corporations is far from perfect, too. Accounting is not truth. And that is the truth. Accounting is an approximation of truth and sometimes the gap, as we saw during the 2008 financial crisis, can be huge – as in big enough to cause a “healthy” bank like Lehman Brothers to disappear overnight.

    That, I fear, is going to be a very hard sell to the average citizen. Or, more accurately, once you let the cat out of the bag people are going to be aghast and it is unlikely they will see doubling down on technology as the best way forward. It is human nature to not want to think about what we don’t want to think about. And most people don’t want to think about the fact that Wall Street really has no idea what the companies whose stocks it trades are worth. Or that our biggest employers really don’t know if they are making or losing money. That sounds a lot like chaos and we don’t like to go there, particularly since that same Wall Street is playing its game of chance with our retirement and our savings.

    It’s important to accept that, however, because blockchains do not promise perfection. They might be better, but better is relative. Digital, by definition, means replicable, for good or bad. The risk can be reduced, but it can’t be eliminated.

    And that brings us to the second big challenge. Like any system of security and trust, blockchain systems will require that we all agree on some fundamental rules. And this, I fear, will be an even bigger hurdle than the first. And the reason is the asymmetry of power that exists today.

    Our economy and our society, and particularly our politics, are today ruled by minorities. It might be a numeric minority, or it might not be, but its opinion falls short of a complete consensus. There is no democracy if by democracy we mean everyone has an equal say in things. That’s not even close to being today’s reality.

    And as we witness day in and day out, the people who benefit from that asymmetry today want to make the balance of power even more asymmetrical – to their benefit, of course. That’s why we have lobbyists and why corporations and wealthy individuals invest so much money in the political process. If power were allocated symmetrically, it would be a lousy investment.

    It is that asymmetry, even more than the unanticipated security challenge, that has allowed corporate America to hijack the digital economy to the degree it has. It’s not just that the corporations did it; it is the fact that Washington let them, and in fact facilitated them. (And we, the users, of course, let the politicians let them.)

    I don’t yet see, frankly, how blockchain technology gets around that. The banks and the tech giants will seize the agenda and rework it to their advantage, as it appears, from the information provided in this book, they are already doing. In the end, if that continues, we will have the next big thing that looks and smells a little different but is the same old thing when it comes to asymmetric power. Maybe a few new products, like crypotcurrencies or blockchain-enabled supply chains, but the same old players pulling the same old strings to their advantage.

    My ultimate takeaway from the book: It’s ultimately a battle between an ideology of individualism and an ideology built on the common good. Liberal democracy, as we know it today, and have known it since the founding of the country, is built on a foundation of individualism (e.g, individual rights, freedoms, and opportunities). And it has worked remarkably well.

    The Achilles Heel of individualism, however, is the asymmetric allocation of power. It is a weakness, moreover, that has been great exaggerated and accelerated by technology. Technology, to date, has done nothing quite so dramatically as it has enhanced the asymmetric allocation of power in our economy, our society, and our politics.

    The ultimate promise of blockchain technology, therefore, as I think the authors see it, is the opportunity to double down on individualism. The blockchain, might, if the predictions hold, provide the means to overcome the inherent inequities of modern capitalism fueled by the creation of digital monopolies.

    They might be right. But, as Yogi Berra noted, “In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, but in practice there is.” And I’m with Yogi on this one. I don’t see the 1%, however you define it, just walking away and letting the other 99% of us back into the fight.

    Perhaps more importantly, Washington shows no resolve to do anything to impede the asymmetric accumulation of power by corporations and wealthy individuals. According to the authors, while the central banks of England, Japan, and Canada are all actively exploring blockchain technologies, our own government seems content to leave it in the hands of private initiatives like the corporate consortium, Hyperledger, dominated by companies like IBM and Intel.

    I may be wrong. I dearly hope I am. At any rate, it’s a very good book and you will do yourself an injustice if you don’t read it.
    85 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 29, 2018
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Wow, why aren’t we seeing this in the news! Decentralized blockchain technology is changing the world as we know it.

    As stated in this book, “If the future foreseen by this book comes to pass, we’ll witness the biggest employment shakeup the world has ever seen. And this time, the most vulnerable jobs are not the usual suspects: the factory workers, the low-level clerks, or the retail store assistants.

    “Now it’s the accountants, the bankers, the portfolio managers, the insurers, the title officers, the escrow agents, and the trustees—and, yes, even the lawyers. To be sure, the common refrain that lawyers will be replaced by “smart contracts” is somewhat inaccurate since the terms of agreements, the actual contracts themselves, will still need to be negotiated by human beings. Nonetheless, the legal industry is also in for a huge shakeup. Lawyers who don’t understand code are likely going to be valued far less than those who do. (One of the most employable joint degrees to have will be a law-plus–computer science degree.) In any case, you get the idea: the middle class is facing a tidal wave.”

    Decentralized blockchain technology is a record keeping ledger that is transparent immutable and uses algorithms to used smart contracts and this will drastically cut costs and speed up processes that use to take days. All of this is being done automatically through little human oversight.

    Let me give you a few examples:

    In banking, the processed syndicated loans, which now takes weeks, will be processed in minutes. Best of all, these transactions become programmable and able to communicate information and instructions as well.

    Remember when Chipotle’s customers got sick from contaminated foods? Decentralized supply chains would almost eliminate the spread of food contamination because each step within the process would be noted within the blockchain ledger and would be traceable and this would naturally enhance trust in the data.

    The book also stated: “The World Food Program (WFP), a UN agency that feeds 80 million people worldwide, is putting 10,000 Azraq refugees through a pilot that uses a blockchain system to better coordinate food distribution. In doing so, the WFP is tackling a giant administrative challenge: how to ensure, in an environment where theft is rampant, and few people carry personal identifying documents, that everyone gets their fair share of food.

    “This Azraq blockchain pilot ensures that people aren’t double-spending their food entitlements. That’s a pretty important requirement in refugee camps, where supplies are limited and where organized crime outfits have been known to steal and hoard food for profit.”

    Ride sharing services like Uber will also be replaced by services like Tel Aviv-based, blockchain-powered ride-sharing application that have no middlemen or controlling authority.

    Medical record keeping will advance and allow us to centralize and organize all our records in a secured platform that we control.

    Anything can be digitized—a title, contracts, copyrights, personal IDs, solar grids, commodity exchanges, investment funds, blockchain-certified marriage certificates, online voting systems, and supply-chain platforms.

    Blockchain even has the likelihood of helping us reduce our carbon-missions output which will help with climate change.

    Our ability to do background checks will be dramatic. For example, we will know if an individual hangs out with high-school dropouts or people with graduate degrees. It will show our payment history, sleep patterns, travel history, and, of course, our online surfing.

    If social media companies agree to share our data, a whole new identity could be formed that would be much more informative than anything produced by, say, credit score keepers such as Equifax.

    The book states: “This is precisely what a new breed of algorithmic credit-scoring companies and other such big data–driven startups are doing. Putting all of that into a blockchain-proven system could be a powerful way to get people to trust each other and expand their social and economic exchanges.”

    Decentralized blockchains are just the beginning. Our world is changing faster than we realize through artificial intelligence, biotechnologies, quantum computing, and advanced materials, and these discoveries are creating a radical shift in the way we live.
    14 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2021
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    A very good introduction to the Blockchain and the many benefits of it. I had heard about it many times and was glad I read this book.
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2018
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    The book reviews about a hundred start-ups in the fields of digital crypto-currencies as well as block-chain-based managements (of property identity etc.). Unfortunately, it does not provide a clear technical explanation about these non-currency applications as to how the validity of the records is maintained and ascertained.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2018
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    These two authors have managed to cover a topic of great complexity with the ease of the great journalists they are -- and never let us forget that what they're talking about is in the process of changing how we view the world of finance and the rest of the world around us. You have to admire writers who at the outset admit they were once skeptical about the staying power of the very topic of their hard work. Under that standard, I am pleased to join the skeptics. Funny how such skeptics were around when the internet just got off the ground, too. And, oh, how about the printing press, the automobile, the telephone -- just about every other new revolutionary technology that from the outset was difficult to understand, hard to imagine how it would make our lives better, and almost impossible to conceive how it could be made profitable.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2020
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    Was expecting a deep technical review of current blockchain in the world... instead it is a very basic overview of blockchain ideas, mixed with Anti Trump sentiment and even a pro Socialism section. Not a good read to learn about deep technical blockchain. If you want a left leaning basic overview of ideas, then this is average. No technical, deep explanations in this book.
    4 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Tiziana
    5.0 out of 5 stars Le basi storiche
    Reviewed in Italy on June 4, 2023
    Ricostruire la nascita degli strumenti aiutata a capirne i pregi e le ragioni delle caratteristiche
    Report
  • H.B.
    5.0 out of 5 stars An insightful Book.
    Reviewed in Germany on April 1, 2018
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Wonderful, a masterpiece. This is what every manager, politician, lawyer, and bureaucrat has to know about the Blockchain and Bitcoin.
  • Kate
    5.0 out of 5 stars A complex subject made accessible
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 27, 2018
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    This is a superb book. I spend a lot of my time writing and speaking about blockchain technology, and I wish I had the easy turn of phrase of these authors. A complex subject brought to life and placed in context. Highly recommended.
  • Kunal Verma
    5.0 out of 5 stars Nice book for learning about basics of blockchain
    Reviewed in India on May 8, 2024
    Worth the money! Still reading it
    Will update after reading it to the last last
    Amazon delivery and packaging by seller was soo good that i got my book without any harm
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    Kunal Verma
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Nice book for learning about basics of blockchain

    Reviewed in India on May 8, 2024
    Worth the money! Still reading it
    Will update after reading it to the last last
    Amazon delivery and packaging by seller was soo good that i got my book without any harm
    Images in this review
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  • Nadia Diakun-Thibault
    5.0 out of 5 stars Truth Machine in an Age of Cryptocurrency
    Reviewed in Canada on March 4, 2018
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    “It might surprise you to read this, but the most subversive, controversial, anti-authoritarian idea in the world of finance, an idea so powerful every government on the planet is trying to figure out whether to co-opt it or outlaw it, the dream of the most fervent libertarian, dark-Web denizens, is a ledger.”
    The Truth Machine (p.17)

    Blockchain. Ledger. Truth Machine...
    ...the technology that has the potential to restore citizens’ faith and trust in financial institutions, in media, in government; the technology that can spin “distributed justice” from a glib phrase into a societal norm.

    As in their previous book, “The Age of Cryptocurrency,” Michael Casey and Paul Vigna weave compelling stories and examples of what is, to some, a dry mathematical curiosity shrouded in cryptography, mysterious code, and terminology – hash, block, miners, nodes.

    Casey and Vigna do not assume the reader is a cryptocurrency geek, a Fintech banker, mathematician or collector of academic articles on all things cryptocurrency and blockchain. The history of civilization’s tinkering with ledgers, exchange of goods and services spans millennia, and they are quick to remind the reader the technology reflects the past:

    “The advent of the first ledger technology can be traced back to roughly 3000 BCE, in ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq). Of the tens of thousands of clay tablets the Mesopotamians left behind, most are, well, ledgers: records of taxes, payments, private wealth, worker pay.” (p.18)

    If we have used ledgers for millennia, what makes this ‘ledger’ particularly unique?

    In 2008, a decade ago, this planet experienced one of the worst moments of financial reckoning. While some may believe this affected only Wall Street, the repercussions were felt beyond ‘the markets.” It left financial ruin and economic detritus that hurt many – from mid-America to Iceland to Asia. ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ – but you know this creation story about bitcoin.

    Unique as this ‘cryptocurrency’ is, the decentralized structure and the framework, the incentive system that guides consensus, the distributed nature of the blockchain ledger, cryptography, and immutability set it apart from other forms of ‘currency.’

    “The result is something remarkable: a record-keeping method that brings us to a commonly accepted version of the truth that’s more reliable than any truth we’ve ever seen. We’re calling the blockchain a Truth Machine, and its applications go far beyond just money.” (p. 20)

    Bitcoin, ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies have littered the pages and screens of news media since bitcoin’s public appearance in 2009. It is a running tale of discovery, dark web, non-dark web, hype – from missteps to ICO frenzy in 2017.

    Chapters One through Three are a review of some of the history, the technical aspects of bitcoin and blockchain, and the politics around them. Casey and Vigna make certain that a generic definition of blockchain is provided:

    “…a distributed, append-only ledger of provably signed, sequentially-linked, and cryptographically secured transactions that’s replicated across a network of computer nodes, with ongoing updates determined by a software-driven consensus.” (p. 64)

    Referring to blockchain as ‘a database’ is not only inaccurate, but it diminishes the elegance and complexity of blockchain.

    Having clearly defined and illustrated the construct of a blockchain, the stage is set for “The Token Economy” (Chapter Four), bringing the reader to 2017. “The Token Economy” perhaps could have been titled “Here, there be Dragons”.

    While regulators had been quibbling since 2015 whether bitcoin was a commodity or currency, whether it should be banned or heavily regulated, whether it would ever come out from under the deep of the dark web, a new spin-off, unsecured, unregulated method of raising capital for ‘projects’ was born: the ICO – Initial Coin Offering. 2016 to the end of 2017 was the year of the ICO mania.

    We arrive at the “Fourth Industrial Revolution”, (Chapter Five) cyber-physical systems, Internet of Things, the Internet of Systems. Here Blockchain meets the energy grid -- efforts to a create decentralized microgrids, nanogrids – a better way of managing energy consumption. Provenance, supply chains, tracking products, providing assurance of origin – ideas for a global economy at scale.

    Blockchain without a cryptocurrency – a permissioned blockchain, that would run and operate on a system of known nodes, on an ecosystem designed for the exchange of data (with constraints), is suitable for a company with multiple offices, or a group of companies, or government departments. All the security requirements and caveats would be built into the system, saving taxpayer dollars, preserving privacy and confidentiality, and encouraging lean, transparent, auditable and effective governance.

    Chapters Seven through Ten are the heartbeat of blockchain – from applications that enable billions of humans without access to rights, property, legal standing, being able to prove “who am I, what I do, and what I own” – a given in the developed world, an aspiration in the developing world – this is “Blockchain for Good.” For the instruments/proofs of one’s identity we take for granted - a birth certificate, a passport, a driver’s license - either do not exist or are lost in conflict zones. Without formal documentation, millions of human beings risk being exploited, especially children.

    Casey and Vigna put forward the case directly: “Regardless of what tools are used to get there, we think society must move toward a more decentralized, digital, and ultimately self-sovereign model of identity.” (p. 204)

    In this reviewer’s view, without Identity (whether for humans or things), Blockchain may remain on the periphery as a shiny object. Identity or identification is the quintessential piece that will make Blockchain perhaps the most important compound technology to date. The elements of Blockchain were not imagined in 2008 by Satoshi Nakamoto. They existed in concepts, papers, theories – computation and the Internet provided the fertile soil.

    One would have expected that Blockchain, by now, would have at least garnered greater understanding and acceptance. It is difficult to understand and to deploy without thinking about the problem, imagining the solution, and consciously designing the approach.

    Blockchain is not COTS (commercial-off-the-shelf). Not every problem needs a blockchain solution. Blockchain applied to simple problems is like driving a very fast car in a traffic jam.

    Michael Casey and Paul Vigna put it rather pointedly:

    “We seem to be stuck with bankers who don’t really understand technology, technologists who don’t understand economics, and politicians who understand only politics.” (p. 245)

    In that definition is a melange of “make me rich quick”. That is not the purpose of THIS technology.

    In Chapter One, “The God Protocol” the genesis of the Truth Machine is revealed:

    “The ledger came to be viewed as a kind of moral compass, whose use conferred moral rectitude on all involved with it.” (p.28)

    Society needs to calibrate its moral compass.

    We have a method.

    __________________________________________________

    “The Truth Machine: The Blockchain and the Future of Everything” – Michael J. Casey and Paul Vigna. St. Martin’s Press, New York. (2018)

    (This review first appeared on LinkedIn 3 March 2018)