A world built on passwords and promises is breaking down. What replaces it is not another platform, but a different idea of trust: rules you can verify, freedoms you can keep, responsibilities you cannot outsource. This book is a clear, unsentimental guide to the moral stakes of crypto philosophy and decentralisation ethics—for readers who care less about price charts and more about power, privacy, and the shape of civic life. What is it about? A rigorous tour of trustless systems explained, from keys and wallets to DAOs and identity, showing where code outperforms institutions—and where it cannot. Why is it important? Because the fight between privacy and power will decide whether autonomy scales or collapses into new gatekeepers. Who is it for? Builders, policy thinkers, designers, and curious citizens who want governance in crypto without the hype. What will you gain? - A mental model for digital sovereignty that balances exit rights with accountability - A sober history of cypherpunk origins and how they still shape today’s design choices - Practical tests for legitimacy, from token incentives to the ethics of smart contracts - Language to argue the philosophy of blockchain in public without caricature If you want to know why decentralisation matters—and when it doesn’t—this is your map. It will not flatter your priors. It will sharpen them.once needed a mint; now it needs a protocol. In a world of programmable money and decentralised currency, the real question is not which token will moon—but who will write the rules that touch every payment, wage, and tax you make.
Crypto for Thinkers
SKU: 9789374599051
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- Sameer Khalid writes about power, trust, and technology with the calm focus of a systems thinker. Raised between bureaucracies and bazaars, he learned early how institutions both enable and constrain ordinary lives—a sensibility that animates his work on decentralisation. His essays read code as political text and incentives as moral choices, drawing lightly on sources from Ibn Khaldun to Elinor Ostrom to make today’s design debates intelligible. He champions privacy as civic infrastructure and autonomy as a discipline, not a slogan. When he is not mapping governance patterns, he mentors builders on writing constitutions that people can actually live with.


















