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"map_content": "100% - Peer-to-Peer Was Fulfilled, So What Happened Next?\r\nI want to start by saying something you might not expect from me.\r\nThe white paper was truly Peer-to-peer electronic cash that worked. Satoshi delivered exactly what he wrote. You can send a coin from your hand to mine, person to person, no bank in the middle, and it arrives. That part was never broken. It was fulfilled. I am not here to argue against the white paper. I believe in it.\r\nSo if it worked, what happened next? Let me tell it as a story. It is a simple story, a crude one, and you could add a hundred details to it, but you will get the gist, and the gist is the point.\r\nOnce there was a shop, and the shop was called Bitcoin. And the man who ran it sold rice. Good rice, plain and honest, person to person. People came, and they bought rice, and it worked. Word got round. This is a good idea, people said.\r\nNow the founder, the man who opened it, decided to step back. And he left the keys with someone he trusted to mind the shop for him. But the man minding the shop let a Mafia gang come in. And that Mafia gang took the place over, and they changed how it ran. No more big bags of rice. From now on, one small bag per customer, and that is your lot. That was the block size, kept small. The founder had handed over the keys, and by the time it was done, the shop he built was no longer being run his way.\r\nAround this time, another fellow came to those Mafia bosses with an idea. His name was Ethereum. He said, let us work together, let us do more than just the one small bag. And they said no. We are keeping it exactly as it is. So Ethereum, turned away, went and opened his own shop next door. And here is the thing to his credit. He never claimed to sell rice. He was honest from the first day. I am not doing peer-to-peer cash, he said. I am selling something different. Smart contracts (call it fish). And people came for his fish, and his shop boomed. He never pretended to be the rice shop. Fair play to him.\r\nAnd other shops opened too. Litecoin. Namecoin. Peercoin. Later, Dogecoin, and many more. Not all of them lasted, but the street kept filling with new doors.\r\nMeanwhile the founder, pushed to the side of his own creation, still held the blueprint. The same idea that built Bitcoin in the first place was still his. So he opened a new shop, called it BSV, and thought to himself, right. I will use that same idea, and I will build a shop that can serve more customers, faster, than anyone alive. A million customers a second (transactions per second, TPS). And he built it. Nobody on the whole street could match it. Give him that, plainly. The technology is genuinely the best in the world at what it does.\r\nBut here is the heartbreak. The million a second did not win the war.\r\nIt did not bring the rice customers back. Because by now the customers had long settled into the newer shops, Solana, Tron, Zcash and the rest, and made those their regular stop. A faster way to serve people was never going to call them home once they had already found their door elsewhere. He could serve a million a second, in a street where the crowds had already gone.\r\nAnd all the while, away in the wings, there was a young man. He had grown up with all of this, watched the whole story unfold, and he decided to build something of his own. Not just a rice shop, and not just one thing. A whole connected world. A Master Universe, you might call it, where if you carry a BSV wallet, anywhere, for anything, you belong to it. It is an interesting idea, and the young man has put real years and real devotion into it. I will not pass judgment on it here, because it deserves a proper look on its own. So let us investigate the Master Universe next time, fairly, and see what it is offering.\r\nBut here is what the story has already taught me, after two weeks of looking honestly.\r\nThe peer-to-peer worked. The white paper was true. None of that was ever the problem.\r\nThe problem was the war was never fought where wars are actually won. You do not win by serving customers fastest, or by building the grandest connected world. That is air power. It looks mighty and it changes nothing on its own. You win with boots on the ground. People going out, street by street, shop by shop, getting real human beings to take the thing and use it.\r\nThat is the campaign that was never run. Not because the people were lazy, but because all the effort went into the speed and the spectacle, and almost none of it went to the muddy, unglamorous, door-to-door work that actually wins ground.\r\nThe rice was always good. The shop just stopped sending anyone out to sell it.\r\nBuild thinkers, not followers.\r\nLet us ponder this full well.",
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