{"id":4479,"date":"2020-03-05T10:38:12","date_gmt":"2020-03-05T15:38:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/?p=4479"},"modified":"2020-04-09T10:53:34","modified_gmt":"2020-04-09T14:53:34","slug":"toxic-twitter-tribalism-crypto-toxygen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cointelegraph.com\/magazine\/2020\/03\/05\/toxic-twitter-tribalism-crypto-toxygen","title":{"rendered":"Toxic Twitter Tribalism: The Fuel Powering the Crypto Rocket?"},"content":{"rendered":"
There is nothing romantic about suicide. Yet, ironically, Goethe\u2019s tragic tale <\/span>The Sorrows of Young Werther, <\/span><\/i>in which the protagonist Werther commits suicide, is widely regarded as the spiritual epitome of the <\/span>Sturm und Drang \u2014 <\/span><\/i>the movement that gave rise to<\/span> Romanticism.<\/span><\/p>\n Now, in case you\u2019re wondering \u2014 no, cryptocurrency has nothing to do with Romantic literature. This story is about the strange events that unfurled in the years following <\/span>Werther<\/span><\/i>, and the effects of the forces behind those events on the blockchain industry today.<\/span><\/p>\n Soon after Goethe\u2019s seminal work was published in 1774, something very obscure happened. Young men from Central Europe, living mainly in Germany, Denmark and Italy, became obsessed with the novel and started mimicking the main character. First, youngsters started imitating how Werther dressed: dark boots, yellow trousers, a matching waistcoat and a blue jacket. After that, things escalated. An entire cult grew around the novel; boys started mimicking how Werther spoke and acted toward girls, artists began selling illustrated Werther-themed cups, plates and woodcuts, and someone even designed an \u201cEau de Werther\u201d perfume in an attempt to cash in on the fever.<\/span><\/p>\n This, unfortunately, wasn\u2019t the end of the craze and things soon took a morbid turn. A wave of copycat suicides followed; the victims were mainly young boys wearing the same eerie uniform, committing the act in the same fashion, using the same kind of pistol.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The novel was rapidly banned.<\/span><\/p>\n Two centuries later, in 1974, sociology professor David P. Phillips, who was the first to connect the dots and coin the term the \u201cWerther effect,\u201d <\/span>published<\/span> a scientific paper on the influence of suggestion on suicide. The study showed evidence that suicide rates were increasing immediately after a suicide story was publicized in the media, and that the more publicity the story attracted, the more significant the increase in suicides thereafter.<\/span><\/p>\n The Werther effect epitomizes the core thesis behind the <\/span>social contagion theory<\/span><\/a>. Sociocultural phenomena like affect, attitudes, beliefs and behavior spread through populations as if they were infectious. The social contagion theory views cultural traits as analogous to mind <\/span>viruses<\/span><\/a> or thought contagions, reproduced from one mind to another through mimicry or communication.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Does this ring a bell?<\/span><\/p>\n In his 1989 book, <\/span>The Selfish Gene<\/span><\/i>, evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins coined the term \u201cmeme,\u201d defining it as \u201ca unit of cultural transmission, or a unit of imitation and replication<\/span>.\u201d <\/span><\/i>The core idea behind memetics is that memes are discrete units of culture that spread by replication and, like genes, differ in their degree of fitness or ability to adapt to the sociocultural environment in which they propagate. In different terms, memetics is grounded in the Jungian idea that<\/span> people don\u2019t have ideas, but rather that ideas have people.<\/span><\/p>\n The meme in the post-Selfish Gene era is reminiscent of the crypto industry at the peak of the initial coin offering craze that ran from late 2017 to early 2018. Just as the myriad crypto influencers and celebrities back then made all sorts of ambitious claims about the potential of blockchains and shilled all kinds of dubious tokens, the<\/span> \u201cscience of memetics\u201d \u2014 as it came to be known \u2014 made the same type of overhyped claims on behalf of memes and promised to offer a new, unifying theory of culture, one that transcended the traditional anthropocentric conceptions of culture, personal agency and free will.<\/span><\/p>\n The overblown claims of pan-memetics, extreme reductionism and lack of empirical support for the core thesis are just a few of the many reasons why meme theory hasn\u2019t caught on in the academic world. Regardless of this, however, the theory is developed enough to be at least partly operationalized by adopting the <\/span>meme\u2019s eye view<\/span><\/a> \u2014 an imperfect but handy tool for anyone investigating culture.<\/span><\/p>\n The crypto community is deeply factionalized and, as a result, almost unbearably toxic. Much of what you see on Twitter, Reddit or Telegram is no-holds-barred tribal warfare.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The Ethereum tribe is fighting the EOS, Tron and Tezos tribes; the Bitcoin tribe is fighting the Bitcoin Cash and SV tribes; the XRP army is threatening the life and family of anyone daring to say anything negative about Ripple; maximalists are parroting <\/span>HODL <\/span><\/i>and calling every other project a \u201cshitcoin\u201d \u2014 it\u2019s chaos all over.<\/span><\/p>\n What\u2019s more, most beefs are often not even produced by the anonymous masses or the company-sponsored shills and astroturfing bots, but by the talking heads: the journalists, high-profile developers, lawyers and entrepreneurs.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Mike Dudas of The Block and podcast host Peter McCormack have both built their businesses on the back of engagement created by picking endless fights on Twitter. Vlad Zamfir, with his non-meta quasi-trolling \u201clegal thought leadership,\u201d has single-handedly managed to increase the relative risks of stroke and seizure by a statistically significant margin in the small subset of legal professionals in crypto. Changpeng Zhao, CEO of Binance, has threatened journalists with lawsuits, and Justin Sun of Tron has publicly vowed to sponsor cyber-harassment campaigns. To top it all off, there\u2019s Udi Wertheimer, the legendary crypto-developer-turned-Twitter-journalist riling up the entire Ethereum and DeFi community all by himself.<\/span><\/p>\n For these exact reasons, many prominent people in crypto have contemplated rage-quitting the industry and going back to their old, pre-crypto lives.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The notion of quitting crypto and <\/span>\u201c<\/span><\/i>life at the cutting edge of technology<\/span>\u201d<\/span><\/i> in order to regress to living as a caveman \u2014 as a doctor, a professional poker player or a measly <\/span>helicopter assembly line<\/span><\/a> designer \u2014 is as absurd and ridiculous as the idea that tribalism is avoidable and somehow detrimental to the crypto industry.<\/span><\/p>\n The currently prevailing narrative regarding tribalism within the community is that we could make so much more progress if we could all just get along<\/span>.<\/span><\/i> However, the whole point of Hayek\u2019s denationalization of money<\/span> \u2014 perhaps <\/span>the <\/span><\/i>fundamental idea behind crypto \u2014 was to detach cash from the state and, consequently, arrive at <\/span>better money<\/span><\/i> by having many private and decentralized currencies duke it out on the free market.<\/span><\/p>\n Does nobody see the irony?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Not getting along is precisely what got us from an obscure forum <\/span>post<\/span><\/a> to a $250 billion market cap in just over 10 years. Aside from being an essential part of the human condition, arguing over ideas \u2014 even if just trolling or trash-talking the other camp \u2014 is a driving force behind all technological progress. War is terrible in many ways, but expedited technological advancement isn\u2019t one of them. Thinking that fighting over ideas is a waste of energy is the same as thinking that proof-of-work is a waste of electricity \u2014 it\u2019s factually correct in some sense, but it\u2019s missing the entire point.<\/span><\/p>\n During the Cold War, tribalism was, among other things, what got humans to the moon. And things aren\u2019t much different today \u2014 tribalism isn\u2019t what\u2019s stopping crypto from going to the moon<\/span>, <\/span><\/i>it\u2019s the toxygen fueling the rocket. Factionalization allows us to test many different ideas and visions in parallel. It might be toxic to the hosts, but invigorating to the ideas.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The anthropocentric approach sees the culture war primarily as a war between individuals. It needlessly makes things personal and takes a perfectly natural evolutionary process \u2014 the clustering of human behavior in time and space \u2014 and misinterprets it as primitive and uncivilized.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Adopting the meme stance is a much better heuristic. By observing tribalism through the meme\u2019s eye view, we see the crypto space for what it is \u2014 a battleground of ideas. Largely unrefined, but potentially hugely disruptive ideas. In this regard, tribalism is not a bug, but a feature. Not only is it unavoidable, but also healthy for the industry in the long run.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nThe Werther effect<\/span><\/h3>\n
Crypto tribalism through the meme\u2019s eye view<\/span><\/h3>\n
The bullish case for tribalism<\/span><\/h3>\n