People do not coordinate only through broad legal rules and prices. Hayek emphasized abstract rules that allow people to coordinate like property, contract, trade, and competition. But Lachmann also emphasized the practical secondary institutions people orient their plans around, like banks, standardized contracts, product categories, and so on.
In software, an abstraction boundary is an interface that hides complexity hiding beneath. In this 2005 paper (https://t.co/FPxYCFUSPT), Miller and Tulloh explain that you can apply this concept to markets too. Consider a post office: there's an abstract boundary that separates why the customer wants to mail something (which the postman doesn't need to know); what the shared transaction is (all the recognizable steps and commitments involved in sending mail); and how the postal system actually delivers it (complex logistics network hidden from the customer).
The middle part is what lets the user benefit from the postal system’s expertise without having to learn postal logistics. The boundary defines the shared 'what' but also separates the customer’s 'why' from the provider’s 'how'. Not only that, but reusability means the same institution can be used to satisfy many purposes (birthday invites, subpoenas etc) and polymorphism means different providers can satisfy the same need and compete (UPS, FedEx etc).
An important question in institutional theory is how societies achieve both stability and adaptation; the paper authors say that the solution is stable interfaces allow changing internals. I find this very intuitive: when companies don't evolve/change from the inside much, you get ossification and insufficient adaptation. When laws change too much and institutions are unstable, uncertainty affects market confidence.
The people who are good at redrawing abstraction boundaries are entrepreneurs, who notice when existing categories are wrong and will invent new ones to remedy faults or address demand. What has always saddened me is how poorly rewarded and incentivized political entrepreneurship is. Part of the reason why is that this is hard: market abstraction boundaries are often disciplined by exit, entry, profit/loss, customer choice, and provider competition - but these feedback loops are much weaker in the public sector.
I hope we'll see a lot more of this in the coming decade. In fact this is something that AI will hugely facilitate, since it can lower the cost of articulating and prototyping new abstraction boundaries. We've already seen minor examples through e.g. citizens creating websites/services that compete with government ones. Though usually this is to make state services more legible rather than changing the boundaries in the first place.
I think if people want the future to go well, bolstering state capacity and enabling more innovation on the governance/democracy side of things will be critical. People don't really like this because it's a slow process, but I think they're wrong (and cheems), and playing the 'urgency of AGI' card to bypass this through a de facto state of emergency will cause lasting harms, partly by weakening institutional learning, public trust, and future coordination capacity.
Inter Protocol is live on @agoric 🚀
You can now mint $IST using the Parity Stability Module (PSM). Bridged $USDC or $USDT accepted.
Full details + video tutorial 👇
https://t.co/sD9oxntBaz
@kate_sills For an interesting perspectives on how the courts misinterpreted authorized access of computers, I would recommend Orin Kerr's paper https://t.co/gq4ezykJQW
@kate_sills Unfortunately, I don't know a good answer to your specific question. However, the best write-up on how it could be different is https://t.co/BLemeO7Fx0
In Lisbon on Nov 7? Drop by our Fast Finality event @ 6pm local with @sommfinance and @axelarcore for drinks, a live DJ, and good convo 🥳
Link: https://t.co/1sNoZeA1ZM
Pw: SAA2021
A CBDC is a perversion of cryptocurrency, or at least the founding principles and protocols of it—a cryptofascist currency, expressly designed to deny you the basic ownership of your money by installing the State at the center of every transaction. https://t.co/720SYvqzZM
.@JAXenter's diversity series aims to highlight inspirational women in tech. This week they sat down with our own @kate_sills for a Q&A about her work as lead software engineer on Zoe, Agoric's smart contract framework.
👇👇👇
https://t.co/P51CkpXa9g
Announcing the @keplrwallet + @agoric integration!
- Supports BLD at Mainnet Phase 0
- Includes staking & governance
- Supports RUN at Mainnet Phase 1
- Cross-chain transfers once enabled
- Register an Agoric address for Mainnet rollout 👇
https://t.co/3OG8ZC8H6v
🎧 @deantribble will be live on @zempbran’s podcast today at 4pm PST / 7pm EST! He'll be covering @agoric's JavaScript smart contract platform, exponential composability, and his views on the #DeFi ecosystem.
https://t.co/rpULboq7Zq
Register for the @Cosmos#GravityDex trading competition before April 30th! Test deposits, withdrawals, and swaps between 11 tokens including RUN, our up-and-coming stable local currency.
Last month we launched our incentivized testnet. Today we share the story of 150 #validators grinding through Phase 1 to deploy their nodes, test our network, and win prizes for their deployment and monitoring tools ⚒️
Developers looking to launch a cross chain service or dapp should check out our #beta https://t.co/1dh2rN86me
Today you can build your #DeFi dapp using pre-written smart contracts. These components in the @Agoric framework enable developers to rapidly build their projects.
Get ready for this month's Pillar Series livestream🔥 Tomorrow we'll cover RUN (Agoric's stable local currency) and some of its initial use cases in the Agoric beta and the @Cosmos Gravity DEX trading competition. Stay tuned!
https://t.co/iS5huv2iC9