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Software has eaten the world. Now, it's Bitcoin's turn.

Bane, the Batman villain, was famously born in the darkness. Molded by it.
Bitcoinâs deepest darkness was, arguably, the year 2014.
Ross Ulbricht had just been nabbed and was awaiting trial. Rolling related FBI and DEA raids led to numerous high profile bitcoin seizures, including the January arrest of Charlie Shrem for allegedly assisting in the laundering of coins linked to Ulbrichtâs Silk Road.
Then a meteor struck: Mt. Gox went belly up in February. Goxâs market share had been shrinking, from over 70% in late 2013 to about a third when it suspended withdrawals, but the Bitcoin world was still rocked.
Marc Andreessen wasnât worried.

Exactly 11 years ago, the Washington Post ran a prescient interview with Andreessen. His venture fund Andreessen Horowitz had led Coinbaseâs $25 million funding round about six months earlier, which at the time was the largest fundraise in Bitcoin history to date.
âIn 20 years, weâll talk about Bitcoin like we talk about the internet today,â Andreeseen said. It might be an old adage now but the sentiment was a big deal in 2014. After all, it had come from one of the original architects of the â90s internet boom. Who else would know better?
Bitcoinâs perception in the media was weighing heavily on its prices. BTC/USD had retraced by 60% from its November 2013 bull run peak, from over $1,100 to around $440 as the Andreessen piece was published.
The price of bitcoin would go on to fall by another 50% over the next seven months.
Granted, there was more going on in the world of tech outside of Bitcoin. The world was still processing Edward Snowdenâs revelations about the NSAâs wide-reaching internet surveillance, which all told took more than a year to fully sink in.
Weâre now more than halfway to Andreessenâs predicted future
Trust in US tech had been âseriously damaged,â Andreessen said, which alongside the resulting âbalkanization of the internet,â had led to standstill in public policy over how internet technologies should evolve.
âGovernments are very worried about what citizens are going to be able to do with these new technologies,â Andreessen said. âCitizens are very worried about what governments are going to do, and everybody's worried about what businesses are going to do. It's this three-way dynamic that's playing out.â
âAnd so for any of these individual issues, it's not just âWhat is one leg of this triangle going to be doing?â It's, âWhat are all three of them going to be doing, and how will the tension resolve itself?ââ
The answer was Bitcoin.
âI have a lot of friends who are programmers. The programmers have always gone like, âThose [Bitcoin] guys are crazy.ââ
âAnd then, almost 100% of the time, they sit down, read the paper, read the code â it takes them a couple weeks â and they come out the other side. And they're like: âOh my god, this is it. This is the big breakthrough. This is the thing we've been waiting for. He solved all the problems. Whoever he is should get the Nobel prize â he's a genius. This is the thing! This is the distributed trust network that the internet always needed and never had.ââ
Some of the interview borders on blockchainism, even if Andreessen was suggesting that some eventual use cases would be underpinned by data written to the Bitcoin ledger: âDigital stocks. Digital equities. Digital fundraising for companies. Digital bonds. Digital contracts, digital keys, digital title, who owns what â digital title to your house, to your carâŠdigital voting, digital contracts, digital signatures. You've got unique pieces of digital content.â
âAnd, by the way, if we had had this technology 20 years ago, we would've built it into the browser,â he said, referring to Netscape.
Bitcoin may or may not be an appropriate venue for all that activity. Still, Andreessen got something very right more than a decade ago, when journalist Brian Fung asked: âIs this, like, a billions-of-dollars kind of industry?â
âYeah,â Andreessen replied.
âTrillionsâŠ?â
âYeah!â he said. Before laughing like Mr. Burns. Almost six years later exactly, in April 2021, Bitcoin achieved a $1 trillion market cap for the first time.
Now, we just need to wait another nine years to confirm that Andreessen was right about the rest. See you then!
â David

BTC/USD was only $942 shy of all-time high this morning â a difference of less than 1%.
Supply Shock is dropping an epic longform podcast interview with Messari founder Ryan Selkis later today. Subscribe to be the first to know.
Vivek Ramaswamyâs Strive Asset Management has flagged intent to buy discounted, distressed Mt. Gox claims totaling 75,000 BTC ($8 billion).