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A Cryptocurrency Millionaire Wants to Build a Utopia in Nevada (nytimes.com)

chiefcrash shares a report from The New York Times about a man who wants to build a community based on the blockchain technology introduced by Bitcoin: An enormous plot of land in the Nevada desert -- bigger than nearby Reno -- has been the subject of local intrigue since a company with no history, Blockchains L.L.C., bought it for $170 million in cash this year. The man who owns the company, a lawyer and cryptocurrency millionaire named Jeffrey Berns, put on a helmet and climbed into a Polaris off-road vehicle last week to give a tour of the sprawling property and dispel a bit of the mystery. He imagines a sort of experimental community spread over about a hundred square miles, where houses, schools, commercial districts and production studios will be built. The centerpiece of this giant project will be the blockchain, a new kind of database that was introduced by Bitcoin.

So far, he said, he has spent $300 million on the land, offices, planning and a staff of 70 people. And buying 67,000 largely undeveloped acres is a bit of old-fashioned, real estate risk-taking. Still, Mr. Berns said his ambition was not to be a real estate magnate or even to get rich -- or richer. He is promising to give away all decision-making power for the project and 90 percent of any dividends it generates to a corporate structure that will be held by residents, employees and future investors. That structure, which he calls a "distributed collaborative entity," is supposed to operate on a blockchain where everyone's ownership rights and voting powers will be recorded in a digital wallet.
"In a keynote spectacle at Devcon4 in Prague, Berns announced some of their plans for the future, as well as some of their recent activities, such as buying two nuclear bomb shelters, a mountain fortress in Switzerland, and a bank," adds Slashdot reader chiefcrash.

10 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting wonder by oldgraybeard · · Score: 3, Interesting

    where he is going to get the water from. With 67,000 acres of desert seems l;ike there is plenty of room. But with out water in large volumes I am not sure how this gets done.

    Just my 2 cents ;)

    1. Re:Interesting wonder by tap · · Score: 5, Funny

      It'll come from blockchain.

      You see, by recording things in blockchain, the least efficient database ever conceived of, anything becomes possible.

    2. Re:Interesting wonder by fermion · · Score: 2
      I assume he will expect the rest of us to pay taxes to cover his infrastructure, just like the people in the suburbs expect everyone to pay for the highways to get them home then complain about the city people mooching off everyone else.

      As much as people in the west like to take about personal responsibility and freedom, the only reason that there is water is because the government exercises strict control over water use.

      Much of the water storage in the area appears to be running on dry. I assume that this community would have to build more water storage, and presumably have us pay for it, but where would the water come from?

      Cryptocurrency is built off cheap subsidized electricity, and with all the sun and space electricity is not going to be hard to come by the residents of the area. And Nevada is desperate for anyone who wants to provide jobs, and does not care the damage it does. But water is harder to get than electricity, and infrastructure that its build for a few thousand people does not scale well for tens of thousands. While the state probably does not care if the cities have enough water, the people in the cities probably do.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  2. Jonestown by Archfeld · · Score: 2

    Jonestown in Nevada? The setting is different but the Kool-Aid is the same.

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    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  3. GLWT! by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

    Ever heard of California City, California? That's the same idea, but in California. Lots are quite affordable, and also entirely plentiful. And you don't even have to live in Nevada. Guess what? Nobody wants to live in the desert unless there's some kind of natural feature there which makes it make sense.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    1. Re:GLWT! by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 2

      A while ago I saw a documentary about how people with allergies used to go to Phoenix (or some city like that) because because there were no plants growing there that they were allergic to. But over the years people were missing the trees and other plants from where they came and started planting them. One person would put in the plants that they wouldn't be allergic to but not thing about other people. It had gotten to the point where people are suffering from their allergies again.

  4. Give me man some credit... by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...even if you disagree with him. He is putting his money where his mouth is and trying something new.

    Yes he is a very wealthy man who can afford to squander a big chunk of his resources. There are very many people who could well afford to expend a small portion of their resources and try nothing.

    There are easily ten of thousands of "serious" socialists who spin yarns about their beautiful ideas, ideas that a couple hundred of them could try to put into practice by pooling their resources and building a new kind of community on the embers of some rural town whose heyday is long past. But they do not try.

    This man is trying.

    1. Re:Give me man some credit... by Gavagai80 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Buying tons of desert with no water access, two nuclear bomb shelters and a mountain fortress is just being bat-shit crazy. But sure, I give him credit for being more interesting about it than a millionaire who converts his wealth to pennies and buries it under hundreds of mattresses.

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  5. Oblig. Bob the Angry Flower by Quinn_Inuit · · Score: 4, Insightful
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    Stop learning! Only you can prevent esoterrorism.
  6. Blockchain more likely laundering.drug.money.chain by najajomo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Blockchain more likely laundering.drug.money.chain