‘Crypto Is an Important Part of Financial Freedom,’ Says Amaury Sechet‘Crypto Is an Important Part of Financial Freedom,’ Says Amaury Sechet‘Crypto Is an Important Part of Financial Freedom,’ Says Amaury Sechet
There are people in the blockchain and cryptocurrency industry who are zealous with their ideas and pursue them relentlessly throughout their lives despite popular trends or the prevailing opinion. One such person is Amaury Sechet.
They do not have millions of subscribers on social networks, like Elon Musk, and popularity sometimes simply passes them by (temporarily). However, they still have a greater influence on the development of the cryptocurrency industry than all the prominent influencers combined.
Amaury Sechet, is a Bitcoin pioneer and blockchain developer. He is the man who determined the fate of bitcoin way back in 2017.
Nowadays, Sechet is building the eCash project, which is a development of Bitcoin ABC. Sechet is just as dedicated to his ideas as he led a development team in dividing bitcoin and creating the novel BCH cryptocurrency.
The practical experience and knowledge he gained during that process are now helping the eCash team lay the foundations for a new generation of cryptocurrency payments.
Sechet dislikes publicity, and it took a while and some effort to arrange a call with him. This reclusive ex-Facebook engineer who previously helped build the Bitcoin Cash core is only just starting to come out of his shell since he left Bitcoin Cash last year.
Over the past year, he has been writing code virtually non-stop and hasn’t even had time to attend any of the blockchain conferences he is regularly invited to.
Bitcoin and countries
Julia Magas: El Salvador became the first country in the world to legalize bitcoin on par with the national currency – the U.S. dollar. Is this an important development?
Amaury Sechet: It shows how far crypto has come from earlier bull runs in 2013 and even 2017. However, it’s not a major development. The big changes in crypto happen when technology moves by big enough leaps to make regulatory changes irrelevant. What is important this time around is how much people have been paying attention. But this isn’t because of a new law in El Salvador — this is because more people have a baseline understanding of cryptocurrency.
JM: Why aren’t totalitarian and authoritarian regimes rushing to adopt bitcoin?
AS: Totalitarian and authoritarian regimes are not rushing to adopt bitcoin for the same reason that no other governments are rushing to adopt bitcoin. Cryptocurrency brings transparency and accountability to areas that most legacy power structures would prefer to obscure. The potential shifts in power and influence are not fully understood, so it’s understandable that governments would take their time.
Cryptocurrency and financial freedom
JM: Cryptocurrencies are the embodiment of financial freedom, you said. At the same time, is this the goal of your new project?
AS: Cryptocurrency is an important part of financial freedom. Especially today, where surveillance is on the rise and privacy is harder to come by, cryptocurrency will become a necessary part of financial freedom.
However, cryptocurrency is not the whole picture. You also need the tools and ecosystems that can be built on a cryptocurrency, for example, what you see today with DeFi on Ethereum. On top of that, you need to build a culture that understands and wants financial freedom.
If you can’t do all of these things, then your cryptocurrency will fail. We’ve seen this happen to a lot of cryptocurrencies that seemed big in 2017 but are no longer so impressive. So yes, enabling users to have full financial freedom is the goal of eCash. Cryptocurrencies that do not push forward everything needed for financial freedom will fail. This is why eCash has been designed with careful consideration for the big picture.
JM: Do you think anonymity is what cryptocurrency users need most of all, or is this only one important aspect?
AS: Anonymity is an important part of financial freedom, but I don’t think it’s what cryptocurrency users need most of all. A fixed and auditable supply, for example, is more important than anonymity.
Still, it’s important that anonymity is possible. Users who want to remain anonymous need the appropriate tools. That’s why eCash already supports tools like CashFusion, which can yield anonymity comparable to existing privacy coins. We plan to develop more privacy tools in the future.
The fourth financial revolution
JM: What role do cryptocurrencies play in the fourth financial revolution that is happening right now? Can we say that one of the fronts of this revolution is the struggle between the banking system and cryptocurrencies?
AS: I think cryptocurrency is often framed in this kind of simplistic “old vs. new” competition. That’s a limited way of looking at it.
If cryptocurrency is successful, it will not be because cryptocurrencies created better banks. Cryptocurrency will succeed by building systems that are ten times better than banks. They aren’t fighting over the same thing. For example, banks are not in the business of enabling financial freedom. Debt is the exact opposite of this.
So, you could say that there is a kind of struggle between the banking system and cryptocurrency. But the idea that this struggle is competitive is mostly a distraction. Cryptocurrency is a financial revolution. Banks are banks.
Thoughts on cryptocurrency ideals
After the interview, I thought about what Amaury had said, my impression of him, and what remained outside the scope of this article.
I started wondering how many people in the blockchain and cryptocurrency world are actually moving the industry down the path of Satoshi’s vision, not for the sake of hype, wealth, and money.
Do fame and fortune get in the way of doing it right? Do cryptocurrencies need legalization and regulation? Should bitcoin be a copy of the dollar, and do we all really need the ability to buy a cup of coffee using cryptocurrencies, or should we expect something more of them?