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Copying is rampant in crypto projects.
Every week, I get a message from someone building âDecentraland for ARâ or âDecentraland for Chinaâ or, my favorite, âDecentraland with a different name.â
Consider crypto games. An entire category of game is the Cryptocelebrities smart contract with a renamed variable.
One of the most blatant examples of copying comes from a project called TRON. The body of its white paper was copied from IPFS and Filecoin.
Juan Benet, founder of Filecoin, posted this damning analysis, leading to widespread ridicule from the community.
The result? TRON is a top ten coin.
In this upside-down world, we have project leads asking other projects to take their code. Recently, Vitalik commented on a proposal for the EOS consensus model, worried that their proposal was unsafe.
âThis does not seem to actually be safe.â
He goes on to outline a case where two conflicting blocks get finalized, and ends with the following suggestion:
âIf you want an intuitive and good way of doing this, I recommend just using the algorithm in our Casper FFG paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.09437â
Vitalik asks Larimer to âcopyâ the algorithm developed by the Ethereum foundation.
In an environment where projects are open source, copying is, like blockchains, unstoppable. Some think this means crypto projects have no defenses against competitors, and that the projects that win will have the best go-to-market strategies.
What would Warren Buffet say?
âIn business, I look for economic castles protected by unbreakable âmoatsâââââWarren Buffett
Projects should build moats: sustainable competitive advantages that defend against competitors.
Sources of economic moats and do crypto projects have any?
There are five sources of economic moats:
- Cost advantage (e.g. economies of scale): when a company uses its scale or unique assets to undercut competitors on cost.
- Intangible assets (e.g. patents, brands, trade secrets): when a company holds intangible assets like patents or brands that lead to monopolies or pricing power in the market.
- Efficient scale: when the market of limited size is best served by one or a small handful of companies (e.g. utilities, airports) and a competitor is discouraged from entering because the returns in the market would fall below the cost of capital.
- Switching costs: when a customer would have to incur an expense or inconvenience in order to switch from one supplier to another.
- Network effects: when the value of the network increases for both new and existing users as more people join.
Do crypto projects have any of these?
Defending with cost advantage
Letâs say weâre the largest smart contract protocol, Ethereum. In a business with cost advantage, we would use our superior scale to undercut competitors. Can we do that?
Absolutely not. We will toil and toil to come up with innovations like Casper FFG only to have our fearless leader offer it to EOS.
In open source, being biggest tends to mean you canât wait around for someone else to develop a solution for you. For the copycat, the cost effective solution is to wait, spend no resources on R&D, and take what you need from the innovators.
Defending with intangible assets
There are good examples of projects defending with intangible assets. Letâs go through each of patents, brands, and trade secrets.
Patents: Hashgraph is a new smart contract protocol that has its underlying technology patented. Weâll see how defensible the patent is and how the community will react to a patented public blockchain.
Brand: Brand matters but itâs hard to tell how much. It seems like Bitcoin benefits from being the first coin people think of. Ethereum benefits similarly. 0x and Aragon have halo effects. One might expect brand to play a meaningful role in attracting and retaining members of the network, but itâs too early to tell.
Trade secrets: Starkware is a new project focused on STARK technology (a privacy and scalability technology that few have expertise in). They plan to offer their expertise to projects in exchange for tokens. For this model to work, their expertise must be virtually impossible to replicate. This strategy is even more interesting than Hashgraphâs.
Weâre seeing attempts to defend with intangible assets, but weâll have to wait to see if these defenses are effective.
Defending with efficient scale
Efficient scale means that a given market is unprofitable for new companies to enter. A new company would drive down profits and make it unprofitable for everybody.
Does this mean that crypto projects should pick niche markets? Instead of building a smart contract protocol, should we build a prediction market for cats?
This may deter competitors for a period of time where our idea looks dumb or trivial to would-be competitors, but because of the near-zero cost of copying, efficient scale doesnât matter much for crypto projects. If thereâs any proof that the market has value, copycats can enter for virtually no cost.
Defending with switching costs
Switching costs exist, though there is ongoing debate about to what extent (I believe they are sufficiently high)6.
Take Ethereum. The more projects being built on the platform, the more developers. The more developers, the more tooling and shared knowledge. The more tooling and shared knowledge, the more attractive the platform for other developers. Try asking a developer to switch after theyâve joined the community, learned the language, and adopted the tooling. Itâs going to be hard unless they hate the experience and the new platform is twice as good.
Defending with network effects
Bitcoin enjoys the many benefits of being the largest cryptocurrency by market cap.
Because itâs the largest and most secure, Bitcoin is the most likely to be:
- The first cryptocurrency someone buys
- Accepted by merchants
- Held by institutional investors and governments
- Trusted by holders as a store of value
Because of its network effects, it is difficult for another cryptocurrency to overtake Bitcoinâs lead.
As an upstart project, how do you establish network effects? Go-to-market and strength of network effect.
The plan for Telegramâs TON token represents a bet on go-to-market. By taking advantage of their hundreds of millions of users, they can instantly bootstrap the size of their network. If youâre starting from zero, you might partner with someone with distribution or raise sufficient capital to pay for distribution.
Strength of network effect is covered well by Samani in âOn the network effects of stores of valueâ. Some networks have more powerful network effects than others.
Moats (and lack thereof) for crypto projects
The figure above compares importance of moat sources for crypto projects with an average non-project. A point at the origin means that that particular moat source does not apply. A point closer to the origin compared to the âNon-crypto projectâ means that moat source is less applicable than the average project and vice versa.
For crypto projects, network effects are more important, switching costs are equally important, intangible assets and efficient scale are less important, and cost advantage is not important. Overall, there are fewer ways to build a moat, but itâs not true to say crypto projects cannot have economic moats.
Crypto projects have fewer moats to protect against competitors and copycats. As a result, go-to-market is critical. A competitor with deep pockets is an existential risk. Ecosystem funds like the Stable Fund and massive raises like Telegramâs $1.4B token offering are rational.
Once a project reaches scale, it becomes much harder to simply copy and merge changes into the protocol (while maintaining decentralization)7. As weâve seen with Bitcoin, Ethereum, Zcash, Monero, and more, protocol governance is slow and messy with the most contentious decisions resulting in hard fork. While a protocol can be bootstrapped by copying features, the ease of deploying copied features is inversely related to its size and decentralization.
Copying reduces overall R&D costs across the industry (and benefits everyone), but disproportionately benefits new projects with deep pockets and distribution. However, copying plus go-to-market is only effective in bootstrapping a protocol. At sufficient scale, copying is no longer as effective. Over a long enough time horizon, the teams with a clearer connection to their constituents and superior execution can winâbut having capital and distribution makes it a lot easier.
Are you building a project? Iâd love to hear how youâre thinking about defending against competitors.
Thanks to Spencer Noon and Kyle Samani for their input on this post
Originally published at www.tonysheng.com on May 16, 2018.
Fear of crypto copycats was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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