Unlike the Early Web, Crypto Does Not Need State Patronage
Blockchain doesn't need ARPANET-type government support. But co-ordination and collective action are vital to avoid duplication of effort.

Popular myth would have you believe the entrepreneurs and CEOs working in the internet and technology sectors have built up their companies from scratch. This, however, would overlook the enormous role government investment has played in making funds available for the research and development of the products and services these companies offer.
The first computers were developed during the Second World War at Bletchley Park in England to crack the German Enigma codes. The iPhone depends on the internet, the origins of which lie in ARPANET, a program funded in the 1960s by the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA), part of the U.S. Defense Department and later renamed. The Global Positioning System (GPS) began as a 1970s U.S. military program called NAVSTAR. Even SIRI, the iPhone’s voice-recognizing personal assistant, can trace its lineage to the government: It’s a spin-off of a DARPA artificial-intelligence (AI) project.
Luke Stokes is the managing director for the Foundation for Interwallet Operability (FIO). He's been a consensus witness for the Hive (previously Steem) blockchain since early 2018 and a custodian for eosDAC, a community-owned EOSIO Block Producer and DAC Enabler, since its inception.
The role of the state isn’t limited to just spending taxpayer funds. Setting supportive policies that enable companies to solve problems and flourish is fundamental to ensuring we solve climate change and many other pressing issues of our time.
While the impact of government investment in areas such as military research is clear for all to see, its impact on Silicon Valley and modern technologies is more opaque. By their design, digital currencies such as bitcoin
See also: Kevin Owocki – How DeFi ‘Degens’ Are Funding the Next Wave of Open-Source Development
However, if this industry is ever going to achieve its goals and gain mainstream adoption, it is unlikely to happen organically. Agreed principles and collective vision will be fundamental to ensuring the blockchain industry achieves aims such as greater financial inclusion, competition for the banking industry, and a reduction of costs and friction within supply chains.
The blockchain industry needs to pursue collective policies that are bold, innovative and enable people to work together towards these goals. Currently, projects and teams are siloed, doubling up on efforts to solve almost identical problems with no means for sharing intellectual property or potential revenue, should the mainstream adopt their solutions.
Private companies lack the resources to realistically compete with public funding.
For this to happen, the blockchain industry will need to come together and break down barriers to engagement between different protocols. It’s a prospect I’m intimately aware of, through my work with the Foundation for Interwallet Operability (FIO), a protocol designed with interoperability and service provider cooperation at its core.
FIO remains a group of dedicated, well-intentioned individuals trying to tackle a problem of standardized easy-to-read and -use cryptocurrency addresses. Although the foundation has received private funding, its situation is similar to that of Tim Berners-Lee, who, in the late 1980s, developed the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML), uniform resource locators (URLs) and uniform Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) that became the global standards for internet use at CERN.
Supported by government funds, he and fellow researcher Robert Cailliau completed the first successful HTTP for computers. The manifesto describing the construction of the World Wide Web eventually became the international standard for computers all over the world to connect. For blockchain to succeed, the industry will need to create a similar approach to long-term funding and the type of support that Berners-Lee and Cailliau enjoyed at CERN, whether it be financial or manpower for future development.
Private companies lack the resources to realistically compete with public funding and develop the technology we take for granted. It requires decades of R&D efforts spread out over different agencies that share information for the sake of learning, rather than profit.
See also: Juan Benet: From Idea to Action
The blockchain vision goes well beyond simply making a speculative profit whenever bitcoin’s price rises. It has the same potential as the internet, computer science, atomic energy and railways to change our infrastructure and unleash economic growth. It remains a very young and fragmented industry with no clear sense of direction. As a sector, we need to ensure the founding ideals can be applied and it remains open to anyone interested in making a contribution to the future, and not at the behest of state political patronage.
Partnerships, research institutes and non-governmental organizations will, over the course of the next decade, ensure blockchain’s promises to become a reality. The vision is there. It’s now time for the international community with shared value systems to come together and build this future.
Note: The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk, Inc. or its owners and affiliates.
More For You
Protocol Research: GoPlus Security

What to know:
- As of October 2025, GoPlus has generated $4.7M in total revenue across its product lines. The GoPlus App is the primary revenue driver, contributing $2.5M (approx. 53%), followed by the SafeToken Protocol at $1.7M.
- GoPlus Intelligence's Token Security API averaged 717 million monthly calls year-to-date in 2025 , with a peak of nearly 1 billion calls in February 2025. Total blockchain-level requests, including transaction simulations, averaged an additional 350 million per month.
- Since its January 2025 launch , the $GPS token has registered over $5B in total spot volume and $10B in derivatives volume in 2025. Monthly spot volume peaked in March 2025 at over $1.1B , while derivatives volume peaked the same month at over $4B.
More For You
Barclays Sees ‘Down-Year’ for Crypto in 2026 Without Big Catalysts

Spot trading volumes are cooling, and investor enthusiasm is fading amid a lack of structural growth drivers, analysts wrote in a new report.
What to know:
- Barclays forecasts lower crypto trading volumes in 2026, with no clear catalysts to revive market activity.
- Spot market slowdowns pose revenue challenges for retail-focused platforms like Coinbase and Robinhood, the bank said.
- Regulatory clarity, including pending market structure legislation, could shape long-term market growth despite near-term headwinds.









