#2026年比特币行情展望 **From the Dream of Cypherpunks to the Current Dilemma: The Rift Between the Ideals of Freedom and Reality**



When it comes to the origins of cryptocurrency, many people only know Bitcoin, but few understand the group of rebellious idealists behind it—the Cypherpunks. In the early 1990s, they were already pondering a question: how to truly achieve freedom in the digital world?

**Part One: The Beliefs of Cypherpunks**

This group holds an ironclad creed:

Privacy is not about concealment, but the cornerstone of an open society. Without privacy, freedom of speech and thought are empty words.

Rather than trusting the promises of institutions, they trust mathematics more. Systems built with cryptography are more reliable than any organizational rules—because mathematics does not lie.

They dream of creating a transaction system that requires no third parties, thus escaping censorship and achieving genuine economic freedom. This idea later directly incubated digital currencies like Bitcoin.

**Part Two: From Theory to Practice**

Cypherpunks are not just talk. They collaborate through encrypted mailing lists, turning ideas into reality one by one:

In the 1990s, DigiCash attempted to create electronic cash; Hashcash aimed to solve spam issues; B-money explored the possibilities of digital currency... These were not ideas hatched in isolation but the collective wisdom of the community.

In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto released the Bitcoin white paper on this mailing list—he did not create out of thin air but stood on the shoulders of these pioneers, integrating years of technical accumulation into a complete blockchain solution. The emergence of Bitcoin marked the first time the ideals of Cypherpunks were truly realized through code.

**Part Three: The Dilemma of Idealists**

But now, the problem is that the original dreams of Cypherpunks face awkward realities:

**Moral Dilemmas**: Providing encryption tools protects freedom, but the same tools can also be used for malicious purposes. When to use them and when not to, technical developers find themselves in a dilemma.

**The Irony of Centralization**: What was once meant to be decentralized is now increasingly controlled by large tech companies and financial institutions—new centers of power. Isn’t that a bit ironic?

**The Fall of Privacy**: Even more painfully, most people now willingly sacrifice their privacy for convenience. Alipay, social media, various apps... People exchange data for services. The "surveillance society" that Cypherpunks warned about has now become a reality.

This is the paradox of the contemporary crypto world: technology itself is neutral, but the people who use it are not. The beliefs of Cypherpunks still persist, and Bitcoin is still running, but in this highly centralized internet era, how much freedom and autonomy remain? This is a question every practitioner needs to seriously consider.
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DegenDreamervip
· 01-07 14:20
In plain terms, the dreams of the cypherpunks have long been crushed by capitalism.
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OnchainDetectivevip
· 01-06 11:59
That hits too close to home; idealism always dies in the hands of reality.
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ruggedSoBadLMAOvip
· 01-06 11:56
In plain terms, when idealism meets reality, it's a joke... we have all fallen into it.
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MerkleTreeHuggervip
· 01-06 11:53
You're not wrong; the dream of the cypherpunk has long been crushed under the weight of reality.
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SchrodingerAirdropvip
· 01-06 11:44
The ideals of the cypherpunk movement have long been dead; now it's just about leeks harvesting leeks. The reality is, everyone wants freedom but is begging for mercy. It's called decentralization in nice words, but in reality, it's just big players consolidating power. As for privacy, most people stopped caring long ago. The dream that Bitcoin would change the world... is a bit ironic at this point. United in decentralization, but in the end, they are still being exploited by new powers wave after wave. It's quite insightful; it's 2026, and people are still fooling themselves with the same tools. The original ideals of the cypherpunk movement were indeed impressive, but now they've been corrupted. Isn't this paradox the entire essence of web3?
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