I recently revisited Eric Hughes's cypherpunk manifesto from 1993, and honestly, it's crazy to see how relevant this text remains today.



For those who don't know, the cypherpunk manifesto lays the philosophical foundations of this cryptographic revolution we're experiencing. Hughes didn't hold back: he talked about privacy as a fundamental right, about individual autonomy in the face of centralized systems. At the time, it was almost radical. But look where we are now with Bitcoin and blockchain, which are completely transforming finance.

What interests me most is that the principles of the cypherpunk manifesto have stayed the same even as everything around them has changed. Privacy, autonomy, digital freedom — these themes haven't become less important, on the contrary. They are at the heart of current debates on digital rights and security.

Rereading this text, I realized that many developers and activists today, even if they don't always admit it, are directly building on the foundations laid by the cypherpunk movement. The technologies we use, the questions we ask about online privacy — all of that comes from this vision.

The cypherpunk manifesto isn't just a historical document. It's a manifesto that continues to guide thinking about what cryptography and cryptocurrencies can truly change in our relationship to freedom and autonomy. It's worth rereading.
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