In brief
Sweden and Norway are reversing their cashless society initiatives after discovering their centralized payment systems are vulnerable to infrastructure failures.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin suggested that decentralized systems like Ethereum could potentially serve as resilient alternatives to traditional payment networks, though he acknowledged significant technical challenges remain.
While some crypto experts believe decentralized finance protocols are already robust enough, others point to critical limitations including the need for electricity and internet connectivity.
Sweden and Norway are reversing their cashless society initiatives after discovering their centralized payment systems are vulnerable to infrastructure failures.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin suggested that decentralized systems like Ethereum could potentially serve as resilient alternatives to traditional payment networks, though he acknowledged significant technical challenges remain.
While some crypto experts believe decentralized finance protocols are already robust enough, others point to critical limitations including the need for electricity and internet connectivity.
Nordics are walking back the cashless society initiative because their centralized implementation of the concept is too fragile. Cash turns out necessary as a backup.
Ethereum needs to be resilient enough, and private enough, to be able to credibly play this kind of role.… pic.twitter.com/eFVYT254qN
— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) May 25, 2025
Cash versus code
@rohangrey has done a lot of deep thought in this direction.
We basically know how to do it, but with the limitation that any solution depends on trusted hardware and/or post hoc enforcement against double-spenders.
— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) May 25, 2025
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