
The Internet of Money Volume Two
Andreas M. Antonopoulos
May 2026
A collection of talks exploring the why of Bitcoin and open blockchains, covering their philosophical, social, and historical implications.
My Thoughts
I jumped in at Volume Two without reading the first, and it stands perfectly well on its own. What I appreciated most is that Andreas spends his time on the why of Bitcoin rather than the how — the mechanics take a back seat to the ideas, and the book is better for it.
His real talent is taking something abstract and grounding it in an analogy until it just clicks:
Our ancestors said, "This is as good as written in stone." Our grandchildren will say, "It is as good as written on the blockchain."
A few things that stuck with me:
- The why over the how. Less protocol, more purpose. The book is about what open blockchains are for, not how they work under the hood.
- Clarity through analogy. Andreas has a rare gift for making complex ideas feel obvious and memorable.
- Historical & social framing. Situating open blockchains in the longer story of money, trust, and power — rather than treating them as a passing piece of tech.
A good read, full of insights and observations worth sitting with.