Jeff Park argued that cryptocurrencies are entering a phase similar to Nvidia’s mainstream pre-AI era. This was a time when technological change was noticeable to early believers but not yet apparent to the broader market. In an
Park’s comparison centered around the moment Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Elon Musk made their first public appearance together at GTC 2015. He described it as a moment within a narrow window before AI became a mainstream consumer or institutional priority. By then, Huang had spent decades supporting parallel graphics processing and had supported CUDA since 2006, while Musk had already had what Park called his “Hassabis moment” in 2012. He pointed out that OpenAI has not yet been established.
“This is a narrow window in which the revolution is visible to some but invisible to others. These two geniuses recognized the broad potential of AI early on, but the broader public has not yet. Of course, it will be another decade before it reaches mainstream applications.”
Why Cryptocurrency Looks Like Nvidia
Mayor Park said that cryptocurrency today is in a similar position. Before GPUs became the center of the AI boom, the technology was kept alive by gamers, enthusiasts, and researchers pushing GPU capabilities without necessarily knowing that they would help subsidize a computing transformation on a much larger scale. In his analogy, early DeFi played a similar role to cryptocurrencies by subsidizing the development path toward institutional tokenization.
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“Just as early DeFi subsidized the development of institutional tokenization, gamers have subsidized the development of AI,” he wrote.
The core of Park’s argument is that the most difficult stage for cryptocurrency is not the initial ideological stage or the ultimate maturity stage. It is a transitional stage between them. He borrowed from Elon Musk’s remarks on autonomous driving at GTC 2015, where Musk said the simplest part is ultra-low speed driving where the car can stop and high speed driving where the rules are more structured. The most challenging part, according to Park, is the 10 to 50 mph zone, an urban environment with bicycles, children, cones, manholes and edge cases, where both precision and speed are required.
Mr. Park applied the framework to cryptocurrency infrastructure. The “0-10 mph” step was green light and a use case that people could understand from a practical standpoint, he said. In his view, the “50mph+” phase will be when on-chain capital markets become evident due to self-management, capital efficiency, money velocity, and settlement optimization. The difficult part is the part in between.
“But the 10-50 is difficult when funds in pre-Internet financial infrastructures, with AML/KYC, offshore capital conduits, discretionary bank risk models, and delayed reporting regimes, create all kinds of demands for accuracy and speed that require further evolution of today’s institutional infrastructure,” Park wrote. “Although fundamentally solvable, this is the most difficult part of realizing the dream of on-chain capital markets.”
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Park also distinguished between Bitcoin and the broader cryptocurrency sector, while rejecting the idea that support for one should exclude the other. He said Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies do not attempt to solve the same problems, despite being driven by similar ideological impulses toward open access.
“I love Bitcoin, but contrary to some opinions, I believe it is possible to love cryptocurrencies too, because Bitcoin is a monetary experiment made possible by the evolution of technology, whereas most cryptocurrencies are the opposite: they are technological experiments made possible by the evolution of money,” he wrote. “They are rooted in one ideal, which is to provide access to as many public goods as possible, but they are fundamentally solving different problems.”
Park’s broader thesis is that the ideology behind cryptocurrencies is not disappearing, but is changing form. He described the “victory ideology” as “technological financialization,” a form of hyperfinancialization with decentralized elements that export sovereign finance, proxy rails, and self-determination as public goods.
This framing is important because much of the current debate in the industry focuses on whether the institutionalization of cryptocurrencies undermines their original purpose. Park’s answer is that the ideological hierarchy is still essential, but the practical expression of that ideology is now moving through financial infrastructure, tokenized markets and systems that must interact with existing compliance and banking institutions.
President Park added, “This ‘intermediate’ period will be remembered as the most important period in the industry,” adding, “It belongs to those who recognize that the future is always ideological.”
At press time, the overall cryptocurrency market cap reached $2.55 trillion.
Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
