The a16z Show artwork

Jul 13, 2026 · 37m, Episode 1144

Before Blockchains, There Was State Machine Replication

From The a16z Show

— Player

?t=90 · ?t=1:30 · ?t=1h2m3s

0:00--:--
Timestamp sharing

— Episode notes

Every blockchain today relies on replication techniques first developed in the 1980s by researchers who weren't thinking about cryptocurrencies at all. In this episode, Tim Roughgarden speaks with MIT professor and Turing Award winner Barbara Liskov, one of the pioneers of programming languages, fault tolerance, and distributed systems. Joined by a16z crypto research partner Ittai Abraham, they trace the evolution of ideas that now underpin modern blockchain networks. The conversation explores viewstamped replication, Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance (PBFT), state machine replication, and why concepts developed decades before Bitcoin became the foundation for today's blockchain...

— Timestamp deep links

Share any moment by clicking "Copy @ timestamp" in the player above. Supported formats: ?t=90 (seconds), ?t=1:30 (mm:ss), ?t=1h2m3s (hms).