CZ Wants Crypto to Become Invisible by 2031 — And His Vision Says a Lot About Where the Industry Is Headed
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Changpeng Zhao's most interesting comments in recent months have not been about Binance's competitive battles or his pardon — they have been about where he sees the entire crypto industry heading over the next five years. Speaking on the Wolf of All Streets podcast in April, Zhao said his hope for 2031 is that people stop talking about crypto as crypto entirely. "I'm hoping that we don't talk about crypto as crypto in five years, just like we don't talk about the internet anymore, we don't talk about TCP/IP, we don't talk about HTML, JavaScript, etc," Zhao said. The analogy is deliberate and precise: the internet's most transformative phase was not when people were actively discussing it as a technology but when it quietly became the invisible infrastructure beneath everything — email, commerce, communication, media — without requiring users to understand or think about the underlying protocols. Zhao's vision for blockchain and cryptocurrency is the same: not a niche asset class that enthusiasts debate on podcasts, but a layer of financial and data infrastructure that operates beneath daily life without demanding attention or technical literacy from the people it serves.
That vision is more ambitious than it sounds and carries real implications for how the current phase of the industry should be evaluated. If the goal is invisibility and seamless integration, then the current period of intense regulatory debate, exchange competition, and retail speculation is a transitional phase rather than a destination — a necessary but uncomfortable stage of infrastructure buildout that precedes mainstream embedding. Zhao's own trajectory through that transitional phase has been unusually dramatic: building the world's largest crypto exchange, pleading guilty to federal charges, serving prison time, receiving a presidential pardon, and watching his platform re-enter the US market while simultaneously being cleared of terrorism financing allegations by a federal court. If crypto does become invisible infrastructure by 2031 in the way Zhao envisions, the decade of turbulence that preceded it will look in retrospect like the equivalent of the internet's dial-up era — chaotic, contested, and essential.