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Just 2 million Bitcoin left: Bitcoin hits the 19 million milestone

The 19 millionth Bitcoin was mined, leaving just 2 million BTC to be mined over the next 100 years.

The 19th millionth Bitcoin (BTC) was mined on Friday, a landmark occasion for the number one cryptocurrency. Nineteen million Bitcoin are now in circulation, with just 2 million Bitcoin yet to be minted (or mined) until roughly the year 2140. 

In block 730002, mined by SBI Crypto, the 19 millionth Bitcoin entered circulation. SBI Crypto earned ‎6.32 BTC, roughly $293,000 for the trouble in transaction fees and block reward. 

A momentous occasion, the Bitcoin community was quick to celebrate the milestone event.

The CEO of possibly one of the world’s most ESGfriendly Bitcoin miners, Kjetil Hove Pettersen of Kryptovault, told Cointelegraph "we have only two million Bitcoin—less than 10% of the total—left to mine." He continued:

"This may seem like a small number at first glance, but I believe the best days of mining are still ahead of us.”

Bert de Groot, founder of a Bitcoin flower come mining company, Bitcoin Bloem, told Cointelegraph the “19th million Bitcoin being mined today marks a historical moment.” He concluded that it “makes us realize once more how important the work was that Satoshi Nakamoto,” joking that “we wish we could have sent flowers to show our gratitude.”

According to Vlad Costea, founder of Bitcoin Takeover, there are “only 2 million BTC left to mine in the next 118 years!” Over the past 13 years since the inception of Bitcoin, miners have uncovered 19 million Bitcoin; the last Bitcoin is expected to be mined in the year 2140.

The 18,500,000 millionth Bitcoin was mined in September 2020, as the current issuance rate is 6.25 Bitcoin per block. The next halving, where the issuance rate is cut in half, is scheduled for 2024.

Bitcoin halving and issuance rate. Source: Bitcoinfool

For the Bitcoin community, the 19 millionth Bitcoin mined highlights the scarcity of Bitcoin. According to Human Rights Foundation chief strategy officer Alex Gladstein, the scarcity is even more prominent, given how early the world is on the route to adopting Bitcoin:

Related: Bitcoin ‘dormant’ for 7+ years moved right before BTC price dropped 5%

To date, El Salvador is the only nation-state to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, now issuing Bitcoin-backed “Volcano Bonds” to raise money. However, several other countries including Brazil showed promising signs of Bitcoin adoption in 2021.

With less than 10% of the Bitcoin left to be mined, the most aggressive Bitcoin buyers—such as Do Kwon's Luna Foundation Guard—face an uphill battle if they want to continue stacking Sats.   

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US grassroots adoption: the Bitcoin Lightning party in Portland

A grassroots Bitcoin Lightning festival in Portland, U.S. demonstrated that the Lightning Network is the perfect companion for payments.

There is “grassroots evidence” that “America is adopting Bitcoin,” according to Clay Graham, founder of Rapaygo and a Bitcoin Lightning Network (LN) enthusiast. 

At a Bitcoin Lightning festival held in Portland, United States over the weekend, the Bitcoin LN clocked more than $200 (four million Sats) in just three hours.

Hailed as “Puddle Town on Lightning Rails,” Portland’s Bitcoin Party was a space where “vendors, food carts, artists all accept Bitcoin.” Graham told Cointelegraph that there was also a “food cart pod” that acted as a “business attraction destination to Bitcoin fans who want a Bitcoin beach type experience.”

The "mobile Bitcoin development lab for embedded research and development,". Source: Graham

Fiat money was of course, not allowed, and popular Bitcoiner Dennis Porter MC’d at the festival. In this tweet he showed how easy it is to pay for goods using the LN:

Graham told Cointelegraph that the event was judged to be a success if “people could spend Bitcoin freely as they would fiat.”  In total there were:

"50 people spending over 4M sats in 3 hours, 3 food carts and 7 vendors selling anything they want while even supporting use cases like 'tipping the DJ'."

Graham concluded that the LN made payments at the party a breeze: it was “easier than cash, all cheaper than cards and having tons of fun on a sunny day.”

Dennis Porter MC'ing at the event in front of 'The Bitcoin Standard' books and Bitcoin t-shirts. Source: Twitter

A near-instant layer-2 payment network built on top of the Bitcoin base chain, the LN is ideal for a party setting. Pubinno, the company behind the Lightning pour a pint tool was built with festivals in mind, while LNBits build open-source payments tools like split payments tools and offline solutions to make payments tech even smoother. 

The LN tech used at the festival, enabling fast print outs of receipts. Source: Twitter

Tiago Vasconcelos, cofounder of Aceita Bitcoin and an LNBits FOSS contributor told Cointelegraph:

“With the LN the only thing you need is an internet connection! No card swipe hardware, no need for cash, no need for changing currency [even] if the venue is international and with lots of foreign people.”

Built on the LN, LNBits’ free open source solutions are closely competing with Visa and Mastercard. Vasconcelos adds that the “network fees are near to zero, or even zero, and ultimately are paid by the customer, not the merchant!” Plus, “using LN reduces the costs, and risks, of using Visa or Mastercard.”

Ultimately, some Bitcoiners are even keen for scammers to learn about the LN, and for Graham:

“The LN is so fast and transactions can clear as fast as faster than cards so both the buyer and seller don't feel that ‘where has my money gone’ feeling when they are just trying to have fun on a sunny day.”
Snacks and trinkets featuring LN QR codes at the festival. Source: Graham

Related: Shitcoins are ‘garbage’: Bitcoin-only brokers on freedom and finance

Plus, it’s a payment network that supports “artists, people who made stuff with their own hands and small businesses.” And there’s more of a local connection to money–and more sovereignty–because for the Portland Bitcoin Party, “the nodes that routed payments for the LN are mostly made liquid in Portland.”

Following Portland's success, Graham added that “Kansas city has already reached out on how to boilerplate this party," using his company's solutions. 

“Remember that within a year of Bitcoin beach el Salvador announced legal tender. Now we can have Bitcoin beach in every town.”

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Vanuatu prime minister says yes to Satoshi Island crypto project

The Vanuatu government announces its support for the Satoshi Island Community Project, a private crypto island where fiat isn't invited.

It’s not every day that a country’s leader endorses a cryptocurrency project. Nayib Bukele, the President of orange-pilled El Salvador, was the first leader to endorse Bitcoin (BTC). 

Now, the prime minister of Vanuatu, the Honourable Bob Loughman, has officially given the green light to Satoshi Island.

The Vanuatu government approval, which Satoshi Island was happy to share with Cointelegraph. Source: SI

Satoshi Island is the megaproject crypto utopia in the South Pacific tha recently disclosed to Cointelegraph its vision, progress and preparation. Hot on the heels of news that they received 50,000 citizenship nonfungible token (NFT) applications, the prime minister of Vanuatu has given his blessing to “watching the development of Satoshi Island unfold.”

For the team at Satoshi Island, the endorsement is welcome news:

“With this full endorsement from the prime minister of Vanuatu in hand, we can show everyone that Satoshi Island is as real as it gets, and the kind words of the PM inviting our community to their home could not be a warmer welcome.”
Satoshi Island from above. Source: SI

The official letter states that “the overnment of Vanuatu welcomes the Satoshi Island project and its community to our country,” while highlighting that “Vanuatu is looking for new ways to attract investment and people to our country.”

The COVID-19 pandemic “severely affected the tourism sector,” a mainstay of the Vanuatu economy, contributing 34.7% to total GDP in 2019. According to World Bank data, visitor numbers to the paradise-like archipelago 2,000 kilometers (or 1,243 miles) from Brisbane dropped from circa 300,000 to 80,000 in 2020.

The team at Satoshi Island had previously told Cointelegraph that the “lack [of] tourism” was one of the pain points they wished to alleviate with their project. Fundamentally, however, the “crypto industry finally has a physical home” in Satoshi Island.

Satoshi Island is a space in which crypto enthusiasts plan to reside — not visit. Community members will be living in sustainably-built homes in a community organized by decentralized autonomous organizations, or DAOs, where ownership is represented by NFTs.

Artist's rendering of the Satoshi Island sustainable build homes. Source: SI

Many of the past crypto megaprojects, from Akon City in Senegal to CryptoLand in Fiji, have failed. Satoshi Island’s team advises others to “keep ideas on a need-to-know basis within the team until everything is in place to turn the idea into a reality.”

Related: ‘Satoshi Island’ crypto utopia receives 50K citizenship NFT applications

The team recommends that others "be very selective with the location and ensure it [is] logistically, environmentally and legally possible," as well as to

“Be very selective with the location and ensure [...] most importantly, owning the land before you release your project is an essential step to showing your target market that what you are promoting is real and not just a pipe dream.”

With the prime minister of Vanuatu's approval, the Satoshi Island crypto "pipe dream" is nearing reality.

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‘Satoshi Island’ crypto utopia receives 50K citizenship NFT applications

A crypto island in the South Pacific where fiat is not allowed is making waves: Modular homes under construction, NFT citizenship applications and a promise of a decentralized future.

Step aside, El Salvador, there’s a new Bitcoin-centric destination on the map. As a 32-million-square-foot private island sanctuary in the remote South Pacific, Satoshi Island is a “place for the crypto community to call home.”

A combination of honeymoon getaway, Bond-villain hideout and naturalist paradise, there’s one enigmatic exception to Satoshi Island: it’s 100% crypto. Talking to Cointelegraph, the Satoshi Island team of Denys Troyak, James Law, Taras Filatov and Benjamin Nero mentioned that it is:

“A true crypto-economy where everything will be paid for in crypto and all ownership on the island is represented with NFTs.”

With its name inspired by the creator of Bitcoin (BTC), Satoshi Nakamoto, the team added that “the island intends to host events all year round, house and headquarter crypto projects as well as being a gathering place for crypto enthusiasts worldwide.”

Further down the road, the island could “operate as a decentralized autonomous organization.” To date, they’ve bought an island, secured build permits and reached a milestone of 50,000 visa nonfungible token (NFT) applications to become permanent crypto residents. An NFT marketplace is currently hush-hush.

The construction of Satoshi Island's infrastructure is cemented. Source: SI

The creation of a crypto utopia may seem unassailable even for the ambitious crypto community. Still, the founders have already received “50,000 applications for our free Citizenship NFT, acting as a whitelist to enter our Land NFT sale, while also permitting the holder to live on the island with many other benefits.”

Every home will be an NFT, or a “Satoshi Island Land NFT,” which can be traded. For the traditionalists, NFT holders can “turn their digital rights into physical documentation on the official land registry of Vanuatu.”

Unlike famous flops such as Fyre festival or CryptoLand — or any other failed fantasy project from an overly enthusiastic team of venture capitalists — Satoshi Island has mapped out a strategy, ticking off key developments in an orderly fashion. The team scoured the globe to choose a location, respected the legal process and avoided paid marketing or influencer campaigns.

The Satoshi Island vision began during the 2017 bull run, as the “concept started out as an idea to have a place for the crypto community to call home and the actual island was chosen years after.” In fact, “it took many years to find the right island and to get everything together to be able to release to the public.”

First, the island had to be remote enough for privacy but not so remote that development would be too difficult. Second, the island should not be at risk of climate change and be protected from natural disasters. The slog to find an adequate location was compounded by the knowledge that, while it was “undoubtedly exciting” to pore over the world in search of an island for sale, they “had to be realistic.”

“This project started out as a crypto project looking for an island, not an island looking to become crypto city.”

Plus, the government managing the territory must be “open to the idea of a crypto city.” Finally, after years of searching, the team was onto a winner with Vanuata: “The government showed a willingness to innovate and were open to discussions right away.”

Indeed, the Pacific island nations are building a reputation for being crypto-friendly. Nearby, in Tonga, Bitcoin as legal tender has been widely discussed while just across the same body of water, the Marshall Islands has “opened the gates” to DAOs.

Vanuatu lacks “jobs and tourism,” while in terms of animals, the island — which used to be called Lataro — was overfished and over-poached. The population of coconut crabs was driven “close to extinction” prior to the land purchase.

The Vanuatu government warmed to the idea of creating a future-thinking space where job creation would be high. As for the crabs, the plan is to revive dwindling wildlife populations.

“The minister of finance was already interested in the idea of a digital economy and using blockchain technology when we spoke to him, so he was very excited about the idea of having our company and many of the brilliant minds in our industry call Vanuatu home.”

The team has since received a letter of support from the government to start building on the island using the “latest and greatest sustainable technology,” as solar power features are just one example of being added to the new builds of modular homes. The architect for the project added that “it’s a wonderful opportunity for them to build a land from the ground up.”

Artistic rendering of the modular homes powered by the sun. Source: SI

All of the energy generated from the island will be from renewable sources. Meanwhile, the team said that they’re “not really focused on cryptocurrency mining.” Instead, the plan is to use “solar panels built on top of the homes to run the entire community basically on a shared grid.”

When pressed on whether Bitcoin mining enthusiasts could pack an S19 into their suitcase to be able to mine sustainably, the team said that‘s still no problem at all.

The sustainability-centric modular homes under construction. Source: SI

Sustainability aside, the team stressed the importance of the overall feel of the island. “It’s not a resort” because it will be a “home” with “a permanent population.” According to the website, the goal is to be considered the “crypto capital of the world” — an unachievable goal without permanent residents.

21,000 investors or residents, echoing the 21 million Bitcoin that will ever be mined, will be the island’s headcount. Naturally, residency is granted via an NFT minted on the blockchain. To date, 50,000 people have registered interest in the project, buying into the vision of a “community where they can live, work and visit all year round.”

Nonetheless, NFT residency does not grant Vanuatu citizenship. If crypto enthusiasts want to say goodbye to fiat and hello to a year-round cryptocurrency life in the sun, the Vanuatu government states that citizenship costs $130,000.

The Land NFT marketplace for Satoshi Island. Source: SI

The NFT marketplace is imminent while building the physical island development is underway. A “private opening” of the island is planned for quarter four this year for short-term visits. By early 2023, NFT homeowners will “be able to begin residing on the island.”

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Crypto tattoos to the moon! Bitcoin and Doge ink searches doubled last year

Crypto tattoo searches on Google and Instagram swelled by 222% in 2021, while the Bitcoin "B" has been tattooed over 900 times according to new data.

The crypto ecosystem houses some devoted followers who got the logo of their favorite cryptocurrency etched on their skin for life.

According to the latest data from Crypto Head, more than 900 people worldwide have inked themselves with the Bitcoin (BTC) “B”, while Dogecoin (DOGE) tattoos and Ethereum (ETH) tattoos are on the rise.

The research analyzed “Instagram hashtags and Google search volumes,” revealing crypto tattoo searches have increased by 222%. Despite lackluster price action, more and more crypto enthusiasts seek to get inked with a crypto logo.

Followers of the first and seminal cryptocurrency, Bitcoin tattoos have been around for almost a decade while influential Bitcoiners were quick to ink themselves. Didi Taihuttu, a Bitcoin showman and father of the Bitcoin Family, was an early adopter of Bitcoin ink in 2017. His tattoo represents “freedom and no longer being part of the system.”

Anita Posch, a Bitcoin author and podcaster, has a lightning bolt tattooed on her forearm. She explained in a German language Bitcoin documentary called “Human B” that to people that don’t know, the tattoo “represents energy.” A recipient of a recent Human Rights Foundation grant distributed in Satoshis, Posch is a passionate advocate for the lightning network.

Anita Posch' lightning tattoo on her right forearm. Souce: "Human B", Youtube

While Dogecoin is deep outside the top five cryptocurrencies, it remains the second most popular cryptocurrency tattoo search with 700 average monthly searches. However, the Dogecoin hype of 2021 is clearly on the wane.

A huge peak in searches for Doge tattoo in early 2021 has since dropped off, (in red) despite Doge’ biggest fan, Elon Musk, continuing to popularize the currency.

Google trends for crypto tattoo searches. Source: Google

Plus, some of the Dogecoin tattoos on Instagram are a stretch from the logo of the original Shiba Inu dog.

Dogecoin tattoo. Source: Instagram

As for cryptocurrency tattoos, Ethereum’s logo of an octahedron, a diamond-shaped geometric figure is less inked with only 6 instagram posts. However, NFT tattoos–which were popularised on the Ethereum blockchain have been gaining in popularity.

Related: $1 million rock NFT sells for a penny in all ore nothing error

During the peak for NFT tattoos in late 2021 –as shown on the Google Trends graph– one Lazy Lion NFT collector said that if the floor price for the Lazy Lions reached 2 ETH, they would tattoo themselves.

In March 2021, as the floor price for the Lazy Lions grinds down to 1.5 ETH, the ink remains permanent.

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Honey, I orange-pilled the kids! BTC children’s authors on learning about money

Three Bitcoin children's authors share the keys to teaching about Bitcoin and money, explaining why it's important to do so from a young age.

Bitcoin is for everyone. That includes teenagers, children, toddlers and even newborns.

When these kids grow up, they’ll use the Bitcoin (BTC) protocol, so it “makes sense to start to integrate Bitcoin into learning as early as possible.” 

At least, that’s according to Scott Sibley, one-half of the couple behind the creation of the Shamory Bitcoin game and the ‘Goodnight Bitcoin’ children’s bedtime book. He joins a growing list of Bitcoin children’s book authors who care deeply about educating children on Bitcoin and money. 

Goodnight Bitcoin book. Source: SHAmory

Sibley and his wife are firm believers that “kids can learn much faster, and earlier than most people think.”

It’s one of the reasons why they wrote their Bitcoin bedtime story, a tale for infants that riffs on the “plethora of “Goodnight” books (Goodnight Moon, Goodnight Baseball, etc.)” Incidentally, it also serves as a nice primer for their semi-educational game about Bitcoin mining, SHAmory.

The Sibleys noticed there’s a “product and content gap when it comes to fun ways for kids and adults to learn about Bitcoin,” and are bringing educational content that extends beyond the podcasts, books and long-form essays which Bitcoiners usually gorge upon.

“Financial education that includes Bitcoin is something that kids aren’t going to receive in most “traditional” schools. So right now it’s on Bitcoin parents to find ways to weave that education in at home.”

Bitcoin for Kiddos book. Source: bitcoinforkiddos

Chris and Frieda Bobay are the brains behind Bitcoin for Kiddos, the story of Bitcoin. They’re another couple passionate keen to impart knowledge into “children about money early,” so that “they will have the best opportunity to recognize it [uncorruptible money] when they see it.”

They told Cointelegraph:

“We wanted to expose our kids early to Bitcoin and broader concepts of money early so they are more comfortable using the technology and talking about it when they are older.”

They add that “money for most adults is a taboo subject, but it doesn't have to be.” In educating children about Bitcoin (and inherently, money) with books, it breaks down social barriers, unlocking “an incredible learning experience for the whole family.”

Michael Caras aka The Bitcoin Rabbi, author of Bitcoin Money: A Tale of Bitville Discovering Good Money, compliments the other authors’ musings about children and finance. He told Cointelegraph “it’s important that children learn about working for money, saving, spending responsibly, and also giving to charity.”

Bitcoin money, a tale of Bitville. Source: Amazon

He notes the unintended advantage of teaching children about Bitcoin–it’s an “intro for adults,” too. Sibley explains: “kids, as well as the adults, will still be better off in the sense that we all have been exposed to and learned more about money, where it comes from, what makes it valuable, etc.” Sibley adds:

“These are all questions [about money] that most people probably go their entire life without thinking or learning about.”

Furthermore, given that “children don't have all the biases that adults have,” they might approach the decentralized monetary network with an open mind. The Bitcoin Rabbi expands the idea, sharing “children understand the digital aspect of Bitcoin because they are digital native.”

“Not having preconceived notions about how traditional money and banks makes it easier for them to see Bitcoin as real money.”

Ultimately, not only do the Bitcoin children’s books subtly teach kids (and their parents) about Bitcoin, orange-pilling them along the way; they also only help to break down an enduring taboo: talking about money.

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Senator Ted Cruz invokes Canadian unrest to advocate for Bitcoin again

Cruz has joined the growing list of American politicians who have been advocating for Bitcoin adoption in the United States.

Republican Senator Ted Cruz during his Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) speech on Friday advocated for Bitcoin (BTC) again while lauding its decentralization.

Cruz said he is very bullish on Bitcoin because it is highly decentralized and cannot be controlled by any government or entity. He went on to cite the example of an ongoing issue in Canada, where the government enforced emergency laws as a retaliation to the Freedom Convoy trucker’s protest against COVID-19 mandates.

The Canadian government asked financial institutions and banks to freeze accounts of protesters followed by an order to crypto exchanges and crypto wallet service providers to do the same. A non-custodial wallet service provider Nunchuck received a similar order, and their response to the government went viral which eventually found its way to CPAC via Cruz.

Cruz read the response of the Bitcoin wallet service provider which asked the Canadian government to read up on self custody wallets and private keys. The response also notified that they don’t have access to any of their user’s financial information beyond their email address, which is by design.

The Republican senator called Nunchuck’s response “spectacular” and went on to cite the example of the Chinese crypto ban to suggest Bitcoin cannot be controlled by governments.

Related: US senator submits resolution to allow crypto payments in Capitol Complex

Senator Cruz has joined the growing list of American politicians rallying behind Bitcoin, who has advocated for use of waste natural gas for Bitcoin mining in Texas and recently bought the Bitcoin dip. However, his propagation about the left being anti-Bitcoin citing Justin Trudeau as an example wasn’t received well among crypto Twitter. One user wrote, Bitcoin is apolitical and politicizing it as “Left vs Right” is a wrong move.

Another user noted that Cruz being a politician is using Bitcoin knowledge to his advantage and suggested the opponents become more pro-Bitcoin to counter him.

It is important to note that while there are policymakers who are making efforts at the judicial level to bring changes to the law for Bitcoin adoption, such as Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lumis and a few others, however, a majority of them seems to be focused on using it as a tool for their political campaigns.

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Pro-Bitcoin president of El Salvador to offer citizenship for foreign investors

The 52 proposed legal reforms call for less bureaucracy, less red tape, creating tax incentives to make El Salvador one of the most freedom-centric countries.

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele wants to offer citizenship to those who invest in the small Central American nation.

President Bukele took to Twitter to inform the crypto community on Sunday that he was sending a list of 52 legal reforms to Congress. Among the most notable proposals, Bukele called for the removal of red tape, reducing bureaucracy, creating tax incentives and most importantly offering citizenships to foreigners looking to invest in the nation.

The President promised to make El Salvador one of the most freedom-centric countries at a time when the world is falling into ‘Tyranny.’

Bukele has become a flag bearer for Bitcoin (BTC) adoption but an equally controversial figure in international politics for the same reasons. Recently, a bipartisan group of senators in the United States introduced new legislation, seeking to mitigate risks posed by El Salvador’s adoption of BTC as a legal tender.

Related: El Salvador to inaugurate Bitcoin City backed by $1B BTC bonds

President Bukele rebuked the new legislation and called the U.S. senators “boomer,” while reminding them that they have zero jurisdictions on a sovereign and independent nation.

El Salvador is all set to launch its much anticipated billion-dollar Bitcoin Volcanic bonds in March next month. The funds generated from the bonds would be used to build the world's first Bitcoin city.

El Salvador created history last year in September when it became the first country in the world to make Bitcoin a legal tender along with the U.S. Dollar. While most international organizations, including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) continued to issue warning against the ill impacts of using BTC as a legal tender, the country reportedly achieved a growth of over 10% GDP, the highest in its history.

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Crypto secures a place in the African American saga

With its special qualities that can turn users into owners and owners into users, crypto aligns with historic Black aspirations.

February is Black History Month, and it’s worth recounting that cryptocurrency and blockchain technology have already had a significant impact on the African-American community. 

Peoples of color own cryptocurrencies at consistently higher levels than white people, surveys show, while anecdotal evidence suggests crypto has also unleashed a wave of innovation and entrepreneurial energy in the Black community — from New York City’s new mayor converting his first paycheck into crypto to basketball star Kevin Durant launching a new special-purpose acquisition company to focus on cryptocurrencies and blockchain.

And all this may just be scratching the surface. “Blockchain has the potential to be a beacon of light in the story of Black economic empowerment,” Marco Lindsey, associate director of diversity, equity and inclusion at the University of California Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, told Cointelegraph. 

Cryptocurrencies and blockchain enterprises with their special qualities that can turn users into owners and owners into users align with historic Black aspirations such as financial independence and security, University of Kansas professor and historian Nishani Frazier told Cointelegraph, adding:

“They can enable the Black community to lift itself up in the philosophical sense of Black empowerment.”

These “powerful possibilities,” as Frazier described them, are exciting — and not just in the United States. In the global context, crypto continues to be, at least in part, about disenfranchised peoples participating in mainstream economic life, often for the first time. 

Banking the unbanked

It’s sometimes forgotten, after all, that 1.7 billion people globally remain unbanked, underbanked or lack access to traditional financial systems, Cleve Mesidor, public policy advisor at the Blockchain Association, told Cointelegraph. For this group, sometimes living in countries with high inflation and lacking confidence in their local fiat and central bank, cryptocurrency represents “economic empowerment and an opportunity for financial freedom.”

Cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology “allows greater access to populations typically left out of traditional markets,” agreed Lindsey. It enables “anyone with an internet connection and some capital to invest” to participate in a vital, emerging technology scene, including seed-stage investment opportunities. 

It’s natural to celebrate these developments — especially during Black History Month — but by the same token, one can’t ignore the “flip side,” either, said Frazier. “As much as I enjoy cryptocurrency as a Black person, I can not afford to live in a utopian bubble, and say, ‘Cryptocurrency: Hurray! Equality!’ It’s very complex.”

The technology can be opaque, even for those with technical backgrounds, and crypto remains an extremely volatile investment. Hackers and fraudsters populate the cryptoverse as well. The Black financial experience in America, too, is rife with exploitation.

Frazier recalled that years ago, insurance companies wouldn’t provide insurance to Black people, especially in the U.S. South. Some larger companies eventually began to offer “penny insurance” — where a person might “pay a little at a time” for a policy — burial insurance, for example. 

But “those companies were notorious for taking your money and disappearing,” recalled Frazier. “They preyed upon the Black community.” Her point is that even in these more enlightened times; crypto is still risky; people can still get hurt; and one can’t overlook the downside of things.

Others, like The New School economist Darrick Hamilton, have noted that Bitcoin (BTC) is a high-risk, high payoff alternative. “In the end, it’s a casino,” he told Time Magazine. 

Lindsey agreed about the risks and added that vigilance will be needed to maintain inclusion moving forward. An ongoing education process is required, including a focus on individuals and small businesses from underserved communities. Otherwise, “the industry runs the risk of replicating the inequities we see in more traditional sectors.”

“More diverse investors”

As noted, surveys reinforce the notion that crypto resonates with people who, for various reasons, have been excluded from the dominant economic system. A Harris poll last year found that 23% of African-Americans own cryptocurrency, for example, compared with only 11% of white Americans. 

According to researchers from the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago, “the average cryptocurrency trader is under 40 (mean age is 38) and does not have a college degree (55 percent). Two-fifths of crypto traders are not white (44 percent), and 41 percent are women. Over one-third (35 percent) have household incomes under $60,000 annually.”

“Cryptocurrencies are opening up investing opportunities for more diverse investors, which is a very good thing,” said NORC’s Angela Fontes, while Lindsey added, “African Americans are already early adopters in the sense that we invest in crypto at a rate twice that of our white peers.” 

This user profile is a departure from that of the typical stocks-and-bonds investor, Campbell Harvey, a finance professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, told Roll Call. Crypto users tend to be younger and more likely to include Latinos or Black people. “This idea of bypassing the traditional financial institutions is quite intriguing for a segment of the population that’s largely not welcome in our traditional centralized finance,” Harvey said. 

Lindsey echoed this last point. “In the [U.S.] banking industry, African Americans for many years were not given access to business or home loans despite being just as financially solvent as many of their white counterparts,” while in other instances:

“African-American borrowers were charged significantly higher interest rates than whites. This caused many African Americans to lose trust in the traditional banking and investing system.” 

According to Frazier, this movement toward crypto and blockchain is consistent with the “long arc of Black history with aspirations to be financially independent, financially secure” — and also the desire to be entrepreneurs. 

Back in the late 1960s, she noted, the Congress of Racial Equality, among others, was agitating at the community level for the idea that laborers could also be owners of a home or a business — i.e., developing a second income and along with some financial security. 

Thus, emerging technologies such as Web3, decentralized finance and decentralized autonomous organizations — that break down traditional barriers among workers, consumers and shareholders — resonate with many African Americans, including Frazier’s 80-year-old father, who for years fought for economic development in Cleveland, Ohio. “He gets it [crypto],” she told Cointelegraph. 

“Our message has been, ‘Become early adopters and change the playing field by being producers, not consumers,’” added Mesidor, who also leads the National Policy Network of Women of Color in Blockchain.

White and male — still?

Still, inclusion is not found uniformly through the cryptocurrency world. The software development area remains — to a significant degree — the province of white males, for instance. 

“Yes, it is a concern,” commented Lindsey. “It is extremely homogeneous, particularly at the leadership levels.” Tech leaders must be ready to hire managers who are prepared to work with affinity groups of color to develop new talent, and then train talent for those anticipated new roles, he said, further explaining:

“The predominately white male tech sector leans too heavily on nepotism to find new talent and often lacks creativity in imagining what a qualified candidate might look like.”

Many candidates of color have transferable skills and real-world experience that could greatly benefit an organization, Lindsey added, but “they are overlooked because they don’t fit the traditional mold.”

Meanwhile, Mesidor’s Women of Color in Blockchain group is pressing to develop not just crypto users but also software and hardware developers, as well as miners and stakers. Communities of color have also been encouraged to create crypto merchant accounts for e-commerce businesses and nonprofits to access a new consumer base. As Mesidor told Cointelegraph:

“They are leveraging Web3 and decentralized autonomous organizations and capitalizing on nonfungible tokens to protect intellectual property and monetize their work.”

Black entrepreneurs need more resources to build out what they’ve begun, said Mesidor, including access to capital for micro-enterprises and investment in skills training. These are “vital to ensure America stays competitive in the innovation economy.”

The African-American community has been actively engaged in the education challenge, according to Mesidor. “Over the last decade, it has been innovators of color in crypto that have launched education campaigns and built products and services to dismantle long-standing economic inequities in urban and rural areas here in America,” she continued. “The efforts of Black and Latinx industry leaders is the reason why crypto adoption in communities of color leads the nation by double digits.” 

Assuming leadership roles

In sum, those who have historically been shut out of centralized, legacy finance — who can’t get a loan, or buy a house, or start a business — and “who may not have even had official government-issued identification” now have access to “new instruments for payments, sending money (remittances) and the capacity to transact in the global marketplace for the first time,” Mesidor noted. 

But more needs to happen before real change occurs. “The Black community will need to quickly recognize the value and opportunity that blockchain provides and get involved in the industry at all levels,” said Lindsey, while leaders in the crypto and blockchain space will have to ensure “that Black and brown communities have equal access to not only the technology but also access to leadership roles, market trends, data and analytics.”

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Satoshi Nakamoto’s Bitcoin white paper is now a 13-year-old teenager

Today, Bitcoin maintains a stable trading value well above $60k after experiencing a gradual appreciation of 7,749,999,900% ever since its launch.

The iconic Bitcoin (BTC) white paper celebrates thirteen years of financial disruption after being first published on Oct. 31, 2008, by an anonymous person or entity named Satoshi Nakamoto.

The white paper, titled Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System, foresaw the need for a peer-to-peer online payment system that is self-governing, secure and limited in quantity. The Bitcoin network was launched on Jan. 03, 2009, having each Bitcoin priced at $0.0008.

While Bitcoin was initially perceived as a threat by traditional financial institutions, thirteen years of community support and a growing user base have made Bitcoin one of the most profitable investments for the Internet age. Today, Bitcoin maintains a stable trading value well above $60k after experiencing a gradual appreciation of 7,749,999,900% ever since its launch. 

The Bitcoin white paper proposes a solution to prevent double-spending without the risk of trusting a third party. To do this, it mentions the use of ‘honest’ nodes that confirm transactions by overpowering the bad actors in terms of raw central processing unit (CPU) power of computers.

Interestingly enough, the Bitcoin white paper has 15 ‘honest’ and one ‘dishonest’ mentions, explaining the need for honest nodes to ensure the credibility of each transaction. In the words of Satoshi Nakamoto:

“We have proposed a system for electronic transactions without relying on trust. They [honest nodes] vote with their CPU power, expressing their acceptance of valid blocks by working on extending them and rejecting invalid blocks by refusing to work on them.”

The Bitcoin blockchain has mined block number 707542, which offered a mining reward of 6.25000000 BTC. 

As the Bitcoin ecosystem slowly approaches its hard cap or maximum supply of 21 million BTC, the developer community will need to modify the existing rules to incentivize the miners that confirm Bitcoin transactions on the blockchain. The white paper suggests:

“Any needed rules and incentives can be enforced with this consensus mechanism.”

Prominent entrepreneurs from Crypto Twitter such as Anthony Pompliano join in on the celebrations.

Despite the ongoing resistance from numerous governments and authorities such as China, this year marks the beginning of Bitcoin’s legacy as a legal tender in El Salvador. The long-term effect of Bitcoin on El Salvador’s inflated economy will determine the asset’s mainstream adoption among other jurisdictions.

Related: Crypto is impossible to destroy, says Tesla CEO Elon Musk

The success of Bitcoin and the crypto ecosystems as viable investments continue to attract investors from all walks of life. The world’s richest man, Tesla CEO Elon Musk, recently showed support for cryptocurrencies at the Code Conference in California:

“It is not possible to, I think, destroy crypto, but it is possible for governments to slow down its advancement.”

Musk also believes that “cryptocurrency is fundamentally aimed at reducing the power of a centralized government,” which can be one of the main reasons for Bitcoin’s slow mainstream adoption rate.

Musk has also been highly influential in affecting the market price of other cryptocurrencies such Dogecoin (DOGE).

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