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Crypto Stories: YouTuber Paco de la India explains his travels using Bitcoin

The Bitcoiner had visited eight different countries out of his goal of forty and was in Africa at the time of Cointelegraph’s interview.

A YouTuber started traveling the world to see whether he could survive solely on Bitcoin as a means of payment.

In the latest episode of Cointelegraph’s ‘Crypto Stories’ series, Paco from India explained how he started his journey from the city of Bengaluru and learned from the example of travel pioneers who came before him, including Nellie Bly, who circumnavigated the globe in the late 19th century in less than 73 days. Paco worked a variety of jobs before reading up on Bitcoin (BTC) and made a big decision.

“This is 2021,” said Paco. “I will travel the world by using Bitcoin.”

The YouTuber added:

“When my journey started, I had zero dollars. I sold my furniture, got $200 of Bitcoin, and as soon as I started on day one, the first Bitcoin meetup we had in Bengaluru, one guy came and gave me $200 of Bitcoin [...] My plan is to go to 40 countries in 400 days.”

Paco said he was delayed from his travel plans by the ongoing pandemic — particularly when the Omicron variant hit India. However, he had visited eight different countries and was in Africa at the time of Cointelegraph’s interview.

Related: Crypto Stories: YouTuber DataDash talks about his most expensive mistake

“I feel Africa needs Bitcoin more than anyone else in the world,” he said. “All the currencies are falling down, the countries are falling down — it’s a big blow, it’s happening. Fix the money, fix the world.”

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

New video revives debate over Bored Ape Yacht Club’s alleged ‘racist’ imagery

A new video examines the alleged racist and white supremacist symbols hidden in plain sight by Yuga Labs in its most popular NFT collection.

A video released by investigative YouTuber Philip Rusnack, known as ‘Philion,’ has revived the debate over whether Yuga Labs’ flagship Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) non-fungible token (NFT) collection employs racist imagery and white supremacist esotericism.

In the hour-long video released June 20 on YouTube, Rusnack laid out his case, claiming that BAYC is “one massive alt-right inside joke” using language, symbols, and memes from the anonymous image board website 4chan.

He alleged the NFT images featured racist caricatures of Black and Asian peoples and drew comparisons between the symbology and language used by Yuga Labs and the BAYC with that used by the Nazis.

For instance, an example widely used by supporters of the claims draws a comparison between the BAYC logo and the Nazi Totenkopf symbol used by the SS Panzer Division in World War II.

BAYC logo (left) alongside the Totenkopf (middle) symbol with an overlay (right) to present the similarities. Source: gordongoner.com

At the end of the video, Rusnack makes a call to action, asking his viewers to pressure BAYC NFT owners to “burn” their token in a process where the NFT is sent to an unusable and unrecoverable wallet address.

“I want every celebrity actor, athlete, and influencer to burn their f*cking ape. I want to make such a f*cking shit storm that everyone from Steph Curry to Post Malone to Jimmy Fallon is forced to act.”

The claims of racist symbology within the collection have been a hot topic on social media this year but hit the spotlight when artist Ryder Ripps published a compilation of what he claims is evidence of Nazi imagery and antisemitism in early 2022.

Ripps bought the domain gordongoner.com, the same pseudonymous moniker adopted by Yuga Labs co-founder Wylie Aronow to host a website that details numerous examples of the esoteric symbolism. The video details information acquired by Rusnack and the research conducted by Ripps.

Rusnack says in the video there is a “point at which these similarities are no longer coincidences,” adding:

“If I bring up one instance that highlights deliberate Nazi, fascist, or alt-right messaging, you may think to yourself, ‘I see it, but that's a reach.’ So I ask you: What is your number? At what point do all of these examples become crystal clear in front of your eyes?”

Without directly citing the controversy, Yuga Labs responded to some of the claims, tweeting in January that apes were used as many in crypto refer to themselves as such. Likely regarding the crypto-slang term “ape in,” used to denote when someone invests heavily into cryptocurrencies or projects with little prior research.

Addressing the BAYC logo, Yuga Labs said the purpose was to make the “club” look “ramshackle and divey” and on why they chose a skull:

“We went with an ape skull to help convey just how bored these apes are – they're 'bored to death.'”

A senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) Center on Extremism, Mark Pitcavage, often cited as an extremism expert, said in a February interview with Input he saw no correlation between the logo and the Totenkopf and was quoted saying:

“The Nazi Totenkopf is one very specific graphic design of a skull and crossbones, and the monkey skull resembles it in no way except insofar as all skulls resemble each other to a certain degree.”

Pitcavage did agree, however, that traits and attributes of some NFTs were problematic such as the “hip hop” trait with a gold chain and the “sushi chef headband” being stereotypes of Black culture and a Japanese person, respectively.

Related: Binance embarrassed after unveiling swastika-like emoji on Hitler’s birthday

Overall though, Pitcavage and another ADL researcher Carla Hill said the research complied by Ripps doesn’t point to a specific group of extremists.

Ripps has faced allegations that his complied research is a publicity tactic to sell his own BAYC derivative NFT collection called “RR/BAYC,” featuring over 6,000 NFTs based on the original collection.

Ripps says the collection is a satire and protest aimed to educate those about the BAYC’s alleged extremist ties. However, these allegations don’t present a counter-argument to the claims presented by Ripps in his research.

Cointelegraph contacted Rusnack, Ripps, and Yuga Labs for comment but did not hear back before publication.

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Youtuber NasDaily’s Bitcoin buy is $200K underwater: ‘Be greedy and HODL’

Bear market advice from Youtuber NasDaily, whose “once in a generation” bet on Bitcoin is down roughly $200,000.

Youtuber NasDaily endured a Bitcoin (BTC) baptism by fire. The entrepreneur and influencer with over 50 million followers invested $500,000 in Bitcoin —right before the bear market kicked in

Cointelegraph spoke to NasDaily (whose real name is Nuseir Yassin) during the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland. Yassin told Cointelegraph that the half a million dollars he saved in Bitcoin is now worth $300,000, adding with a smile that “it’s a great test of conviction.”

Despite the paper loss, he’s more convinced than ever that crypto is the future:

“Even if it goes down to zero, I think I do believe there needs to be a way to capture value on the Internet. And I'm taking a bet that Bitcoin is a once in a generation thing.”

Yassin smash bought over 10 BTC ($500,000) at the tail end of March when the price was around $40,000. Gripped by the “revolution that’s happening in the world,” Yassin bought Bitcoin at the same time his Youtube content took on a crypto focus.

A NasDaily thumbnail from a March 2022 video. Source: Youtube

Indeed, Yassin told Cointelegraph that while his motivation is sharing stories that matter with his audience, “We must talk about it [crypto].”

“Crypto opened up my mind into the problems that exist today and how we can collectively fix them tomorrow. That's why I'm excited–and therefore I should try to educate my audience about it as well.”

Yassin jokes that the digital currency revolution is so important that he had to “force crypto down the throat of anybody that follows NasDaily,” as he educates his audience with daily videos.

Unphased by the $200,000 paper loss in his Bitcoin investment, Yassin is buying more, adding another 3 BTC to his stack in the days prior to the WEF. In the below tweet, Yassin receives a Cointelegraph hat in front of the exclusive Hotel Europe on the WEF's promenade.  

A HODLer with conviction, Yassin offered advice to those new to Bitcoin and bear markets:

“It's time to be greedy. So if you have anything you've wanted to build, do, invest in whatever. Everything now comes at a flash sale. I'm greedy today and for the next 12 months.”

Yassin is a fan of the Sage of Omaha, AKA Warren Buffet, the billionaire business magnate in charge of Berkshire Hathaway. In 1986, Buffet penned an investor letter that coined a popular investor cliché.

Related: WEF 2022: Web3 no longer just about crypto and DeFi, says Polkadot founder Gavin Wood

According to Buffet, investors should be “fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” The popular investment strategy has since been hijacked and meme-ified by the crypto world. The phrase roughly translates to “buy the dip”.

As for Yassin, he jokes that he’s “good for Bitcoin now,” after adding 3 BTC to his stash when the price was sub $30,000. In the meantime, he’s excited to build out a crypto community, and undoubtedly take his audience on a journey further down the Bitcoin rabbit hole.

The video interview will be shared on the Cointelegraph Youtube channel. Subscribe here

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Here’s Why Video Sharing Giant YouTube Plans To Integrate NFTs, According to CEO

Here’s Why Video Sharing Giant YouTube Plans To Integrate NFTs, According to CEO

Video sharing giant YouTube says its planning to integrate non-fungible tokens (NFTs) into its business model. In a new interview with BlockWorks, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki says NFTs would make it easier to identify which creator made a video, and it would add another way for content creators to monetize their work. “If creators are […]

The post Here’s Why Video Sharing Giant YouTube Plans To Integrate NFTs, According to CEO appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Did rapper YG just flex a $30M Bitcoin stack in his new music video?

YG is seen in the music video holding a Ledger cold storage USB close to a smartphone which has a screen bearing a wallet app with more than $30.6 million worth of BTC in it.

Keenon Dequan Ray Jackson, the rapper who goes by the name YG appears to show off a fat $30 million stack of Bitcoin (BTC) in his latest music video.

The reveal appears to either be an eye-watering — but possibly fake — flex, or a crafty bit of product placement, as a cold storage device from crypto wallet provider Ledger is featured prominently in the video. The social team from Ledger was on it immediately too:

In one of the scenes of the music video for the song titled “Scared Money” featuring J. Cole and Moneybagg Yo, YG is seen holding a Ledger wallet close to a smartphone which has a screen bearing a wallet app with more than $30.6 million worth of BTC in it.

While the image could have easily been faked, rappers are well known for flaunting their wealth and success, especially so in this song which has a theme focused on spending money, investing and wearing half a million dollars worth of jewelry around one's neck.

YG is quite the BTC proponent, as he has mentioned owning digital gold in multiple other songs such as “Big Bank” from 2018, and also in an interview with RollingStone from mid-2021.

During that interview YG said that he liked the simplicity of hodling crypto as he could invest his money into the asset class without being distracted from his music career. He drew comparisons to the real estate market, where he would have to spend a lot time working and learn to do it successfully.

“I f*ck with Bitcoin. [...] I got Ethereum recently and I got Dogecoin recently but I’ve had Bitcoin for about three years. [...] Bitcoin came around and it was like ‘what?’ and I can just do it and it turns into that?” he said in reference to the booming price of the asset last year.

In a Reddit post on the r/Bitcoin Reddit community earlier today, users were questioning YG’s mammoth BTC stack, with AvoidMyRange stating that “the chance of all these ending at 0 and the cents ending in .00 is incredibly low. This is obviously fake.”

“It is fake because that isn’t even the layout of the ledger app,” user AKeveryday responded.

Other users saw the funny side of YG’s music-based BTC antics, with Redditor Lexstell11 doing the math on the lyrics from the Big Bank song when BTC was priced around the mid $7,000 range.

“In YG’s song Big Bank, he says ‘I might buy her red bottoms with the crypto- 3 coins that’ll pay your whole semester…’ the song was released on 5/25/2018 when BTC was $7,459 at close. So presumably YG paid $132,000 by today’s conversion for a girl's semester at what I’m assuming was University of Phoenix. I think about this a lot.”

Related: Year of sponsorships: Celebrities who embraced crypto in 2021

Crypto has attracted a strong cohort of rappers over recent years, with icons such as Jay Z and NFT-bull Snoop Dogg both making heavy plays in the sector. Other well-known figures to jump on the gravy train include Meek Mill who snapped up Dogecoin amid the hype last year, Nas who tokenized his music as NFTs earlier this year, and Post Malone who featured a Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT in one of his recent music videos.

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Crypto Stories: Pakistani crypto billionaire wants his country to be less reliant on credit

A former reality TV host with millions of followers on YouTube became one of Pakistan's biggest crypto proponents, and hopes to help his country shine again.

When YouTube was banned in Pakistan, Reality TV star Waqar Zaka "had no other option" than to turn to Bitlanders — an artificial intelligence (AI) educational social platform — to monetize his content in Bitcoin (BTC). Cointelegraph interviewed Zaka for the latest episode of Crypto Stories to find out how this celebrity came up against the Pakistani government.

Zaka claimed that the capital gains he was earning in Bitcoin were "nothing" in comparison to his YouTube earnings, but that no one believed in the origins of his newfound financial freedom. With the goal of making his home country of Pakistan crypto rich, he decided to trade in his media and entertainment work for Bitcoin study materials. 

When the technology-averse Pakistani government banned Bitcoin in 2017, Zaka filed a petition against it and won. He took to social media to speak out against the government's unconstitutional acts, offer advisory support and encourage the Pakistani people to invest in crypto. Zaka was then appointed for  to run the first crypto mining farm to use hydropower in Pakistan for a short-lived venture.

When Bitcoin was still at $5,000, Zaka challenged the government to invest 1% of its budget and put up his property as collateral. He succeeded in getting the government to enact an order that does not criminalize crypto mining or investing unless proven to be invoiced in illegal activities.

Related: Crypto Stories: Spells of Genesis card game resurges in popularity as sales skyrocket

Recently, Pakistan's President Arif Alvi called for more training in blockchain technology, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity during a meeting with blockchain experts.

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg Says Social Media Platform Instagram Will Soon Adopt NFTs

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg says that the photo and video-centric social media platform Instagram will soon support non-fungible tokens (NFTs). According to a new report, the famed Facebook founder announced at SXSW that Instagram would be incorporating NFTs into its platform within the next several months. Though he gave no specifics, Zuckerberg said that the […]

The post Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg Says Social Media Platform Instagram Will Soon Adopt NFTs appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Truth or fiction? Popular former hacker claims to have $7B in BTC

“I’m quite wealthy. Yeah, I do not have to work if I don’t choose to. I have over seven billion dollars worth of Bitcoin,” stated the hacker known as Gummo.

A former blackhat hacker who goes by the name Gummo online claims to have amassed around $7 billion worth of Bitcoin (BTC).

Despite a flood of positive comments and posts relating to his interviews with the Soft White Underbelly YouTube channel — which has 3.18 million subscribers — information about Gummo is scarce elsewhere, which could either be by design or suggest that a large pinch of salt may be required when listening to his extravagant claims.

He said that he has been working in the field for more than 30 years, and while he started hacking for illicit reasons and got caught by authorities, he has since turned to doing good work — thanks to the support and counsel of his wife — such as threat hunting, cybersecurity and developer consulting.

The latest comments came as part of a follow up interview published on March 12, after the initial discussion occurred in late 2020. During the first video, Gummo stated that he built four supercomputers to mine Bitcoin when it was priced at around $200-300 back in 2013, and generated more than 80,000 BTC within a year and half.

According to his claims, he has now amassed roughly 179,000 BTC. If his holdings are calculated at current prices that would rank him at around the 369th richest person globally according to Forbes’ 2021 world’s billionaires list:

“I’m quite wealthy. Yeah, I do not have to work if I don’t choose to. I have over seven billion dollars worth of Bitcoin. ”

Gummo stated that his current work in hacking is not motivated by the desire to have a job or money, but by helping the little guy, as he emphasized the importance of choosing to do the right thing and protect people from online evil.

“Knowing that I'm preventing someone’s grandmother from being a victim of some sort of cyber extortion scheme, that’s the thing I get up for each day and those are the things that motivate me currently,” he said.

Speaking on the dark side of technological advancement, Gummo warned that the hacking has quickly evolved from “having endless javascript pop-ups” humorously spam PCs to the weaponization of data and software against people:

“The landscape is growing darker and more sinister as more people wish to seek their wealth. Whether it be cryptocurrency theft or traditional theft of banking systems.”

“The fact that governments now are keen to begin a war on just the idea of software being deployed is quite frightening and unfortunately that will be society’s new reality,” he added.

Related: No crypto for criminals: Coinjoin BTC mixing tool to block illicit transactions

Looking at the response to the both interviews, it appears Gummo is fast becoming a beloved figure due to his back story which includes a difficult upbringing, the loss of loved ones and a significant shift from the dark side of hacking to helping people online.

The latest video has 14,000 likes so far and there is an almost endless amount of positive feedback for the figure, while the first video has 144,000 likes and the same sentiment in the comments.

“This man has inspired me to pursue cyber security with good intent. I'm a broke teacher, LOVE teaching because it helps students so never focused on the paycheck. Now too old to teach. Considered cyber security as a new career to pay the bills, but Gummo has given more meaning to this career, will now pursue the career to make the world a better place too. Thank you Gummo,” wrote YouTube user “Zim Petrichor.”

User “quicklern818” stated that: “I don't think we're ever going to see this man again, and in a way, I feel that's appropriate — he's like a guardian angel, working behind the scenes and always watching. Sending love to him and his family, and a thank you for all of his hard work.”

Comments on Gummo follow up interview: Soft White Underbelly YouTube channel

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Financial future or false promises? Crypto firms go big on ads in 2022

Cryptocurrency companies have impressive advertising budgets this year, but industry experts have differing opinions when it comes to marketing crypto.

Advertisements are in abundance everywhere we go — from billboards seen throughout road trips to commercials displayed every fifteen minutes or so during television shows. It’s also the case that most advertisements today display messages from major internet-based brands like Amazon, which was ranked as the largest advertiser in the United States in 2020. Telecommunication providers and payment giants like American Express have also been listed as some of the biggest advertisers in the United States. These companies typically spend billions of dollars per year on marketing messages aimed to inform, persuade and remind consumers about their products and services. 

2022 is the year for crypto advertising

While dot-com brand commercials and social media advertisements continue to bombard consumers, some advertising executives believe that crypto companies will dominate advertising in 2022 and in the years to come.

Mark DiMassimo, founder and creative chief of DiGo — a New York-based marketing agency — told Cointelegraph that he believes crypto-focused ads will dwarf the dot-com and social media phenomenon due to the rise of Web3 and the integration of crypto assets within digital ecosystems known as the Metaverse.” DiMassimo said:

“This is not typical consumer language, but almost every startup I work with or LinkedIn job offerings I see mention the Metaverse and Web3 now. Cryptocurrency is central to all this. Therefore, I think this will be a bigger ad boom than the dot-com and social boom.”

DiMassimo added that the rise of nonfungible tokens (NFTs) has also increased the popularity of cryptocurrency. This, in turn, has allowed crypto companies to obtain large advertising budgets. “Many early adopters focused on word of mouth marketing or advertising through Reddit, Discord and other social channels. We’ve reached the next level though, which is being displayed through classic marketing and advertising techniques,” explained DiMassimo.

For instance, DiMassimo pointed out that crypto commercials displayed during the 2022 Super Bowl highlighted the notion that blockchain companies will dominate the advertising world moving forward. “I called the 2022 Super Bowl the ‘Crypto Bowl,’” he joked. To DiMassimo’s point, though, 2022 Super Bowl ads from leading crypto companies like FTX and Coinbase did make an impact, attracting an abundance of media attention while also demonstrating that crypto companies have massive advertising budgets.

An NBC executive disclosed that NBC was selling 2022 Super Bowl ads for $6.5 million for 30-second spots to put this in perspective. Bloomberg reported that some ads sold for as much as $7 million this year. “Production values are going to ‘Mars’ and crypto companies want to have their voices heard in the real world,” said DiMassimo. As such, he believes that more crypto organizations will sponsor ads with celebrities or with sports stadiums to prove they mean business.

Are crypto commercials selling false promises?

While the rise of crypto ads is notable, some industry experts are aware of the dangers associated with cryptocurrency companies promoting advertisements to the masses. For instance, Richard Smith, an investing expert and chief operating officer of risk management tool RiskSmith, told Cointelegraph that this year’s Super Bowl ads from crypto companies were a disappointment in the sense that they completely failed to be honest with their audience:

“These commercials didn’t disclose any risks involved with high levels of financial speculation. There was no recognition of risks at all in fact — only rewards. I understand that Super Bowl ads are supposed to be fun and lighthearted, but these were not authentic.”

Smith elaborated that the Coinbase Super Bowl commercial boasted the reward of getting free Bitcoin (BTC) simply by scanning a color-changing QR code, which silently moved across the television screen. When scanned, the QR code redirected users to Coinbase’s landing page that promoted a Bitcoin giveaway and sign-up promotions.

Coinbase 2022 Super Bowl ad. Source: DiGo

Smith added that eToro’s Super Bowl commercial promised users the ability of “going to the moon” by trading cryptocurrency and stocks.

eToro 2022 Super Bowl ad. Source: eToro

While these commercials may have been captivating, Smith believes that in the long run, these advertisements will ultimately be disadvantageous to crypto companies due to what he believes is a lack of authenticity. “I think cryptocurrency is more about independence and transparency, and those who care about crypto will be turned off by these obviously pandering messages,” he remarked.

Smith was not the only one frustrated by 2022 Super Bowl advertisements from crypto companies. As Cointelegraph previously reported, United States Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown also blasted the ad-makers for not including appropriate warnings and risks involved. “I don't think crypto ads should be bluntly disingenuous about the benefits of their product. People are getting hurt badly today because of the whole advertising-driven meme madness,” said Smith.

DiMassimo begs to differ, noting that the reason crypto Super Bowl ads generated criticism was that they resonated with the mainstream. According to DiMassimo, Super Bowl advertising isn’t about educating consumers in 30–60 seconds but rather about leaving people with a memorable feeling. He added:

“For example, with Coinbase and the QR-code, the idea was to get people to sign up and remember their exchange while also creating conversations. Coinbase increased the chances of this with digital repetition, so people will likely remember their brand over others. Emotions are more important in advertising than rational. I think we will most likely see more people sign up for Coinbase as a result.”

Rationale behind the advertisements

To DiMassimo’s point, many Super Bowl watchers did respond to the Coinbase commercial. Coinbase published a blog post the day after the event in which Kate Rouch, chief marketing officer for Coinbase, stated that the exchange saw over 20 million hits on its landing page in one minute. “Volume that was historic and unprecedented,” wrote Rouch. He added that engagement was six times higher than the company‘s previous benchmarks.

Unfortunately, Coinbase’s website crashed following its 2022 Super Bowl ad, resulting in a slew of additional issues. However, this technical mishap didn’t seem to create major issues for the cryptocurrency exchange. As Rouch wrote, “understandably, this volume led to us temporarily throttling our systems.”

While the Coinbase QR-code commercial created quite the scene during this year’s Super Bowl, Brad Michelson, head of U.S. marketing at eToro, told Cointelegraph that eToro views the Super Bowl as one of the best brand-building opportunities in the U.S. “This makes it the perfect opportunity for our brand to put a stake in the ground, particularly in the scope of the ‘crypto bowl’ that we saw this year,” said Michelson. In regards to eToro’s To the Moon commercial, Michelson explained that the ad showed how the company perceives social investing:

“It was especially important for us to include nods to the crypto community. But, it was also a priority to help make investing in these assets as approachable as possible. Our team was able to accomplish exactly that through this campaign.”

Michelson added that eToro has had a large crypto advertising footprint in the U.S. for the past few years, noting that the company has experimented across television, radio and print channels to reach new audiences. While this may be one goal, Michelson also mentioned that eToro believes education is the key to investing and will, therefore, be investing more time in this area moving forward. “Crypto is part of eToro‘s lifeblood and we plan to continue promoting the industry through our advertising into the future,” he remarked.

Smith expressed skepticism, however, remarking that crypto companies should be disclosing how blockchain technology makes digital sovereignty possible, rather than pushing out ads for free Bitcoin that may invoke fear of missing out, or FOMO. With this in mind, Smith mentioned that one crypto company did connect more with users in his opinion. He noted that Binance’s Jimmy Butler ad that appeared before the 2022 Super Bowl across social media channels was less about hype and more about trust: “This is what crypto is about.” 

Indeed, Binance’s 30-second social media ad featured American basketball star Jimmy Butler who stated that he doesn’t know much about cryptocurrency. Butler added that Super Bowl watchers should always do their own research, regardless of what advertising messages say.

Patrick Hillman, chief communications officer at Binance, told Cointelegraph that while Binance looked at the opportunity to run an ad during the 2022 Super Bowl, the company decided against it and instead launched its message on social channels before the game:

“The actual return on investment of Super Bowl ads is tough to gauge. Most companies want to do this for brand awareness, which isn’t our goal. I also think it’s bizarre to advertise Web3 and blockchain in between beer and Coca-Cola ads.”

Hillman added that while most crypto campaigns are celebrity-driven to create brand awareness, Binance aims to focus more on addressing education for new users through channels like Twitter, Discord and Telegram. “We are taking a different approach from many of our peers. The crypto industry has no ceiling when it comes to innovation. There are a lot more new users now than educated users, so finding ways to effectively educate these individuals is important,” he said.

And, although Binance’s “unofficial” 2022 Super Bowl campaign did feature a well-known figure, Hillman argued that the goal was to use a notable name to flip the advertising model around to encourage users to do their own research when it comes to crypto. “We want people to fully understand the opportunities associated with cryptocurrency and this simply can’t be done in a 30-second Super Bowl ad.”

Given the fact that Binance’s advertisement was not displayed during the Super Bowl, some may wonder if the message was effective. According to Hillman, this wasn’t an issue, noting that Binance’s official Twitter account ad received 55,000 clicks in the first quarter of the 2022 Super Bowl. “We then pushed it to a number of communities on Reddit and from there, it went viral,” explained Hillman. Even more impressive, Hillman remarked that Binance spent a tenth of what the company’s peers did on Super Bowl advertisements.

What’s next for crypto advertisers?

While crypto companies are ramping up their advertising efforts, it’s important to point out that other forms of marketing are also on the horizon. Although the 2022 Super Bowl demonstrated the impact of cryptocurrency-focused commercials, billboards advocating for crypto, Web3 and NFTs are also being seen more widely.

For example, Christian Hasker, chief marketing officer at Hedera Hashgraph — a layer-1 distributed ledger technology platform — told Cointelegraph that the company is advertising on billboards and using online video ads to cater to prospective Web 3 developers. “We recently ran billboard ads at Denver Airport for EthDenver. The ad campaign was well received and the return on investment exceeded our expectations,” said Hasker. In turn, Hasker mentioned that Hedera will build upon this momentum at other upcoming blockchain events.

Hedera Hashgraph EthDenver billboard. Source: Hedera Hashgraph

NFT-related billboards are also becoming more common. Most recently, SaveArtSpace — a nonprofit art patronage organization — helped Nadya Tolokonnikova, a conceptual artist and member of the Russian punk-rock collective Pussy Riot, display NFT artwork across the United States. Tolokonnikova selected 10 artworks to be exhibited on billboard ad spaces in New York, California, Tennessee, Nevada, Missouri, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana and Alabama.

Michele Pred, Equal Pay billboard Located at Sunset Blvd & N Normandie Ave, in Los Angeles. Source: SaveArtSpace

Travis Rix, co-founder of SaveArtSpace, told Cointelegraph that Tolokonnikova’s exhibition aims to challenge the mainstream ideas that are currently held. “Women make less than men for the same work in addition to all the other issues women face. We aim to challenge the viewer to change or force for change,” explained Rix. He added that SaveArtSpace has new billboard exhibitions just about every month:

“It‘s very effective, even if people only see one of our billboards for a second, it may stick with them all day. And, if they pass these every day for a month, it may change the way people think.”

Regardless of a company’s advertising choice, DiMassimo warned that crypto organizations that are new to the ad space must have a clear strategy in mind. “Money can be soaked up fast if you are unsure of what you are doing in the ad world. This is still a new and volatile space, and it will be turbulent for advertisers that can’t afford to sustain strategies.”

$200,000 Bitcoin ‘Doable’ in 2025 Courtesy of One Catalyst, Says Venture Capitalist Dan Tapiero

Cryptopedia: Learn the basics of DAOs and how they work

Cointelegraph breaks DAOs down, explaining why this increasingly popular governance structure is relevant and transformative.

In the latest Cryptopedia episode, viewers can get a succinct and informative overview of decentralized autonomous organizations, or DAOs. Cointelegraph's Jackson DuMont believes DAOs have the power to "completely transform how work and social collaboration are organized."

What makes this type of organization both decentralized and autonomous? The answer is smart contracts on the blockchain. Fundamentally, a DAO runs on the lines of computer code written on smart contracts that anyone can interacted with in the same way.

DuMont described the three major steps necessary to launch a DAO. The first step is creating that smart contract. The second step is to determine how to receive funding and enact governance, usually done by creating a token. Lastly, the DAO is deployed on the blockchain.

The most popular use case of a DAO is crowdfunding. The money pooled together is put into a smart contract that, in return, issues tokens to DAO members. Tokenholders, who own equity in the DAO, can then vote on how spend the money and vote to appoint delegates. 

In the case of ConstitutionDAO, members raised just over $49 million to buy an original copy of the U.S. Constitution but were outbid at auction. Another example is Blockbuster DAO, which aims to raise enough money to buy the video rental brand from Dish Network and turn it into a streaming film studio.

DAOs intend to reduce the risk of poor leadership through horizontal leadership, or flat hierarchies that level out the playing field of power. The reach is infinite and no matter where a member is located, everyone is bound by the same rules of the smart contract. Trust is placed in code rather than people. 

Related: $53 million raised for Assange showed the power of DAOs

Of course, there remain risks and concerns over legality and security. One notable example of a DAO gone wrong is The DAO, which was hacked for $50 million in 2016. A recent report claims to reveal the identity of the alleged hacker

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