Craig Wright Can Serve Bitcoin.Org Over Publication of Bitcoin White Paper, UK Court Rules
The move is largely procedural and does not settle any questions around the origin of the Bitcoin white paper.
The move is largely procedural and does not settle any questions around the origin of the Bitcoin white paper.
Bitcoin has an ecological footprint and so does the carnivorous diet of many hardcore bitcoiners. Sacrifice meat to save the sacred cow.
A conversation with crypto lawyer Marta Belcher about how cryptocurrencies fit into the decades-long battle for online privacy and the coming attacks against it.
Save the internet intellectualizing for another day.
As dogecoin's gains top 9,392%, CoinDesk’s Adam B. Levine finds some surprising parallels between the top meme token and bitcoin.
“They used to be revolutionary,” one former user said.
It’s official: Gary Gensler is the new chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), after a 53-45 vote by the U.S. Senate on Wednesday. Gensler, who was nominated to the position by President Joe Biden in January, previously ran the federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), overseeing the implementation of new regulations around derivatives […]
Thiel's comments about China “weaponizing” bitcoin to hurt the U.S. are a warning about the cost of inaction.
If mass adoption is the aim, we might as well tell the truth about what that world looks like. The whole truth.
Lashes, thought to be the first "meme agent," is helping clients who were successful on Web 2.0 get into crypto.
Justin Schmidt has become the latest Wall Streeter to leave a traditional finance firm to join one fully on the crypto side of things.
As chief legal officer, Olta Andoni will be navigating uncharted waters, given the novel and complex issues posed by NFTs.
NFTs provide one of the best tools ever invented for making the most of scarce resources, says EY's blockchain leader.
Bitcoin progresses through boom and bust cycles but always finds a new level of support. That may be true for its price and the people here today.
Bitcoin has a tendency to show up the weakness of governments in the face of technology. This is nowhere more true than in India.
The big wins in crypto are going to come from the punks, hippies and contrarians. In this very bullish season, don't be enraptured by the “grownups.”
Sam Bankman-Fried wants to do good by doing well.
By embracing bitcoiners, Tesla is likely to make more sales among that crowd even if they pay in fiat. Any extra BTC the carmaker gets is gravy.
Crypto could do with a little less tribalism.
The same fascistic tendencies Walter Benjamin saw in the rise of mass media are at play in the NFT "revolution," too, culture critic Jonathan Beller writes.
When rarefied art critics sneer at non-fungible tokens, it’s not about art. It’s about instructing the in-group what they should and should not care about.
Belfort, previously a bitcoin critic, now says he believes the cryptocurrency holds advantages over stocks.
In a bull market, people new to crypto will seek out any information they can, from serious to silly. What should they find?
Cryptocurrencies and NFTs are often derided for not having "intrinsic value." But, honestly, what does?
Vignesh Sundaresan said he wants to show Indians and people of color they could be art patrons, too.
Software firm Meitu, which just bought more ETH and BTC, points to the meta-nature of modern investing driven by consensus opinions.
Bitcoiners may want to dismiss the energy/environment debate, but it's not going away as more corporates look to make an allocation.
Talking on CoinDesk TV's First Mover on Tuesday, the pseudonymous founder of NFT fund Metapurse, said he plans to "build monuments in the virtual world" for it.
The NFT features a gold trophy decorated with "diamond hands," a group of Shiba Inu dogs, a moon and the crypto term "HODL."
The NFT is now being offered for sale at $1.7 million.