Depending on who you ask, Whit Jackson is anywhere between 10 and 16 years old, his elastic age a testament to the general awkwardness of male puberty.
Jackson, aware of this, quickly clarifies in conversation. Heâs 15, a soon-to-be sophomore at Brentwood School in Los Angeles, a K-12 coed day school that boasts an A-list of alumni including child actors Ben and Fred Savage as well as three current members of the pop rock band Maroon 5.
At school, Jackson already has a distinction, however. Heâs âthe bitcoin kidâ, a nickname that seems to have stuck even if itâs origin story is less clear.
âAll my teachers know me as âthe bitcoin kidâ. I told a few of my friends and it spread just because Iâm really passionate. Iâll wear bitcoin t-shirts. They tease me for it,â he tells CoinDesk.
One reason for the attention is that after school and on weekends, Jackson works on cryptocurrency projects. Heâs currently the CTO of Etherparty, a platform that aims to make issuing smart contracts on Ethereum easier for developers, and serves as a summer intern at blockchain-based currencies trading platform Tether.
Jackson said he was inspired to begin work on Ethereum, the decentralized app development platform invented by another young wunderkind, 21-year-old Vitalik Buterin, shortly after reading the white paper. At the request of Etherparty CEO Lisa Cheng, a friend and colleague, Jackson joined Etherparty earlier this year.
âThe idea of Etherparty is to make Ethereum development a lot easier,â Jackson explained. âWhen you write code and deploy it on a server, you donât need to build your own server and use the command line to build the contracts. We make it straightforward to do it.â
Ultimately, he says the goal of Etherparty is to âbring mainstream developers to Ethereumâ, replicating the process by which he first became enamored with the technology â and its community â a year and a half ago.
âItâs a product of meeting the right people,â Jackson says of his continued notoriety among the technologyâs core community.
âI canât imagine where Iâd be at this point without bitcoin.â
Though he cites bitcoin as the impetus for his work, itâs another cryptocurrency that perhaps has more to do with Jacksonâs interest in the technology.
Jackson said he first learned of bitcoin in fall 2013, but it wasnât until the debut of the once-popular dogecoin that his interest was piqued.
âI saw dogecoin on Reddit and was like âWhoa Doge! Wow!â At first, I thought it was a joke, I didnât realize there was anything but bitcoin,â he recalled.
âIt wasnât really finance that got me interested in dogecoin. It was dogecoin that got me into finance.â
Jackson missed the âcrazy price inflationâ that happened as the cryptocurrencyâs popularity grew. However, he remembers being swept up in the real-world impact the project had, even watching the dogecoin-sponsored Jamaican bobsled team race in the Olympics on TV.
Soon, he fell deeper into the community, hanging out in forums where he got his first experiences learning to code. At the beginning, Jackson indicates he was a total novice, but that others were eager to help him learn.
âI wanted to be cool and learn with the developers,â he said. âFor me, it wasnât anything super libertarian, it was âWhoa, I love dogeâ, and I thought it was funny and the community was great.â
Jackson is still friends with the dogecoin developers but says he isnât the biggest altcoin supporter these days. The remarks come with the air of someone whoâs been around long enough to have seen what happens when these communities turn sour.
âI realize the scene is not that great, most innovation happens in bitcoin. All these altcoins really only serve for price manipulation,â he added. âBut I know a ton of people because of dogecoin.â
Even after dogecoin fell out of the spotlight, Jackson stuck around to hone his skills.
For a while, he was a moderator for a subreddit for tacocoin, a short-lived offshoot of the dogecoin community and was a developer at opalcoin, an anonymous cryptocurrency, even serving as its spokesman during a high-profile hacking incident.
This constant exploration of the bitcoin and blockchain space leads in part to the confusion around Jacksonâs age and expertise. Cheng, the Etherparty CEO who recently hired Jackson, notes it was she who was first hired by Jackson a year ago for the Opalcoin project.
âMy first interaction with him was when he hired me,â she said.
âWe had only messaged through Skype and email so I didnât realize he was young until we had a phone call sometime later.â
It also comes with its own set of challenges, as Cheng notes that Etherparty is only a part time project for the team during the summer, as Jackson has had a busy summer schedule complete with summer camp and debate camp.
This confusion surrounding Jacksonâs age makes sense when divorced from his sometimes spritely voice. He peppers his comments with all the typical industry colloquialisms.
âI saw use cases and it just kind of clicked,â he says, recalling his first interactions with Ethereum, his current project of choice.
Jackson also attests to a love of decentralization, as well as an underlying support for the movementâs ethos, noting that he often gets âpreachyâ on the subject.
âI think it has the potential to change our modern interactions,â Jackson said. âI think decentralization causes so many benefits, it reduces trust you have in individuals. Itâs very idealistic for me. Itâs the way the future will be.â
So far, Jackson believes the Ethereum platform is off to a âgood startâ, even though the price of ETH, the networkâs native token, has declined since trading began.
âAll the haters are going to be, âThe price is down 33%â from when it openedâ, but I think the fact that people are running applications on it and the community base is strong,â he said.
Further, he expressed his belief that Etherparty will find an audience given that itâs still âreally trickyâ to use the platform in its current developer beta stage.
âItâs already not going to be the safest, but having to learn a new coding language, Serpent or Solidity, whether or not youâre just going to compile it, it just gets really complicated,â he says, adding: âWe realized there was a gap in the market.â
As for now, Jackson is happy honing his skills. He visited a family friend at Google this August, and expressed an interest in working for the tech giant some day.
While heâs not the most proficient coder, he believes his knowledge of bitcoin is high, and that heâll be able to have a full-time career in the space.
âTo the dismay of a lot of people, I do plan to go to college and get a job in bitcoin and blockchain,â he quips.
As for his internship at Tether, he said heâs been working on âreally cool projectsâ and âcomplicated stuff heâs not allowed to discussâ.
Tether CTO Craig Sellars was positive in his remarks about the 15-year-old, calling him a âyoung geniusâ.
âHe really gets it, and has the perfect talents and the best possible attitude to contribute to the digital currency ecosystem,â Sellars said. âIt continues to be exciting to work with him.â
He takes his online detractors and minor celebrity in the community less seriously, brushing aside posts that have sought to poke fun at his age like a true industry veteran.
âIâve seen them all,â he said.
Images via Twitter