âWe are not trying to fix bitcoin.âÂ
MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylorâs remark Wednesday at a meeting of the new Bitcoin Mining Council seemed to encapsulate the gist of what the event, on Twitter Spaces and attended by more than 7,000 listeners, was trying to accomplish.Â
There were few concrete next steps discussed this time. Instead, the meeting became another way for bitcoin industry representatives to air their grievances about those claims that bitcoin mining is bad for the environment.  Â
For instance, hereâs what Perianne Boring, president of the Chamber of Digital Commerce, had to say:
Saylor said the Bitcoin Mining Councilâs responsibility is to provide a âsharing, cooperative and informative space [from which] people can learn the benefits of bitcoin mining.âÂ
He said not having that âinformative spaceâ â or reading the headlines â has prompted politicians to move against the cryptocurrency. Â
âBitcoin has external threats,â Saylor said. âThe threat is not bitcoiners talking to each other. The threat is people that donât understand bitcoin.âÂ