Anarchist activist Cody Wilson has officially launched his candidacy for the upcoming Bitcoin Foundation board elections, and reaffirmed his intention to try and disband the organization from within if successful.
Wilson nominated himself with a post on the foundationâs forums on 20th December and has also launched a website to support his campaign.
A staunch opponent of bitcoin regulation or centralization, Wilson is also best known for co-founding Defense Distributed, a donor-funded nonprofit organization that designs and distributes plans for the 3D-printed âLiberatorâ pistol and âGhost Gunnerâ CNC milling machine.
He was also part of the founding team of DarkWallet, the project to make bitcoin transaction anonymization easy for everyday users.
âI will run on a platform of the complete dissolution of the Bitcoin Foundation and will begin and end every single one of my public statements with that message,â Wilson said in November when he first announced his intention to run.
Notably, the Bitcoin Foundationâs November announcement that it would wind down its education, outreach and public policy efforts to focus on developing bitcoinâs software core appears not to have weakened his campaign.
Wilsonâs recently posted manifesto also does not hold back on its combative rhetoric and disdain for the foundation, with its introduction that states:
âThis Bitcoin Foundation ⦠was always an embarrassing exercise in bad faith and state philosophy. It was always a vessel for frauds and second-rate minds to collude against the public. I invite you now to its ritual sacrifice.â
Elections will be held 13-19th February for the individual board seats being vacated by outgoing executive director Jon Matonis and current chief scientist Gavin Andresen. Election committee chair Brian Goss posted an acknowledgement that nominations including Wilsonâs had been received. Official confirmations will be posted mid-January.
The foundation board also voted in November to retire the Founding Member seat of chairman Peter Vessenes, to be replaced with an International Chapter Director Seat to represent non-US affiliates. The goal is to eventually have a board 100% elected by foundation members.
Speaking to CoinDesk, Wilson said his complaint is not with any individual or group within the foundation, but the structure of the organization itself.
The problem with the Bitcoin Foundation goes all the way back to its inception and original mission, Wilson said, adding:
âThe best way to help your business is to be part of a trade group and lobby Congress for preferential or beneficial regulation.â
Rather than forming a body to standardize and protect an open-source technology a la the Linux Foundation, he said, the Bitcoin Foundation gave itself a wider role with lobbying power and creation of global policy strategies.
Incoming executive director Patrick Murck promised a new era of openness and consultation with the foundationâs constituents, and conducted surveys into what members wanted most. This led to the promise to focus only on bitcoinâs technology.
This refocus on development only, however, is superficial and there is no meaningful break with its current incarnation, Wilson believes. He notes that public statements have not changed the foundationâs by-laws, its established channels of communication or its affiliate programs around the world.
Even if current leaders are sincere, those in the near or longer-term future could simply come in and pick up the threads previous lobbying efforts have left in place, he said.
When bitcoinâs price shot up around April 2013 and began to appear in mainstream headlines, often in association with operations like Silk Road, regulators also started to take a much closer interest.
In response, advocacy groups, including the Bitcoin Foundation, hurried to reassure the authorities that the technology and most businesses were legitimate.
Had it not done so, some say, government moves to further marginalize or even block access to bitcoin may have ensued.
Wilson disagrees, and says the foundationâs founders were also too fast to reveal bitcoinâs potential and seek to negotiate it with regulators.
He said:
âIt was the first self-annointed evangelists of bitcoin who were also the people that started this foundation. I just think it was such a critical kind of betrayal, because they gave the security state all the briefings on the technology, where we couldâve [had] one, maybe two, more years of freedom to experiment.â
Despite the rhetoric, the candidacy is not meant to be flippant or overly negative, Wilson said, and he intends to âgive other candidates a run for their moneyâ.
âLike in most of my endeavors, I donât know enough to know if itâs impossible.â
He has been conversing with other former members of the foundation who have become disillusioned with the its recent direction, he said. This could potentially bring a contingent of energized participants to the election who wouldnât have been involved otherwise.
Wilson expects outside criticism of his campaign, or even challenges to his legitimacy via the foundationâs own bylaws, should he be elected.
However, it is a serious campaign, he stresses, saying it is legally possible while abiding by all the current rules. He would take his seat and does not wish other members to simply turn him away at the first board meeting.
But can bitcoin still succeed without a public face to argue for its legitimacy?
That depends on your definition of success, Wilson said, adding that in terms of acceptance and use, bitcoinâs superiority over existing financial technology would see it make gains without formal help.
He said:
âMost of the critical innovations in finance so far have just happened ⦠e-mail didnât need a foundation, it just took over the Internet like a wildfire, it was so superior to mailing a letter.â
Wilson would like to start a debate about what âbitcoinâs successâ actually means to different people, he said. He does not view success as bitcoin merely becoming an âunder the hood lubricant for other financial transactionsâ, unseen by users.
Instead, it represents a kind of singularity that entails whole new political ways of being, new economic modes, rebellion.
Making âFaustian bargainsâ with regulatory powers would ultimately limit what can be achieved with bitcoin politically, even if the software remained capable of fulfilling Satoshi Nakamotoâs original vision.
Jim Harper was the Bitcoin Foundationâs Global Policy Counsel from March to December 2014, and is a senior fellow at libertarian think-tank the Cato Institute. Disagreeing with the foundationâs decision to withdraw from public policy and education, he left his job there and is now also running for a board position.
He posted on the Bitcoin Foundation forums that he did not agree with Wilsonâs approach, and suggested it was more about provocation and drawing attention to the cause than for the good of bitcoin â but also that such discussion âshouldnât be off the tableâ.
Harper told CoinDesk that the foundation instead needs stability before it can again be a credible public policy voice or educational resource. While he has his own vision for the foundationâs return to a policy role, it would require a consensus of the board.
âLetâs make sure thereâs a solid organization that has fundraising in place to support all its work, then we might regrow the organization into roles that many of us joined expecting the Foundation to do.â
Bitcoin can certainly exist without a foundation, Harper added, but a well-run foundation can help speed its adoption wordwide.
âEducation and public policy work can increase direct adoption and position conventional financial services companies to help deliver bitcoinâs benefits to billions of people.â
Growing the bitcoin ecosystem this way would do nothing to prevent bitcoin from developing independently at the same time, he said. There need not be a conflict between those parts of the bitcoin community interacting with regulators, and others developing the ecosystem independent of government regulatory systems.
Wilson compared bitcoin pioneers to those of the 1990sâ âcryptography warsâ who went to court and risked jail terms for creating technology like remailers and data encryption software PGP, as well as his own work with Defense Distributed.
He said:
âYes, itâs more uncomfortable. You donât make as much money. If you want to start a bitcoin business you might run afoul of the SEC. But making these direct overtures to [regulators], without even being solicited, that seems to me to be a betrayal of the goodwill and political capital of early bitcoin.â
Wilson acknowledges that there is considerable anger and outrage in the words heâs written in his campaign manifesto, but insists it is not his intent to be punitive.
I donât believe itâs purely about punishing the foundation for what itâs done; itâs about recognizing it and hopefully inviting whatever libertarian or anarchist segment of bitcoin is left and activating it.â
CoinDesk spoke to the Bitcoin Foundation, but its leadership declined to comment other than saying anyone had a right to campaign on the platform of their choice and that the organization did not want to interfere in the electoral process.
Â