Bitcoin is a spanking-new, highly-specialized topic. Even those deeply involved donât agree on many points. So why trust a reporter whoâs only given it an hourâs thought, max?
My well-meaning, non-tech friends know Iâm interested in bitcoin â âsince Iâve written about it every day since mid-2013 and bewilder them with it on Facebook.
They often send me links to bitcoin articles, usually from the mainstream media. In a way, itâs a fresh perspective, since bitcoiners spend most of their days buried in chat rooms and Reddit, and forget the outside world.
I said freshâââbut not particularly edifying. Quite the opposite, in fact.
After the excitement of the immediate at bitcoinâs edges, itâs a bit depressing to see where the outside world is stuck.
The latest is this one, from John Naughton at The Guardian. Reading The Guardian for finance and economic commentary is like reading Hustler for the literary reviews, but some people do.
The first thing you see is a big photo of Estonian Prime Minister, Taavi Rõivasâ â âand a caption saying his government is experimenting with âblockchain technologyâ.
Hereâs the first red flag. As a proud (and upstanding) e-Resident of Estonia Iâve heard this a few times already. The link is tenuous at bestâ â âthe laudable Estonian e-Residency program has a few links to the hypothetical BitNation project, but thatâs it.
As to what the blockchain experiment actually entails, the article doesnât mention it. Thereâs more information in the sentence before this one.
Then we get to bitcoin, with this line:
â⦠in so far as Joe Public thinks about distributed ledgers at all, it is in the context of bitcoin, money laundering and online drug dealing.â
I know the mainstream mediaâs modus operandi on unfamiliar topics is to single out a few tropes and flog them till theyâre red and raw, but really?â This trope was old in 2013.
That age of bitcoin yore when the price had just hit a massive high of $275 and the Dread Pirate Roberts still menaced the world on his good ship Silk Road, confounding equally swashbuckling DEA and Secret Service agents at every turn.
Do people buy drugs with bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies? Yep! Thatâs because it is money. People use digital money to buy goods just like they use paper cash. Paper cash, for the record, is still the most common way to buy such party goods.
Those hungry to link bitcoin with crime usually haul in money laundering, too. Theoretically itâs possible, though weâre short on actual case studies of this happening. Charlie Shrem was sent to prison for exchanging US dollars for bitcoins that were spent later by someone else on⦠you guessed it, drugs.
Apparently that counts as money laundering, though obviously not the banker-class kind. No mainstream reports really questioned the legitimacy of Shremâs prosecution for such a crime.
Iâll give Naughton some credit for not mentioning terrorism or child porn, though. Any time you see those two pop up together in the same sentence, stop reading right there and cancel your subscription or delete your bookmark to wherever you read it.
The other example this article gives of blockchain technology in action is Honduras land titles. We see this one often too. Everyone can relate to real estate on some level, I suppose.
The trouble is, Factomâs Honduras project reported last December that it had stalled, and even then it only confirmed rumors that had been going around for months.
Then thereâs the question of how records concerning physical real estate are made more secure by putting them on a blockchain. There still needs to be a third-party legal process to connect them, which trumps any blockchain record anywhere.
If someone seizes your building, changes the locks and hires a security guard to rough you up, screaming âbut itâs on the blockchain!â will not help you.
Mainstream media loves to talk about The Blockchain, âbitcoinâs underlying technologyâ, and its myriad usesâ â âwithout ever telling us how a blockchain would be useful in any of them.
Consult Hyperionâs David Birch machine-gunned the whole âforget bitcoin, itâs blockchain!â meme in this excellent piece last week â âitâs a satisfying read.
The Guardian article concludes with some stuff about it being difficult to implement change in places like the UK because âwe do things differently hereâ. OK, fair enough on that one.
In the end, it may not matter. Bitcoin does not need official approval to succeed â âit just needs to work on some level for its value to become self-evident, and users appear.
Just as theyâve been doing since bitcoin began seven years ago.
Anyway, hereâs my point. If I take a week away from bitcoin news Iâm left behind. Iâve seen at least one guy post about bitcoin development while the nurses were washing his newborn baby. Bitcoin moves that fast.
If youâre a mainstream journalist, even if business, tech and/or finance is your field, you probably donât have a handle on where bitcoin is at right now. At least not enough to be writing columns for a major publication about it. (Generalist mass media reporters covering any topic on which they clearly have no expertise is a big problem. See also: science, politics⦠and everything else. But weâll leave that for another time).
With all that in mind, be wary of anything you see in the mass media. If itâs a topic unfamiliar to you too, donât assume youâre getting an inside track by reading one of their reports.
The Internet gives you the power to go direct to knowledgable sources on most topics â the real experts â and leapfrog the info-gatekeepers. Every topic has a specialist news service and hard data. For bitcoin, thereâs CoinDesk, Kaiko, Reddit and a bunch of others. If you want to go deeper than that, pretty much every bitcoin insider and expert has their own blog.
Single-person blogs, twitter feeds and news aggregators have more truth than newspapers and TV. If you want to get closer, jump there first. /rant.
This article originally appeared on Medium and has been republished here with the authorâs permission.
Newspaper image via Shutterstock