The next time someone smugly tells you there is âno legitimate use caseâ for cryptocurrency, or asserts that it has âno redeeming social value,â shove this story in his or her face:
Meduza, a Russian news outlet, is soliciting donations in cryptocurrency (along with traditional payment methods) after the government labeled it a âforeign agent,â CoinDeskâs on-the-ground correspondent, Anna Baydakova, reported Thursday.
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Meduza is now required by law to post a notice of its âforeign agentâ status in a typeface bigger than the text of its articles. As a result of this scarlet letter, Meduza lost many of its advertisers and is running out of money, the team behind the publication said. Apparently, it hasnât been deplatformed by traditional financial institutions because it is also taking donations by bank card and PayPal. But the reasons Meduza gave for including the crypto option were telling.
âIf people are afraid to send us money from their bank accounts, and they might well be, they can send us crypto,â said Meduzaâs editor-in-chief, Ivan Kolpakov.
A skeptic might note that donors who send bitcoin (BTC), ether (ETH), or BNB to Meduza would leave a permanent record of their actions on the blockchains, or public ledgers, of these assets. But such a record would show only the address, a random-seeming string of numbers and letters, that sent the money, not the person behind it. An address may or may not be tied to donorsâ real-world identity, depending on how they acquired the crypto and what steps they took to protect their privacy, whereas their bank and PayPal accounts definitely are.
Further, if recent history teaches us anything, it is that financial intermediaries cannot be relied upon to stand with dissident or unpopular voices.
We saw this more than a decade ago with the blockade of WikiLeaks by PayPal and other large financial institutions that caved to extra-legal pressure from U.S. politicians.
We see it today when payment processors and crowdfunding sites boot content creators, fundraisers or pariah-friendly internet platforms, not because they are breaking any laws but because their speech offends activists. I, too, find the content in many of these cases unsavory. But I donât mind that it exists, and I donât want to prevent those who want to read, watch or hear it from doing so. Thatâs a basic âsmall-l liberalâ principle. Or was.
To quote a locked Twitter account, whom I will not name out of respect for the personâs privacy: âIf I cover my ears because I donât want to hear from you, itâs not censorship. If I cover your mouth or someone elseâs ears because people want to hear you, itâs censorship.â
I can already hear the bien pensants say, âItâs only censorship when the government does it.â But even if you accept only that narrow legal definition of the word, it surely describes what the Russian government â the very regime whose influence in the U.S. many of those same bien pensants spent the last four years hyperventilating about â is trying to do to Meduza.
Crypto might thwart that attempt, or at least hinder it, by enabling individuals to transfer money to a publisher without permission from third parties that can be strong-armed or politicized.
By all means, letâs talk about the copious amounts of electricity required to secure Bitcoin and other proof-of-stake networks â although describing this intensive computation as âwastefulâ is a subjective value judgment. (TikTok and hair dryers are wasteful in my book. Should those things be banned?)
By all means, letâs acknowledge that cryptocurrencyâs openness to all comers makes it attractive to criminals â although the blockchainâs trail of crumbs also helps law enforcement catch the crooks who use these systems.
See also: Daniel Kuhn â Bitcoin, Warts and All
By all means, letâs pay attention to how terrorists, foreign or now, weâre told, domestic, might take advantage of this technology. But if weâre going to blame anyone or anything other than the terrorists for their actions, remember it was not Satoshi Nakamoto who destabilized the Middle East or hollowed out Middle America.
When tallying the social costs of censorship-resistant money, do not ignore the benefits for the Meduzas of the world.