Wikipedia Considers To Stop Accepting Crypto Donations Because Of The ESG FUD
13 Janeiro 2022 - 07:42AM
NEWSBTC
Even Wikipedia fell for the environmental FUD surrounding
Proof-Of-Work mining. A proposal to “stop accepting cryptocurrency
donations” is currently under discussion. It starts with the same
very thin arguments that the whole mainstream media irresponsibly
uses. However, it gets better and more interesting. In general,
it’s amazing to see both sides of the argument unfolding. Even
though there might be some information suppression going on.
Related Reading | Human Rights Foundation Accepts Fully Open Source
Bitcoin Donations Well do our best to summarize the whole thing,
but people interested in the topic should take time to read it all.
It’s full of twists and turns. The most amazing thing about the
document is that real people wrote it. Wikipedia editors are not a
sample of the world’s population, but, they’re heterogeneous enough
to make the discussion interesting. Wikipedia Falls For The
Environmental FUD The original proposal poses three problems with
receiving cryptocurrency donations, but, in reality, we can
summarize them all in the ESG FUD category. The three points are:
“Accepting cryptocurrency signals endorsement of the cryptocurrency
space.” “Cryptocurrencies may not align with the Wikimedia
Foundation’s commitment to environmental sustainability.” “We risk
damaging our reputation by participating in this.” It’s a shame
that, to try to prove their points, the original author uses a
questionable source and a discredited one. “Bitcoin and Ethereum
are the two most highly-used cryptocurrencies, and are both
proof-of-work, using an enormous amount of energy. You can read
more about Bitcoin’s environmental impact from Columbia or
Digiconomist.” Counterpoint: That Data Is Compromised Even
though it’s widely cited, an “employee of the Dutch Central Bank”
posing as a neutral journalist runs Digiconomist. That fact alone
disqualifies him as a credible source. However, his data is also
under question because “Digiconomist Bitcoin Electricity
Consumption Index is not being driven by real world metrics and
profitability as stated in the methodology.” So, we’re dealing with
an intellectually dishonest individual who’s presumably paid to
attack the Bitcoin network. For more information on this shady
character, go to the section “The Digiconomist is Disinformation.”
The Columbia report is newer, but it cites outdated data and
debunked studies. Like the ridiculous one that doesn’t understand
how PoW scales, or even works, and irresponsibly claims that
crypto-mining could raise the Earth’s temperature by two degrees.
Columbia’s main source, though, is the “University of Cambridge
analysis.” That same organization literally said that “There is
currently little evidence suggesting that Bitcoin directly
contributes to climate change.” However, they suspiciously
erased that part from their report. They changed the wording and
now their FAQ just contains a “radical thought experiment” in which
“all this energy comes exclusively from coal.” Even under those
extreme circumstances, which are far-far away from reality, the
energy use would be marginal. “In this worst-case scenario, the
Bitcoin network would be responsible for about 111 Mt (million
metric tons) of carbon dioxide emissions1, accounting for roughly
0.35% of the world’s total yearly emissions.” ETH price chart for
01/13/2022 on Poloniex | Source: ETH/USD on TradingView.com
Protecting The Process Or Information Suppression? Under the whole
thread, there’s a section called “Discussion moved from proposal
section.” It contains several suppressed pro-cryptocurrencies
arguments. The reason is that the accounts that made them had “no
other editing records”. What do the people proposing that those
opinions should be removed argue? That they “risk that both vote
gaming and manipulation of discussion to introduce bias and fake
“bitcoin” news.” Coincidentally, those low-edit accounts are the
ones bringing forward the information on how bogus the original
poster’s sources are. Someone had to say it and they did. And the
administrators removed them from the main thread. Is this really
what Wikipedia is about. Luckily, other Wikipedia
contributors managed to say that “Bitcoin is therefore a green
energy stimulus, aligned with the Wikimedia Foundation’s commitment
to environmental sustainability. “ Another user urged “everyone to
understand more about Bitcoin as a whole package beyond its energy
footprint (negligible when compared to the cost in oil and warfare
of backing the US Dollar) as well as the continual exponential
progress that has been made in making Bitcoin greener and greener.”
Yet another one said “bitcoin core is a FLOSS project attempting to
promote monetary freedom.” In any case, the crypto detractors
trying to game the vote might have a point. Except for the
ridiculous “fake “bitcoin” news” claim. The header of the
discussion says, “this is not a majority vote, but instead a
discussion among Wikimedia contributors”. And the administrator
tells them that they can’t remove their opinions or votes. However,
“an optimal RfC scenario would not actively silence any voices, but
would allow community members to inform each other which
participants are not community members, who may have alternative
interests.” That’s fair. What About The Votes? Is Wikipedia Banning
Crypto Donations? The vote doesn’t look good for crypto donations,
but that doesn’t mean Wikipedia will ban them. At the time of
writing, the “support” votes are approximately double than the
“oppose” ones. Plus, roughly 150 Wikipedia persons have voted. Does
this mean the ESG FUD worked and cast a shadow over the whole
crypto space that will be hard to shake? Absolutely it does.
Related Reading | New Contender Emerges Despite Wikipedia’s
Begrudging Listing of Cardano It also means that people WANT to
believe. And are not willing to accept the overwhelming evidence
that points to PoW mining being a net positive for the environment.
Fortunately, Bitcoin doesn’t care. Tick tock, next block. Featured
Image by James on Unsplash | Charts by TradingView
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