The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Nov. 25, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Sponsored by Welcome to a special Thanksgiving edition of The Node. We've brought you a round-up of what's going on in the world of crypto before the festivities begin today.
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Have a very happy Turkey Day.
–Daniel Kuhn
Today's must-reads Top Shelf SELF CUSTODY: Coinbase, the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, has acquired crypto wallet firm BRD for an undisclosed sum. BRD was founded in 2014 and has 10 million global customers for its self-custody wallet, according to a website post from co-founders Adam Traidman and Aaron Voisine. The duo said that BRD wallet customers will be able to continue to transact normally, though users will eventually "have an optional migration path to self custody with Coinbase Wallet, which will include a special gift."
FREE TO FEE: Cryptocurrency lender BlockFi will move to a rate-based withdrawal fee structure beginning Dec. 1, ending free withdrawals, as it cited "increasing transaction costs on the Ethereum network." The company, currently under examination by several state securities agencies, said the move will apply to ethereum, chainlink, PAXG, uniswap and BAT. As for bitcoin, litecoin and stablecoins, BlockFi noted that customers will continue receiving one free withdrawal per month.
IRAN SANCTIONED? ConsenSys, the Ethereum software powerhouse, removed about 50 Iranian students from its online programming course in a move that highlights the gray areas in sanctions law facing the cryptocurrency industry. The move represents an abrupt turnabout for ConsenSys, which had offered the $985 course to Iranian students for free and in the past talked openly about its scholarships for Iranian women.
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Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway Crypto, the Gift That Keeps on Giving Happy Thanksgiving! Daniel Kuhn writing today. Manuel Gonzalez Alzuru, a co-founder of a soon-to-launch non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace, says he is "doin' good," with a smile and a nod over a video call. "It never gets old saying that." His platform, boyishly named DoinGud, is what Alzuru calls a "prosocial" experiment – a way to funnel some of the massive profits generated by the emergent NFT economy to worthy causes.
"Ethereum gave me freedom," Alzuru, 31, said. "And I'm always looking for ways to give back and to get some freedom for others as well." That's a message he thinks others in crypto could get behind. DoinGud, set to launch on Nov. 30, distinguishes itself from the increasingly crowded field of NFT markets by automatically directly a percentage (5%-95%) of sales to charities.
For an industry that prides itself on working on behalf of the "public good," outright philanthropy isn't often prioritized. Companies, projects and individuals have made breathtaking profits this year during a bull market that has driven the entire market cap of all cryptos, at times, above $3 trillion. It's money that's sometimes literally printed from nowhere and might be put to good use.
"In order for you to give, you need to have something to give," Alzuru said. NFTs have unlocked untold fortunes for a number of artists across industries – seemingly regardless of experience or, at times, talent. The "creator economy" was well underway in 2018 when the ERC-721 white paper was published, describing the smart contract standard underpinning NFTs. Since then, however, NFTs have extended the playing field of who can get paid for their work online.
That's at least part of what Alzuru means when he says "freedom:" Crypto has given him more than just financial "independence" (though there is that), but also the lowercase-l, liberal freedoms some people in North America or Europe may take for granted. Born in Venezuela, Alzuru said he felt he had no guaranteed right to speech or expression, until he found Ethereum.
"I'm able now to express myself on Ethereum, on the internet, and it stays there," he said. "No one can take that away from me." That's the power of property rights enforced by code, he said. But don't confuse him with any old capitalist; Alzuru, perhaps like Ethereum itself, is ideologically fluid.
"I also believe in communal property rights, 'public goods' or public infrastructure," he said, invoking the idea that crypto, open and accessible to all in theory, is a new type of digital commons. That's ultimately what he wants DoinGud to become, to exist at the protocol level, a tool that other NFT or DeFi platforms can integrate to automate charitable giving to charity.
But public goods are open to exploitation. Or, as street artist Rich Simmons put it in an email, "The whole NFT and crypto climates so far have felt like a bit of a cash grab." Simmons is joining the ranks (including publications like CoinDesk and The New Yorker) of those using NFTs to fund charitable giving. He's using a platform called HistoryMakr and donating to several mental health organizations.
Is crypto charity a way to cover up some of the evils of the industry? Under fire for its environmental footprint, rampant scams and general social toxicity, crypto certainly needs a little goodwill.
But "corporate social responsibility," the idea that traditional businesses owe something to the world in addition to their shareholders, often leads to less-than-desirable and sometimes hysterical results. It's the same mentality that has the Central Intelligence Agency whitewashing itself as a progressive wing of government.
Regardless of people's motivations for giving, there's a huge opportunity for charitable efforts to thrive in crypto. Blockchain has long been touted as a way to bring transparency to an industry that sometimes operates in the dark. Smart contracts, like the ones DoinGud designed, can make giving a routine part of doing business. Not to mention the wealth, the insane wealth, created during bull markets.
Alzuru even thinks the psychological effects that transparent blockchains foster, the same mental forces that drive people to display NFTs as avatars on social media, could benefit charity. "With crypto, you have this proof that you've given back to the community," Alzuru said, referring to the paper trail left on Ethereum. "Most of the time, [when giving], people are showing us vanity."
"You might want to create something for the betterment of humanity," he said. "What you need to first think about yourself, like if you're not good, if you're not doing good yourself, you cannot be creating stuff for others."
–Daniel Kuhn
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