Bitcoin in the Headlines: Argentina's Savior or Sign of the Antichrist?
CoinDesk has taken a look at the top bitcoin-related headlines from across the globe.
Bitcoin in the Headlines is a weekly look at bitcoin news, analyzing media and its impact.
Is bitcoin the economic antichrist or a savior for struggling nation states?
This debate played out in the headlines this week in lengthy dissections of bitcoin's apparent growth in Argentina, a nation plagued by economic mismanagement and hyperinflation.
But, while bitcoin may be seen as a potential savior for one long-struggling economy, rumours of bitcoin's biblical ties were levied by a right-wing publication in the latest sign that the debate over the technology is expanding its reach, in sometimes peculiar ways.
Bitcoin in Argentina
Sparking the most comment this week was The New York Times' decision to publish an adaption of Nathanial Popper's new book, "Digital Gold: Bitcoin and the Inside Story of the Misfits and Millionaires Trying to Reinvent Money".
In his lengthy exposé, Popper discussed how the digital currency could potentially transform Argentina's dysfunctional financial system.
Popper's excerpt read:
The prediction is certainly interesting given that Bitcoin Market Potential Index (BMPI) – which ranks the potential utility of bitcoin across 177 countries – found that the digital currency had the most potential in Argentina.
Popper shared his encounters with Dante Castiglione and Brenda Fernandez, two Buenos Aires-based bitcoin borkers, touched upon Argentinian-born, Xapo CEO Wences Casaraes' experience and outlined the various economic difficulties facing the country's traditional finance system.
Reflecting on the situation, the journalist noted:
Given the precarious economic situation, Popper asked Castiglione for his opinion on global ventures like Xapo and whether the digital currency could really succeed in Argentina.
"If people don't use it [bitcoin], it will go to trash, like anything that isn't used in this world. If people use it, then it has a future," he said.
Writing for Fortune, Chris Matthews made a few retaliatory – albeit valid – points. He noted:
Matthews continued: "This is illegal behaviour by any other name, but Argentines, like bitcoin broker Dante Castiglione, aren't worried."
Still, he was quick to note the perhaps more negative connotations of its support, concluding:
Banks and the blockchain
Popper's piece also discussed the role that banks may decide to play in determining if disruptive technologies such as bitcoin and the blockchain can have lasting value outside of perhaps more troubled countries like Argentina.
Mike Orcutt, from MIT Technology Review, weighed into the debate with his piece "Why Bitcoin Could Be Much More Than a Currency", noting what many bitcoin aficionados have argued in the past: it is not believed that the blockchain could survive without bitcoin.
He added:
"One twist, though, is that bitcoins themselves are still inherent to the process: they provide the incentive for people to help make all this happen. Verifying transactions and storing their data in the blockchain earns miners newly minted bitcoins."
Orcutt continued: "In other words, any service that aims to use the blockchain as a general-purpose database will have to pass a bitcoin (or a fraction of one) around in the process. Or it will have to find some other way to motivate miners to put the information into the ledger.”
A piece in The Economist, titled "The Next Big Thing: or is it?" looked into the blockchain's application by traditional finance institutions such as banks, echoing Orcutt's thoughts about the underlying principle of incentivisation.
The article concludes by citing Patrick Collison, co-founder of Stripe, a payments processor, who said:
“Just because bitcoin didn’t succeed as a currency doesn’t mean blockchain will succeed as a technology, but the experiment is important to run."
The possible uses are legion, but the killer app is still missing, concluded the article.
The Mark of the Beast
Of course, maybe bitcoin is just a sign we're all doomed.
Bitcoin has previously been associated with the Antichrist, with Christian blogs and forums making the connection between the digital currency and the Apocalypse.
The Book of Revelations, in the Bible's New Testament, provides ample evidence to suggest that both a "one-world government" and a "one-world currency" will come to exist under the rule of the Antichrist, and his sidekick, Satan.
We can all rest assured, however, because this week, Newsmax, a right-wing political site, discerned that there was no such link between the digital currency and the Antichrist.
The piece, aptly titled "Bitcoin and Bible Prophecy: 5 Reasons the Cryptocurrency Shouldn't Be Considered the Mark of the Beast", began:
"The Mark of the Beast is thought to be among the characteristics of the 'tribulation years,' and some believe bitcoin is in a position to fulfil the prophecy by coming or morphing into the one-world currency the anti-Christ will use to gain economic control worldwide."
For those not in the know, the Mark of the Beast refers to the a term that is associated with the Beast of Revelation. In most manuscripts of the New Testament and in English translations of the Bible, the number of the Beast is 666.
The article caught the attention of Fusion's Kevin Roose, who said:
The writer, referred to the Newsmax article, adding:
It concluded: "It's also a decentralised, peer-to-peer currency, which means that even if the Antichrist did try to use bitcoin to hasten the end of the world, it would be difficult for him to gain control of the entire blockchain."
STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Even with bitcoin's potential still being hotly debated, it seems we can take comfort in the fact that it is likely not a spawn of the devil.
Newspaper image; heaven image via Shutterstock