More than 200 longtime Wikipedia editors have requested that the Wikimedia Foundation stop accepting cryptocurrency donations. The foundation received crypto donations worth about $130,000 in the most recent fiscal year—less than 0.1 percent of the foundation’s revenue, which topped $150 million last year.
Debate on the proposal has raged over the last three months.
“Cryptocurrencies are extremely risky investments that have only been gaining popularity among retail investors,” wrote Wikipedia user GorillaWarfare, the original author of the proposal, back in January. “I do not think we should be endorsing their use in this way.”
GorillaWarfare is Molly White, a Wikipedian who has become something of an anti-cryptocurrency activist. She also runs the Twitter account “Web3 is going just great,”which highlights “some of the many disasters happening in crypto, defi, NFTs, and other web3 projects,” the account profile says.
In her proposal for the Wikimedia Foundation, GorillaWarfare added that “Bitcoin and Ethereum are the two most highly used cryptocurrencies, and are both proof-of-work, using an enormous amount of energy.”
According to one widely cited estimate, the Bitcoin network consumes around 200 terrawatt-hours of energy per year. That’s about as much energy as is consumed by 70 million people in Thailand. And it works out to around 2,000 kilowatt-hours per Bitcoin transaction.
Bitcoin defenders countered that the currency’s energy usage is driven by its mining process, which consumes about the same amount of energy regardless of the number of transactions. So accepting a given donation in bitcoin won’t necessarily increase carbon emissions.
But critics argued that Wikimedia’s de facto endorsement of cryptocurrencies may help to push up their price. And the higher the value, the more energy miners will devote to creating new coins.
Crypto skeptics pointed out that people can easily convert their bitcoins to dollars before donating. But US tax law gives advantages to those who donate an asset directly to a charity.
Cryptocurrency defenders also pointed out that some people can’t easily access conventional banking services.
“Bank transfers, credit cards, and PayPal are inaccessible for millions of people who don’t have government ID and therefore can’t open an account,” wrote Wikipedia user AnarkioC. “They don’t allow anonymous or pseudonymous donations (could be risky depending on your personal situation); and they can easily be surveilled and censored.”
Growing Controversy Over Cryptocurrency
Ultimately, 232 longtime editors of Wikipedia voiced support for ending cryptocurrency donations, while 94 opposed the move.
Votes like this aren’t binding on the Wikimedia Foundation. Legally speaking, the foundation is independent of the Wikipedia community and doesn’t necessarily have to act on its requests.
In a January comment, foundation spokesman Greg Varnum said, “Our teams will continue to follow this discussion and listen to the feedback; we are already considering what has come up here as we determine our path forward.”
We’ve asked the Wikimedia Foundation to comment on the vote and will update this story if we get a response.
If the foundation complies with the community’s request, it wouldn’t be the first organization to stop using cryptocurrencies due to environmental concerns. Earlier this month, the Mozilla Foundation announced it would stop accepting cryptocurrencies that use the energy-intensive proof-of-work consensus process. These include bitcoin and ether—though the latter is expected to convert to a proof-of-stake model in the future.
Last year, Elon Musk announced that Tesla would no longer accept bitcoin payments to buy Tesla vehicles. The announcement came just two months after Tesla started accepting bitcoins for Teslas.
The gaming company Steam stopped accepting bitcoin in 2017, citing the network’s transaction fees, which were then near record highs.
This story originally appeared on Ars Technica.
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