Categories
Data Custody Decentralisation and Neutrality Real-World Crypto

Democratisation is not the same as permissionless-ness

The Internet has democratised pretty much anything you can think of. That which is not yet democratised is spending increasing amounts every year to protect its monopoly, whether by force of law or perception.

Democratisation does not mean the end of concentration of power.

The biggest, most powerful companies are the world are tech giants. Whose products have democratised communication, access and opportunity. Those products have produced previously unimaginable social and economic value, and within a generation.

Yet they are, and have been, under investigation for abuse of power. They may have created platforms for creativity, connection, work and play for billions of us, but none of us have any control over these platforms.

A whole other class of powerful companies are financial giants. They have not even democratised access with and to their sophisticated products, unlike tech giants. We aren’t even aware of most of these products.

The excitement around cryptocurrencies, DeFi and DAOs and so much other decentralised tech is the promise of both democratisation and agency.

Some months ago a venture capitalist, new to crypto but with a lifetime’s experience of asking the right questions asked me incredulously how it was that anyone could create a new currency. And a new financial product. And a new organisation.

The key is that blockchains are permissionless by design. No one, fundamentally, needs approval to set up any of these above. The genie of trustless transactions let out of the bottle by the original Bitcoin whitepaper cannot be put back. That genie is capturing greater and greater amounts of economic value every year.

We are already seeing decentralised commerce. Decentralised financial products. Decentralised gaming. Decentralised communities. Decentralised governance. Decentralised creativity. And, of course, the original use case, decentralised currency.

Their success depends not on legislation. Or capital. Or location. Or race. It depends not even on technology, really. It is community, and, by extension, legitimacy. As the founder of the Ethereum project sums up an excellent blog post of his that I strongly recommend you read:

The concept of legitimacy (higher-order acceptance) is very powerful. Legitimacy appears in any context where there is coordination, and especially on the internet, coordination is everywhere.

There are different ways in which legitimacy comes to be: brute force, continuity, fairness, process, performance and participation are among the important ones.

Cryptocurrency is powerful because it lets us summon up large pools of capital by collective economic will, and these pools of capital are, at the beginning, not controlled by any person. Rather, these pools of capital are controlled directly by concepts of legitimacy.

Permissionless systems have lower barriers to entry. Leave alone creating competing systems from scratch, blockchains can and have been forked, preserving information and participation. And for the first time, the community of a project has the agency to act – collectivity – to do so. Because of this, a project must build and preserve legitimacy or risk irrelevance.

No matter how much a traditional tech giant may have democratised access, it is very much permissionned. In some sectors, for instance finance, that permission is regulation by the state.

As this genie of permissionless systems attracts more and more users, as those people move more and more economic activity there, backlash will follow. But both incumbents and regulators will find that permissionless systems, by their very nature, are difficult to rein in.

For tech and finance – and other – giants, the traditional rules of market capture don’t apply. For instance it is difficult for a ride sharing app company to compete for a driver’s loyalty with cashbacks or a reduced commission against a decentralised version that gives the driver actual agency over the organisation itself, that not just allows or encourages collective action, but requires it, cannot function effectively without it.

For regulators, traditional models of regulation may not apply. To begin with, permissionless entities are borderless. They are not just resistant to regulation or opposed to regulation, they transcend regulation. For instance A capital markets regulator in a country may ban participation in liquidity pools, but they will continue regardless. Regulators’ only option, then, is to block the gates to the decentralised world itself, that is, the conversion of fiat versions of value – currency – to decentralised versions of value – tokens. If a decentralised organisation gives someone enough agency, though, they will find ways to access membership of that decentralised organisation. The organisation does not need anyone’s permission to exist, to function, to create value for its members – why should I need permission, goes the thinking.

At the conclusion of this, I must stress that this is not a value judgement. This is not meant to unquestioningly assert the superiority of permissionless systems. It is a thinking-through of what permissionless really means. And, specifically, that it is different from democratisation in the fundamental aspect of distribution of control. It is a pointing-out of why the spread of permissionless systems is likely inevitable, inexorable.

Categories
Data Custody Real-World Crypto

When you own bitcoin but defeat the purpose of owning bitcoin

Paypal, Venmo and Square opened up buying and selling cryptocurrency in their apps in the last year, at least to customers in the USA.

Recently, the Canadian investing service Wealthsimple announced the ability to “buy and sell cryptocurrencies instantly”, starting with a list of about a dozen such tokens.

The benefit of such widely used services offering easy access to cryptocurrencies is clear: anyone who has been curious about bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies can now ‘buy’ them. They can experience dizzying gains and crushing losses. It’s informative and educative. And it goes beyond crypto: more people than ever can experience how this volatile an asset behaves.

At the same time, the highly abstracted nature of these experiences means that people may not understand what makes these tokens important beyond volatile curiosities. Particularly the idea of total ownership of your tokens without a mediating party – like these apps.

With Venmo, Paypal and Wealthsimple you don’t actually own bitcoin or any cryptocurrency. There’s no indication that Paypal, say, buys a certain amount of bitcoin on some exchange and holds it on your behalf. At most, it holds some bitcoin – it its name – and when you ‘buy’ bitcoin within the app for US dollars, it earmarks, in software, some of that bitcoin against your account.

No wonder none of these will let you send your bitcoin (or crypto) to another one of your own wallets. You can only sell ‘your’ bitcoin back to them (Venmo, Wealthsimple faqs).

That goes against the very basic idea of bitcoin, which was that you shouldn’t have to rely on third parties like banks to hold your money for you. There’s a high risk that ordinary customers of these apps will view the highly abstracted, processed bitcoin (and other crypto) as mere trinkets, toys. Venmo encourages you to buy bitcoin so your friends can get a notification about it:

At least Square’s Cash app gives you an option to send your holdings to an external wallet.

Beyond this, people hold cryptocurrency at the very exchanges where they buy it from, in exchange for their local currencies.

Here the situation is somewhat less bad. You do have a bitcoin wallet, or several other wallets for different cryptocurrencies: you can deposit from an outside wallet to this one. You can send tokens from this wallet to an outside one.

But your ability to operate this wallet is controlled entirely by the exchange. If it decides you have violated its terms of use, or if the exchange is attacked, or there’s a technical problem that causes it to lose your credentials, you will no longer be able to access your tokens.

Tens of millions of people – more likely hundreds of millions – hold such ‘hot’ wallets at exchanges. They all trade control for convenience.

Only a small fraction of the total number of people who have bought bitcoin or cryptocurrency tokens hold them in wallets that they truly control, in what are termed ‘non-custodial’ wallets, meaning no one holds your tokens in custody other than you yourself.

Now while you have total and exclusive control, you also bear sole responsibility for keeping your access keys and recovery passphrase safe. A significant fraction of the bitcoins that have ever been mined have been just lost because people forgot or lost what they needed to access them.

Today mediating companies like PayPal and exchanges like, say, India’s CoinDCX or the USA Coinbase, far outspend non-custodial wallets on acquiring new customers.

I think for the decentralised economy to cross any sort of realistic threshold of relevance, vastly more people need to experience holding their own tokens in non-custodial wallets. That’s when they’ll get a sense of what decentralised tokens, decentralised money means.

(ends)

Categories
Data Custody Decentralisation and Neutrality Privacy and Anonymity The Next Computer

My data backup strategy and tools, 2021

Here’s an overview of how I backup my data across drives and devices.

I was driven to post this because of the recently reported data loss experienced by several people around the world, caused by a malfunctioning, possibly hacked network storage device from Western Digital: “WD My Book NAS devices are being remotely wiped clean worldwide“.

Today, WD My Book Live and WD My Book Live DUO owners worldwide suddenly found that all of their files were mysteriously deleted, and they could no longer log into the device via a browser or an app.

When they attempted to log in via the Web dashboard, the device stated that they had an “Invalid password.”

“I have a WD My Book live connected to my home LAN and worked fine for years. I have just found that somehow all the data on it is gone today, while the directories seems there but empty.

The same device that Western Digital encouraged its customers to ‘Put Your Life On [It]’, lost people’s photos, music, documents, backups, probably more.

Ordinary people like you and me need a better plan for our life’s work and memories than entrusting it to a company and its specialised hardware and software. We need a plan we understand.

This is that plan.

Devices to backup

  • MacBook Pro 1TB SSD
  • iPhone 128GB
  • iPad 256GB
  • External 1TB HDD – archives, old pictures, home movies, other uncategorised data

Laptop, phone, tablet all used daily.

Current backup plan

MacBook Pro

  • Runs Catalina; full weekly disk backup on external 1TB Time Machine HDD.
    • Quarterly restore test on 2014 MacBook Air also running Catalina
  • Backup main document and multimedia folders weekly with rsync, run manually from iTerm2, to external 2TB HDD (redundancy for above). Example: sudo rsync -aP --delete /Users/rahulgaitonde/Documents/ /Volumes/Backups/BackupDocuments

External 1TB drive

WD Elements 1TB drive
  • Backup weekly with rsync, run manually from iTerm2 to external 2TB HDD: same disk as above

iPhone, iPad

2018 12.9″ iPad Pro 256GB and 2018 iPhone XR 128GB
  • iCloud Drive backup, continuous

Other data

  • Email: Gmail and Google Workplace; downloaded locally to Thunderbird on MacBook Pro as Mbox files (which is itself backed up as above)
  • Photos: synced from iPhone and iPad to iCloud; also synced weekly from iPhone to MacBook Pro Photos.app on MacBook Pro
  • Notes: Notes.app and plaintext files; both synced to iCloud
  • Contacts, Calendar, Reminder: synced to iCloud; exported monthly to MacBook Pro
  • Passwords and secure notes: synced to Bitwarden; vault exported monthly to MacBook Pro
  • RSS feeds: synced to Feedly; OPML exported monthly to Macbook Pro
  • Bookmarks: synced to Firefox; HTML exported monthly to Macbook Pro
  • Read Later queue: synced to Instapaper and Pocket; CSV exported monthly to MacBook Pro. Some articles saved locally in Markdown in iCloud Drive

So, here are my tasks:

  • Weekly
    • Run Photos.app to sync iCloud Photos locally to Macbook Pro (turn off storage optimisation) – 10 minutes
    • Backup MacBook Pro to Time Machine external HDD – three hours
    • run rsync on MacBook Pro drive and on external 1TB HDD. Destination for both is external 2TB HDD (distinct from Time Machine). 10 minutes. First run took a long time; subsequent runs take a fraction of the time that Time Machine backups take.
    • Total time: appx. 20 active minutes; 3 hours in background
  • Monthly
    • Export Contacts, Calendar, RSS OPML, Bookmarks, Password Vault, Read Later queue and store locally – 10 minutes
    • Weekly tasks for that week
    • Total time: appx. 10 active minutes + regular weekly backup time
  • Quarterly
    • Test restore on 2014 MacBook Air – about 10 active minutes + 2 hours in background
    • Weekly and monthly tasks
    • Total time: appx. 10 active minutes + 2 hours in background + regular monthly backup time
  • Automated:
    • Downloading mail locally happens throughout the day since Thunderbird is always open
    • iCloud Drive backups happen daily automatically since iPhone charges wirelessly overnight

As you can see, I don’t actually spend a lot of time backing up my data. I last suffered a catastrophic data loss in 2008, and I’m determined to not let that happen again, especially now that storage is cheap and fast, and cloud backups exist.

In the early days of this system, I was tempted to automate large parts of it. I could run an open-source Time Capsule using an unused Raspberry Pi and Netatalk. I could also connect the external 2TB drive and run rsync from my Mac to the remote Pi machine (rsync, or remote sync, was in fact built for this use case).

That way my Time Machine backups would run every hour, not weekly. I could also automate rsync to, say, daily by using MacOS’ cron, a scheduling utility that’s part of almost every unix-based system.

But that frequency of backup seems overkill for my data, especially given that the vast majority of my everyday data, the one that changes daily, is backed up to iCloud. Even if I were to lose data mid-month, between restoring from the latest Time Machine backup and then syncing to iCloud, I’d be able to recover most, if not all, of my data. So that means leaving a computer running, with my backup disks attached, that’s really doing useful work for a tiny fraction of the time. That also means extra wear on the very disks I’m using for backup.

In conclusion

My solution is a mix of cloud sync and manual backup.

The cloud portion – for frequently changing data – uses iCloud, which seems to be the most privacy-centric of all cloud services.

The manual portion – for redundancy and archived data – uses open source tools and doesn’t rely on either an always-on computer, specialised hardware or a connection to the Internet, unlike the Western Digital NAS this post began with.

Finally, the solution doesn’t take a lot of time to run, and can be restored from pretty quickly. The only vulnerability in this system is that all the devices and disks are in my house. If there’s a catastrophic event at my place, the data that’s backed up manually will be lost.

Categories
Data Custody The Next Computer

iPhone home screen, June 2021

Note: my Home Screen in May didn’t change at all from April, so I didn’t post a monthly update.

This month, I added four icons for commonly used apps on my Home Screen, making place for them by using a smaller Fantastical widget:

The dock has also changed. I still use Drafts for quick note taking, but I have begun to use Apple Notes for everyday note and list management, somewhat inspired by an old tweet from the Twitter and Square cofounder Jack Dorsey:

I’m also trying out a large notes widget for a folder on the leftmost widgets-only screen. Let’s see if it’s truly useful:

Categories
Data Custody Decentralisation and Neutrality Discovery and Curation Products and Design The Dark Forest of the Internet

Preserving the web that matters to us

A quarter of the deep links in The New York Times’ articles are now “rotten”, or no longer accessible. The older the web page, the more likely it is that the articles it links to no longer exist. This chart makes it clear:

The internet is decentralised by design. That means no single entity decides whether a given article on the web is taken down.

But that also means that no single entity can ensure that that article can stay up. If the owner of the domain dies, forgets to renew, or simply chooses not to, it’s gone. The Internet archive can’t archive every single web page that ever existed.

That means it is up to each of us to preserve, privately, those parts of the web that matter to each of us.

I am personally a long-time user of both Instapaper and Pocket (from when they were personal projects of their creators), and have thousands of articles in each. Should either of these services shut down, I will be able to export my saved articles. For articles and web pages with more significant personal value, I also have a folder full of markdown-formatted versions of them. I ended up creating an iOS Siri Shortcut to automate this, which I use every day.

Other ways are to save the full text in Evernote, or OneNote, or Notion using their browser extensions, and they’ll be available to you as long as these services are active. You could also copy the web page, paste it in an email and mail it to yourself, creating a library within email. Which again is accessible – and searchable! – as long as you have access to that email address. There’s no perfect solution.

The important take-away here is that what makes the Internet resilient as a whole makes it fragile at a microscopic level. Saving bookmarks alone is no guarantee that you’ll be able to access something on the web later. You’ll need to save the page itself, and find a system for this that works for you.

Categories
Audience as Capital Data Custody Discovery and Curation Making Money Online Privacy and Anonymity

Screenshots show Donald Trump’s website is a donations-collecting machine, not a blog

Donald Trump has a new website. A lot of the coverage I have read is about how it is essentially a blog filled with tweet-sized rants (example coverage).

I think the most notable aspect of the website is how transparently and aggressively it is optimised to be a money-making machine.

Here is my experience (I am outside the US). This popup greets you when you visit the site.

Tapping on it leads you to this.

This is the same text and design that led people to unwittingly sign up for repeated donations from their bank accounts – in some cases until their account was empty [1].

The text is endearingly deceptive, panders to ego and assumes lack of attention. For example, “If you step up in the NEXT HOUR, we’ll make sure your name is the FIRST name on the list” with a large timer counting down from one hour. But also in the middle of it all, “The countdown has ended, but you can still donate below”

If you linger too long on the page, you get this other popup informing you that the ex-president wants to see you on the ‘top of the donor list’, whatever that means. Tapping ‘complete my donation’ simply dismisses the popup, but presumably you are now more likely to finish the transaction.

All of this is before you’ve even seen the home page of the site itself.

Anyway. You navigate back to the popup and dismiss it. Here is the actual home page:

There are three buttons on this screenful, and none of them have anything to do with what Trump has to say. They all have to do with money. Scrolling down, you get yet another contribute button.

The focus of the coverage, Trump’s new blog, is behind that tiny ‘Desk’ link at the top. It’s clear what Trump wants his supporters to click on.

So. Since ‘contribute’ is the main call-to-action, let’s tap on it. You’re taken to a page looks very much like the one you were taken to right at the beginning, complete with hard-to-notice default opt-ins.

Donating on the earlier page would put you on the ‘official donor list’. Donating here would put you on the ‘official founding member donor list’.

If you linger here, the same popup as earlier nudges you.

I couldn’t contribute because I am not “a U.S. citizen or lawfully admitted permanent resident”, so I haven’t experienced what happens after.

But if you navigate back and tap on the other major button, ‘Shop’, you’re taken to this store:

This is the checkout page:

When you check out an item, you aren’t buying it. You’re still donating. Even when you’re in the ‘Save American Shop’. I’m not sure if this is standard practice across USA political organisations.

I’m also not sure if the ten dollars for ‘shipping, handling and fees’ is normal. I’ve never bought items on a USA website. Seems somewhat high.

Finally, when you do tap on Desk, that tiny link at the top that is the center of all the coverage about Trump’s new online presence, this:

The first button, the first actionable click on the screen is the ‘Contribute’ button. Right alongside the post. Bolder than the actual text of the posts themselves.

One last thing. The privacy policy makes clear what the organisation can do with your data:

We reserve the right to use, share, exchange and/or disclose to Save America affiliated committee and third parties any of your information for any lawful purpose, including, but not limited to, as described in Section 3.

And what’s in section 3? All this and more:

This gives the organisation the ability to monetise your data, over and above the contributions you make to it.

So.

The site makes no pretence about who it is for. It doesn’t seek to convert; it’s for the faithful. Back in January, we had discussed this when several of Trump’s social media accounts were suspended:

Anyone who engages with Trump and his community on this [then-not-yet-live] website and forums is someone who has joined for that specific reason. No one other than news reporters covering Trump and his network will join.

– Where will the Trump community congregate after the Twitter and Facebook ban?

Because it’s for the faithful, the site doesn’t need to create talking points; the 24×7 news cycle of outrage creates them already. He knows that his opinions will be picked up by news websites and channels and social media personalities even if they are buried deep on his site. Why, those people have probably set up alerts for new posts.

The true utility of the people who actually visit those site, the ordinary right-wing USA citizen, is their money. That is what Trump’s website is for. And it has done a truly outstanding job.


[1] The donations infrastructure is by Winred, which describes itself as “the official secure payments technology designed to help GOP (ie Republican) candidates and committees win across the US.” Winred appears to have a monopoly on online Republican fund-raising.


(Featured Image Photo Credit: Colin Lloyd/Unsplash)

Categories
Data Custody Products and Design The Next Computer

What you own and what you don’t

I learnt about this case today

A crucial decision came in 1993 when the Ninth Circuit of the US Court of Appeals ruled in MAI Systems Corp. v. Peak Computer Inc. that the local, impermanent copy of an operating system that is loaded into a computer’s RAM upon its booting up — a necessary component of a computer’s operation — is, by virtue of making a copy of intellectual property (the operating system), subject to copyright law. This “deeply stupid ruling,” Fairfield tells Vox, laid a trap, making the use of any software (broadly meaning nearly anything used on a computer system) a copyright violation unless the user followed rules set unilaterally by the manufacturer and/or seller. “That was the case that handed the keys to the kingdom to these companies,” Fairfield says. 

These legal principles have carried over to the so-called Internet of Things, in which tangible objects are embedded with copyrighted software (a.k.a. smart devices, like smart refrigerators and televisions and cars). 

– The erosion of personal ownership

This turns out to be the foundation of the legality of having ‘smart’ devices be technically owned by the manufacturer even after you have paid full price for them. This is what makes it legal – in the US at least – for manufacturers of these devices to remotely disable them, restrict their functionality, make it illegal for you to edit or repair their software, even when the manufacturer itself no longer considers it viable to support the device.

The article I quoted above is a detailed, well-considered take on the matter of not just smart devices, but personal ownership itself. Worth a read.

We have discussed smart devices many times on this site.

We have also discussed being mindful of data custody in the 21st century.

Both are issues to consider the next time you’re looking to purchase a gadget, appliance, car – anything that has electronics in it, really. In the 21st century, the stakes for caveat emptor or buyer beware are much higher.

Categories
Data Custody Products and Design The Next Computer

The tragedy of iTunes

An exasperated look at Apple Music in the Music app in Mac OS Catalina. The Music app is one successor to iTunes; the Podcasts app and the Finder itself being the others.

It’s extremely disappointing that the Apple of 2020 thought the Music app was good enough to release. It’s even worse that it continues to think so.

Mojave is the last Mac OS release that iTunes will run on. I have nearly twenty years of music carefully collated in iTunes, with hundreds of custom and smart playlists, album art, ID3 tags manually added across thousands of files. Having these corrupted, or not being able to reliably play, arrange and sync these would be a crushing loss.

The loss of iTunes is the most important reason why I won’t update any of my Macbooks to beyond Mojave (in fact, all but one run High Sierra).

Ultimately, I’m on the lookout for an open source desktop music management application for Mac OS that either syncs to the iOS music app or to a third-party music player. I realise I cannot keep putting off updates. Sooner or later I will need to; if only because my Macs are on average close to ten years old.

Categories
Data Custody Investing Products and Design Real-World Crypto

Virtual real estate NFTs

(Also posted earlier this week on my crypto/DeFi Whatsapp channel).

We have discussed NFTs or non-fungible tokens before, mostly in the form of digital art and collectibles. Not only do some of them sell for millions of dollars, they can also be re-sold on secondary marketplaces for gains.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday that we’re now seeing pieces of virtual land inside games being sold as NFTs.

In some games, players can buy digital deeds for real estate in the form of an NFT, which proves the authenticity of a certain plot in a specific game.

The real estate will appreciate as more players join the game and scarce land is sold to other players who require the plots for certain tasks and missions.

It’s not just buy-and-hold. Those ‘assets’ are being put to ‘productive use’:

Players can then rent out their land to other gamers, charge others for using it or even sell it—either within the game or on a third-party exchange such as OpenSea.

that real estate, too, can be sold for large sums:

A group of people last month paid $1.6 million for Citadel of the Stars, a large kingdom in the unreleased fantasy role-playing game Mirandus

virtual world The Sandbox sold about $2.8 million worth of land in a pair of well-received sales that now have the company valuing its digital properties at about $37 million.

The sale of properties in games that are not even released reminds me of Bollywood/other Indian movies, which start making money through sale of music weeks before the movie’s release.

that real estate, too, can be sold for large sums:

A group of people last month paid $1.6 million for Citadel of the Stars, a large kingdom in the unreleased fantasy role-playing game Mirandus

virtual world The Sandbox sold about $2.8 million worth of land in a pair of well-received sales that now have the company valuing its digital properties at about $37 million.

The sale of properties in games that are not even released reminds me of Bollywood/other Indian movies, which start making money through sale of music weeks before the movie’s release.

We’ve heard news for years from governments who have wanted to tokenise parcels of land, even apartments. The current Indian government’s think tank also recognises real estate as a major area for the adoption of blockchain (Blockchain: the India Strategy, January 2020).

Innovation in virtual worlds made from scratch will always be faster because they have fewer messy problems. That said, there’s a lot for governments to learn from them about distribution and market mechanisms – if they choose to. For instance, governments could require new real estate projects to list on their real estate blockchain, just like the unreleased games that sold plots of ‘land’ as NFTs.

The smart contract could abstract the chain of ownership from the actual chain of transactions on the blockchain. That is, as the government understands the ownership history of the plot of land on which the new project is being built, the on-chain record history can grow ‘backwards’.

At the same time, the chain of ownership of that plot could also grow ‘forward’ as it is sold repeatedly.

Both the backwards and forwards additions to ownership are immutably recorded on the real estate blockchain. The abstraction means you don’t need to wait for the definitive ownership history of each plot of land to be determined before you list them on-chain.

Categories
Data Custody Personal Finance Real-World Crypto

Nigeria and cryptocurrency

Earlier in February, the central bank of Nigeria banned its banks and financial institutions from servicing cryptocurrency exchanges. Nigerians now have little to no options to convert their local currency to bitcoin and cryptocurrency – which I suppose was the objective.

A few things in this context are notable:

~ This sounds identical to the 2018 ban by Reserve Bank of India.

~ Bitcoin is now trading at nearly a 50% premium in Nigeria: see http://www.bitcoinpricemap.com

~ Since there are no online exchanges, this is probably on local P2P markets like https://localbitcoins.com . This is as transparent a signal as you can get for how desirable cryptocurrency is there. Bitcoin in Malaysia, Indonesia, India, Turkey, and most South American countries is also trading at significant premiums – although Nigeria is off the charts.

~ Late last year, there was press coverage internationally on how anti-police-brutality protestors were using bitcoin (and potentially other tokens) to raise funds: “Nigerian Banks Shut Them Out, So These Activists Are Using Bitcoin to Battle Police Brutality

~ Throughout 2019 and 2020, Nigeria topped Google trends for searches around bitcoin. One reason could be simply because Nigeria’s currency really hasn’t done well versus the dollar, or simply because Nigeria is a very young country and there’s curiosity about crypto: “Why Nigeria Tops Google Searches for Bitcoin