The wiki community held a vote as to whether the Wikimedia Foundation should continue to accept cryptocurrency donations, the result of which was a resounding "no".
The proposal was made by Wikipedia administrator, checkuser
and oversighter GorillaWarfare based on three points: it could be seen as an
endorsement of cryptocurrency by the organization; the tech is not
environmentally sustainable; and, last of all, accepting crypto could damage
the reputation of the foundation.
The Wikimedia Foundation currently accepts donations in
Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash and Ethereum, as well as traditional payment types.
According to the community, crypto is one of the foundation's smallest revenue
channels, making up a mere .08 percent of 2021 revenue, equating to $130,100.
Total revenue for 2021 was around $162 million.
The decision to accept the alternative cash was made in
2014, as requests from donors for the option coincided with the US Internal
Revenue Service issuing guidance on the matter.
The foundation's policy is to immediately convert the crypto
to US dollars using bitcoin payment service provider BitPay, a policy which is
also raised concerns as it may be viewed as an endorsement of the vendor.
Of the 326 votes cast between January 10 and April 12 this
year, 71 percent (232) supported the proposal to stop accepting cryptocurrency
while roughly 29 percent wanted to continue doing so. The results, however, are
non-binding.
"We never should have started accepting them in the
first place. Many years later, they represent not even 1 percent of annual
donations," wrote one community member at the time of voting.
"Wikimedia is legitimizing a series of environmentally unfriendly Ponzi
schemes by accepting Bitcoin and is getting almost nothing back financially in
return."
Another community member countered: "To the contrary,
crypto aligns with our values of free software and user freedom."
One pro-crypto accepting Wiki member stated: "Beggars
can't be choosers."
Yet another reminded voters that "Bitcoin is an
official currency in El Salvador."
Additionally, naysayers pointed out less-energy intensive
cryptocurrencies exist (proof-of-stake), that cryptocurrencies allow people to
donate anonymously and lastly, that fiat currencies have their own
environmental challenges.
Last week, Mozilla announced that it would no longer accept
"proof-of-work" cryptocurrencies, only those that were
"proof-of-stake" and therefore less energy intensive. The decision
came after a three-month feedback period.
"These decisions are informed by our climate
commitments," said the non-profit.
For-profit fintech company PayPal currently allows payments
to be made through the digital currencies.
And although it is yet to materialize, rumors swirled last
summer that Amazon would soon allow users to pay in cryptocurrencies, after job
postings were spotted advertising a digital currency and blockchain product
lead for its payments team