![]() |
VOOZH | about |
We’re so glad you’re here. You can expect all the best TNS content to arrive Monday through Friday to keep you on top of the news and at the top of your game.
Check your inbox for a confirmation email where you can adjust your preferences and even join additional groups.
Follow TNS on your favorite social media networks.
Become a TNS follower on LinkedIn.
Check out the latest featured and trending stories while you wait for your first TNS newsletter.
Sure, it may have actually been around seven years ago now that Mozilla started accepting cryptocurrencies as donations, but with a tweet last week reminding folks of this fact, it seems that the company has stepped into a pile of public relations doo doo. Jamie Zawinski, who credits himself as “one of the founders of Netscape and Mozilla.org,” replied to the tweet and did not mince words.
Hi, I'm sure that whoever runs this account has no idea who I am, but I founded @mozilla and I'm here to say fuck you and fuck this. Everyone involved in the project should be witheringly ashamed of this decision to partner with planet-incinerating Ponzi grifters.
— j͕̠̦̪͕̓͛̊̾̄ͅw̧̧̳̪̘͊̋͗̾͢͠z̢̘̞͈̺̞̩̓̽̐̋͗̆̋̚͟͜ (@jwz) January 3, 2022
For my money, I think it was the “planet-incinerating Ponzi grifters” turn of phrase that really set Twitter aflame. After all, as we learned earlier this year, nothing moves the social media needle more than moral outrage.
Peter Linss, one of the creators of the Gecko browser engine on which Mozilla Firefox is based, also stepped in to back up Zawinski, saying that he was 100% with him and that Mozilla was “meant to be better than this.”
When Mozilla first announced it would accept Bitcoin donations in 2014, it cited Khan Academy, Electronic Frontier Foundation, United Way, Greenpeace, and Wikimedia Foundation among its moral and upstanding cryptocurrency-accepting compatriots. Of that list, just Greenpeace has since stopped accepting cryptocurrency donations, telling the Financial Times earlier this year that “as the amount of energy needed to run bitcoin became clearer, this policy [of accepting cryptocurrency donations] became no longer tenable.”
Now, after Zawinski’s biting wordsmithery and the subsequent Twitter storm, it would appear that Mozilla has also decided to reconsider. Mike Shaver, another Mozilla project founder, also tweeted his support, writing that he was “glad to see this reflection happening.”
Last week, we tweeted a reminder that Mozilla accepts cryptocurrency donations. This led to an important discussion about cryptocurrency’s environmental impact. We’re listening, and taking action. 1/4
— Mozilla (@mozilla) January 6, 2022
In a follow-up blog post to the ordeal, Zawinski doubled down on his condemnation of Mozilla’s cryptocurrency acceptance, writing that “cryptocurrencies are not only an apocalyptic ecological disaster, and a greater-fool pyramid scheme, but are also incredibly toxic to the open web, another ideal that Mozilla used to support” — an idea also espoused in many of the comments on the initial Twitter thread.
https://twitter.com/Sarksus/status/1479158082760585226
Meanwhile, although Mozilla says that it is pausing the ability to donate cryptocurrencies during its review, the donations page still lists BitPay among its payment methods.
As you can imagine, the replies to Mozilla’s tweets about reconsidering cryptocurrencies are also full of cryptocurrency devotees offering contrary claims — for instance, that cryptocurrencies require less energy than centralized banking, and that certain types of cryptocurrency are better than others — but for now, it seems that reconsideration, at least, is underway.
This is disingenuous. All those other industries actually do something with the energy they consume. They constitute the logistical infrastructure of modern civilization.
Bitcoin does nothing except manufacture pollution.
— David Glover-Aoki (@DavidCWG) January 7, 2022
Visual Studio: "Do you trust the author of this repository?"
Absofuckinglutely not, it was me.
— @Nick_Craver@infosec.exchange (@Nick_Craver) January 5, 2022
It's ok if you started programming at 8.
It's ok if you started programming at 38.
There's room for everyone.
Next.— Verónica 👑 (@maria_fibonacci) January 6, 2022