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Paxful’s ‘Built with Bitcoin’ Campaign Completes Second School in Rwanda

Paxful’s ‘built with bitcoin’ campaign completes second school in rwanda

Paxful’s ‘Built with Bitcoin’ Campaign Completes Second School in Rwanda


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Paxful, a peer-to-peer crypto exchange, has completed its second school in Rwanda using entirely bitcoin donations through the #BuiltWithBitcoin campaign. The new school is a primary school for students up to age 14, with Paxful intending to provide students with smartphones and tablets, and the curriculum to be a return to the basic liberal arts notion of trivium et quadrivium or classical education.

Both teachers and students will have blockchain and bitcoin information at the heart of their education, potentially preparing students for a thriving future in Rwanda which is being fomented by the government’s willingness to embrace new technologies. Students will learn how to transact in bitcoin and even exchange it for local currency, an important real-world lesson they can take home to their parents. Paxful is, of course, a realistic method of safely doing so, one of many.

The school has a total of 6 classrooms with a teacher for each, running water and electricity, a cafeteria, and all the other modern things that Western students take for granted. In a press release, Paxful CEO Ray Youseff said:

“We encourage the cryptocurrency sector to contribute more to humanitarian projects. The #BuiltWithBitcoin initiative is an example of bitcoin being used as more than a speculative tool but a testament to the usefulness of cryptocurrency. To date, we have built two schools – a nursery, and a primary school in Rwanda, Africa- and provided scholarships to Afghan refugees, and plan to continue these philanthropic ventures.”

The company announced in July a partnership with ZamZam Water to ensure that the school had the vital resource which is far from a guarantee at all in that part of the world.

In total, Paxful aims to build 100 schools across the country, and there’s no saying the project has to stop there. They raise donations through their own platform and through social media awareness, and convert the donations into schools. The power of the blockchain is leveraged, as Ray Youseff says in the above video: “bitcoin people don’t wait around. Cryptocurrency is fast.”

And they are doing a lot with a little. The bitcoin address (donations can be made in other major cryptos as well) used for donations, 3Q5CESP85hhXTLSy2HDbSyNchb5Bi8D7ku, had received just 15 BTC at time of writing. While it’s not nothing, it demonstrates the amount of good that a relatively small amount of money can do in a place like Rwanda, and potentially the powerful impact that blockchain will play as Rwandan society increasingly adapts to it.

As for Paxful, they remain one of the top peer-to-peer crypto marketplaces, working hard to unseat veteran LocalBitcoins.

Featured Image from Shutterstock

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Published at Mon, 03 Dec 2018 17:53:35 +0000

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Adding Some Fun and Games to Bitcoin Scaling Debate Angst

Adding Some Fun and Games to Bitcoin Scaling Angst

If you’re good at puzzles and familiar with the world of bitcoin, you may be interested in signing up for the second round of the CoinGate bitcoin Challenge, starting Saturday, July 15 at 6 p.m. UTC.

CoinGate, the Lithuanian-based bitcoin and altcoin payment center, is holding its second bitcoin Challenge to highlight the history and benefits of bitcoin as their response to the ongoing contentious scaling debate.

Like many in the bitcoin space, CoinGate CTO Rytis Bieliauskas is watching with some concern and hoping bitcoiners will come back to their roots and remember the origins and original intentions of bitcoin founders.

Every two weeks throughout the summer, CoinGate is publishing a challenge related to bitcoin and blockchain history. Solving the puzzles quickly requires some knowledge and skill, but mostly the challenges are designed to be “geeky fun” for anyone involved with bitcoin to some degree.

On Saturday, contestants can register and access a number of challenges of varying degrees of difficulty on CoinGate’s website and on /r/bitcoin here.

In preparation for the second contest, the Reddit thread is a good source of examples with answers from the last challenge, which began on July 1.

During the July 1st challenge, there was considerable discussion on Reddit among contestants.

“We were really surprised that participants started sharing their thoughts on our Reddit thread, even though there was only one prize for each riddle,” the Coingate team told bitcoin Magazine. “And so all the riddles were solved and prizes snapped up within just 3 hours.

“Our team is really happy with the results and the number of participants [the challenge] attracted. All in all, we logged over 800 attempts and more than 600 people who were up to solve the tasks in a matter of several hours.”

Contestants received a series of puzzles to choose from, leading to a bitcoin private key and the address for a wallet containing BTC.

Three challenges of varying difficulty were launched at once, with the most difficult taking from 4-6 hours to solve. As is evident on the Reddit comments, some found the puzzles baffling while a few seemed more than ready for the challenge.

In one puzzle, for example, contestants were given a grid of four CoinGate logos that seemed identical. A private key was hidden in the image and the participants had to figure out what was hidden and assemble the private key leading to the reward.

Most of the puzzles involve steganography — extracting of the meaning of a secret message hidden within an ordinary message.

Some of the solutions will provide a private key, while some others will provide another method to retrieve bitcoins, for example in the form of a wallet “seed.”

The end goal of each challenge is to get access to a bitcoin address by finding its private key (or otherwise). Depending on the difficulty of the challenge, that address will contain a reward of 0.01 to 0.1 BTC. (The prize will be sent to a bitcoin address just before the challenge.)

CoinGate: On SegWit and UASF

CoinGate CTO Rytis Bieliauskas told bitcoin Magazine:

“CoinGate is seeking to attract people back to the basics of bitcoin and blockchain [technology]. Having been involved in the bitcoin world since 2011, we deeply love the original blockchain and we strongly believe that consensus [on scaling] will be reached.”

Bieliauskas is concerned about the direction bitcoin is taking and is asking Bitcoiners to remember what the original essence and intent of bitcoin was.

Bieliauskas considers himself to be a Core supporter but is hopeful all parties involved will come to a consensus on how to scale bitcoin.

On the CoinGate blog, he wrote:

“We strongly believe in a future for bitcoin. As we have officially stated previously, our team strongly supports SegWit as the best bitcoin scaling solution, and we therefore maintain a close eye on BIP148 (UASF).”

In an email from the CoinGate team, a representative explained: “We have officially expressed our support for SegWit and UASF back in April, though we have not made any comment on the SegWit2x as it was coined after the New York Agreement. We strongly support any scaling solution that will help bitcoin grow and become accessible and useful to people across the globe.

“However, since we are involved with bitcoin from its technical side, we know that a scaling solution must not only seem viable ‘on paper,’ but also undergo rigorous testing before it can be launched across the network.”

Regardless of what the future brings, CoinGate has expressed that it is here to stay:

“[W]hatever the changes in the bitcoin landscape, our team is ready to adjust to any technological developments. In the end, our goal has always been to make cryptocurrencies accessible, simple and convenient for both businesses and individuals.”

CoinGate is a payment gateway/processor for bitcoin and more than 40 altcoins including Litecoin, Ethereum, Zcash, Monero, Dash, Ripple and Golem. According to CoinGate, it is not an exchange because although the site offers customers ways to buy and sell bitcoins, it does not connect customers to each other.

Those interested in applying to play can sign up here.

The post Adding Some Fun and Games to Bitcoin Scaling Debate Angst appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.