By Tim Copeland
3 min read
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and rapper Jay Z are creating an endowment to fund Bitcoin development initially in Africa and India, Dorsey announced today.
They are putting 500 Bitcoin into the fund, which is worth $23.5 million at current prices. It will be set up as a blind irrevocable trust, Dorsey said, that won't take any direction from its founders once it is set up. They are hiring three board members to get the ball rolling.
The application process provides one further detail. It states that the mission statement is to: "make bitcoin the internet's currency."
Dorsey has long been a fan of the idea that Bitcoin may become the currency of the Internet. Speaking with podcaster Joe Rogan in February 2019, he said, "I believe the Internet will have a native currency and I don’t know if it’s Bitcoin. I think it will be [Bitcoin] given all the tests it has been through and the principles behind it, how it was created. It was something that was born on the Internet, was developed on the Internet, was tested on the Internet, [and] it is of the Internet."
Twitter and Square CEO Jack Dorsey. Image: Shutterstock
Dorsey has also shown his willingness to back Bitcoin. In October 2020, payments company Square, which Dorsey owns, bought 4,709 Bitcoin ($50 million at the time) as part of its investment strategy. It certainly paid off; that Bitcoin cache is now worth $222 million.
Twitter itself, however, has not invested in Bitcoin so far. Twitter CFO Ned Segal said earlier this week that the company has considered whether it should invest some of its assets into Bitcoin but has not yet felt it would be appropriate.
"We've done a lot of the upfront thinking to consider how we might pay employees should they ask to be paid in Bitcoin, how we might pay a vendor if they asked to be paid in Bitcoin, and whether we need to have Bitcoin on our balance sheet should that happen," noted Segal.
"It's something we continue to study and look at. We want to be thoughtful about it over time, but we haven't made any changes yet," he added.
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