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MLB Team Washington Nationals Partners With Terra Blockchain Community, Ballpark Plans to Accept UST

On February 9, the American professional baseball team based in Washington, D.C., the Washington Nationals, announced the team has partnered with Terra, the open-source blockchain platform and decentralized autonomous organization (DAO). The Washington Nationals detail that the team is a “leading innovator” and is “consistently introducing new technologies to enhance the fan experience.” Washington Nationals Ink Long-Term Deal With Terra Major League Baseball (MLB) team the Washington Nationals has partnered with the blockchain platform and DAO Terra, according to an announcement published by the team on Wednesday. The deal with Terra follows a slew of sports-related deals with crypto firms, but the MLB team will be the first to partner with an open-source blockchain project. In addition to the partnership, the algorithmic stablecoin UST that’s issued on the Terra blockchain will be “accepted as a payment method at Nationals Park as early as next season.” “The Nationals continue t...

In 2013, Wired destroyed the key to 13 BTC now worth $760K... to make a point

Wired considered donating their holdings to charity back in 2013, but instead decided the “obvious” choice was to destroy the key to their wallet holding 13 BTC.

There has been no shortage of people and institutions that woefully underestimated the potential of cryptocurrency.

Among the ranks of once-were Bitcoin naysayers is Wired, which destroyed the private key to a Bitcoin (BTC) wallet holding 13.34623579 BTC back in 2013 in order to make the point the cryptocurrency was nothing more than an “abstraction”. The Bitcoin in the now inaccessible address is now worth $761,000.

Author Robert McMillan (who now is a reporter with the Wall Street Journal) set up a Butterfy Labs Bitcoin mining rig in the corner of his office at Wired to see what all the fuss was about. And at the conclusion of his little experiment, he was far from impressed.

Full marks for being early, null points for wise choices.

“The world's most popular digital currency really is nothing more than an abstraction,” he wrote. The journalist deliberated on what to do with the Bitcoin at the time, initially considering donating them to charity.

“But in the end, the answer was obvious,” he wrote, “we're destroying the private key used by our Bitcoin wallet.”

“That leaves our growing pile of Bitcoin lucre locked away in a digital vault for all eternity — or at least until someone cracks the SHA-256 encryption that secures it.”

At the time, the Butterfly Labs ASIC was churning out an average of two Bitcoin every ten days. Wired noted in the article that two BTC were worth about $220 at the time. Now, they’d be worth about $57,000 each, or $112,000 for the pair — an increase of around 51,000%.

In 2013, it took an average of 13 hours to mine one BTC using an ordinary PC. By 2014, that time had grown to 23 days. In 2021, it would take 10 years to mine one BTC according to the NYT.

Even back in 2013 however, Bitcoin mining difficulty had been increasing exponentially. McMillan complained that it had become about 10 million times harder to win the Bitcoin mining “lottery” since 2009.

Related: Bitcoiner loses almost $100K of BTC in wallet transfer bungle

Reddit user leMartinx highlighted the article in a post yesterday, writing that the whole debacle shows "how we have come a long way from 2013." But many other users weren't so forgiving, such as Cappy2020, who commented "serves them right for being so arrogant," adding that "even if you thought Bitcoin was just “daydreaming”, at least hold onto it in the off chance that you could, maybe, be wrong."

BakedPotato840, meanwhile, wrote:

"It's not surprising to find posts from the past to have this opinion on Bitcoin. The real ones who deserve criticism are the people who still have these opinions today."
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