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Thereâs an Initial Coin Offering (ICO), an Initial Fork Offering (IFO), but is the ecosystem ready for an Initial Troll Offering (ITO)? Bitcoiners have taken to crowdfunding as a way to answer critics, one of whom placed a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ), warning about bitcoin. The group plans a troll-level response.
Also read: The Satoshi Revolution
Initial Troll Offering Takes-On Wall Street
Twitterer @cryptograffiti read the advertisement, open-letter, plea from Interactive Brokers chairman Thomas Peterffy printed in the Wall Street Journal 14 November 2017. Mr. Peterffy personally addressed Commodity Futures Trading Commission chair J. Christopher Giancarlo, head of the regulatory body ultimately responsible for overseeing Chicago Mercâs (CME) anticipated bitcoin futures market.
Mr. Peterffy urged such crypto assets be segregated from the âreal economy,â citing price volatility and their relatively youngish existence.
Hours later, @cryptograffiti posted:
 44.30228 BTC for Full Color National WSJ Ad
The idea flew across the Twitterverse, gathering steam among bitcoiners far and wide. Soon, a crowdfunding website announced stated intentions, referring to the Twitter brainstorming that followed as its âwhite paper.â
âYour contribution will go directly towards buying a full page ad in the Wall Street Journal,â the ITO explains. âThis generally costs $350,000 USD. We want your help to get this wizard into this old newspaper.â The thrown-together wizard is a beloved symbol for the Reddit group, /r/Bitcoin.
âIf you participate,â it continues, âyou will not get your money back. Unless we fail. Then you will get your money back. If we succeed, weâll get the Bitcoin Wizard into the Wall Street Journal.â
Some of the first comments on the ITO white paper.
The WSJ, despite printed newspapers falling off the planet in recent years, maintains a robust circulation in the United States, and is a mainstay of financial professionals.
The project describes an ITO as âa fundraising campaign for ridiculous and fun concepts involving the trolling of institutions with Bitcoin. This is all done in the spirit of the Bitcoin community! Throughout this process, participants will fund projects whose sole intention is to make fun of things, people, or Jamie Dimon.â
Mr. Dimon famously referred to bitcoin as a âfraudâ and to its participants as âstupid.â
Just the Beginning
âWeâre Ready for the WSJ,â the website urges. âThis famous piece of artwork deserves its own advertisement in the Wall Street Journal. It not only promotes the Bitcoin namesake, but it also trolls the Wall Street Journal for being a paper that is made of paper.â
The funding site has a redirect link to future projects. âSubmit Your ITO Idea Here,â it asks. âTell us about your crazy idea, below,â asking a series of follow-up questions such as âHow much will it cost?, Who are you trolling?, Why are you trolling them?, How do you propose to troll them?, Is there anything else we should know, to be successful?â
Eidoo, Swiss wallet debit card provider.
Trolling and crowdfunding are bitcoin staples, rites of passage. That theyâre combining is not new, of course.
Just this year, Eidoo, a Swiss wallet, debit card provider, and exchange brilliantly trolled Mr. Dimon after his dismissive comments, including how heâd fire anyone who worked for him who even so much as used bitcoin.
They too took a full page WSJ ad.
âMaybe Jamie will fire you. But, youâll be free to trade in the crypto-world,â it read.
What do you think of Initial Troll Offerings? Tell us in the comments below!
Images courtesy of: Pixabay, Twitter. News.bitcoin.com Lead Writer/Editor Jamie Redman contributed sourcing for this article.Â
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The post Initial Troll Offering Fires Back at Wall Street with Paid Ad of its Own appeared first on Bitcoin News.
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