LEIGH: What Venezuelans Think About Bitcoin and American Media

LEIGH: What Venezuelans Think About Bitcoin and American Media

In this audio interview, CoinDesk’s Leigh Cuen and Venezuelan journalist Javier Bastardo talk about cryptocurrency and the media industry. This episode is sponsored by Crypto.com, Bitstamp and Nexo.io. Caracas-based bitcoiner and journalist Javier Bastardo covers the crypto scene in Latin America since 2017 and has been living partially off bitcoin, thanks to BTCPay server and a variety of employers that pay in crypto, like CoinTelegraph Espanol. “Even when I’m trying to report in an unbiased way, I’m really bullish on crypto,” Bastardo said. “Bitcoin could be useful to other Venezuelans.” Beyond holding it as savings, many Venezuelans use cryptocurrency as the fastest way to obtain dollars. Bastardo said there is more in common between crypto readers across the Americas, both Latin America and North America, than similarities within local geographies. “We’re talking to a very specific audience, even if I’m writing in Spanish and you’re writing in English,” Bastardo said, referring to CoinDesk writers in New York and California. “We are more connected than I would be with a person who writes about politics in Venezuela...The way they [crypto audiences] look for information is very particular to the types of viewers that we have.” When it comes to the media, in Venezuela it is more clear to readers that journalists can be activists and that corporate media is often government propaganda. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, at least five journalists were murdered for doing their jobs in Venezuela over the past few decades. In this context, censorship isn’t merely about ad policies or social pressure. It comes from the government and is applied directly to the communications infrastructure. Despite the struggle to identify reliable narratives, many readers make financial decisions based on media reports and social media trends. Media production and financial markets have always been intertwined, for better or worse. This is especially true of cryptocurrency markets. “They [crypto readers] are already against journalism, against the information industry. They have more anger about the information,” Bastardo said, describing the challenge of making media for this niche audience. “They need the narrative to keep going about adoption, about mainstream, yea, bitcoin will save us. It’s weird, because we have an active scene but it’s little.” While the outrage associated with crypto coverage may be unique, the dynamic of media-driven markets is hardly new. After all, the financial outlet Bloomberg reportedly gave bonuses to reporters for “market-moving” stories and many American outlets offer bonuses for web traffic, which may incentivize sensationalism. These policy decisions come from the top, as with most business models, and rarely originates from the newsroom itself. From his perspective, Bastardo said it’s unclear whether North American media, including but not limited to crypto journalism, is deliberately biased. “I really don’t know if the things we see on CNN or CNBC are identified with some party,” he said. “We have those narratives that show Trump is a really good narratives and others that show him as a really bad President. This is a problem in the whole media industry.” In particular, he said some crypto content creators might be “aligned” and “trying to push some agendas,” but that it’s unclear what is really going on with the overlap between journalism and cryptocurrency marketing. For example, he said people overhype and sensationalize stories of bitcoin usage in Venezuela, which can be both dehumanizing and misleading. It becomes even harder for readers to decipher because some of the most trusted sources in the crypto industry are individuals without journalistic training or oversight. This creates even more opportunities for freelancers with bold personalities, but a more challenging environment for readers seeking relatively objective information. “We have a similar way to get information in Venezuela, but it’s worse, because we don’t really have open media,” he said. “But the crypto-related media, I don’t know if the writers are biased...I don’t know if this is true. This is only an opinion.” See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(4044)

Why Strategy Sold Bitcoin, VanEck’s BNB Bet and a $1.7B ETF Exodus

Why Strategy Sold Bitcoin, VanEck’s BNB Bet and a $1.7B ETF Exodus

On this episode of CoinDesk's Public Keys from the New York Stock Exchange, host Jennifer Sanasie is joined by Bloomberg Intelligence Senior Research Analyst James Seyffart to break down the SpaceX IP...

8 Juni 33min

Saylor's Back: Strategy Buys $101M of Bitcoin | CoinDesk Daily

Saylor's Back: Strategy Buys $101M of Bitcoin | CoinDesk Daily

Strategy buys Bitcoin again after 32-BTC sale. Strategy bought 1,550 bitcoin for $101 million, its first purchase since the 32-BTC sale on June 1. The buy came at an average price of $65,332, well be...

8 Juni 0s

A-Rod Bought the Timberwolves at the Worst Possible Time. Here Is Why It Worked.

A-Rod Bought the Timberwolves at the Worst Possible Time. Here Is Why It Worked.

Alex Rodriguez joins the Consensus Main Stage for a candid conversation on life after baseball, building a championship organization, and the lessons that shaped him. From buying the Minnesota Timberw...

7 Juni 26min

Why the Co-Founder of LinkedIn Is Betting on NFTs Again

Why the Co-Founder of LinkedIn Is Betting on NFTs Again

Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and prominent AI investor, joins the Consensus mainstage for a wide-ranging conversation on where crypto, AI, and identity are headed. Hoffman argues that as agent...

6 Juni 18min

Everything You Need to Know about x402: The 30-Year-Old HTTP Code Built for the AI Economy

Everything You Need to Know about x402: The 30-Year-Old HTTP Code Built for the AI Economy

Erik Reppel, Head of Engineering at Coinbase Developer Platform, joins the Consensus mainstage to make the case for internet-native payments. The internet was built for humans, but AI agents are takin...

6 Juni 19min

Kevin O’Leary on the asset class that beat everything else in his portfolio

Kevin O’Leary on the asset class that beat everything else in his portfolio

Kevin O'Leary joins the mainstage at Consensus wearing a $5.2 million Michael Jordan card around his neck and explains why collectibles have become his best-performing asset class, including a 3am bid...

5 Juni 11min

'I Will Not Vote for Clarity Until We Address Ethics': Sen. Angela Alsobrooks

'I Will Not Vote for Clarity Until We Address Ethics': Sen. Angela Alsobrooks

Senator Angela Alsobrooks joins hosts Rebecca Rettig and Renato Mariotti to discuss the three outstanding issues she needs resolved before voting Clarity off the Senate floor. Plus, insights into Jami...

5 Juni 24min

CFTC Chairman Mike Selig on crypto, prediction markets and AI-powered market surveillance

CFTC Chairman Mike Selig on crypto, prediction markets and AI-powered market surveillance

CFTC Chairman Mike Selig sits down on the mainstage at Consensus to break down the most consequential regulatory shift in crypto history: a joint SEC-CFTC taxonomy that finally defines what kind of as...

5 Juni 18min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

aftonbladet-krim
svenska-fall
motiv
p3-krim
aftonbladet-daily
flashback-forever
spar
rss-sanning-konsekvens
rss-expressen-dok
rss-krimreportrarna
rss-aftonbladet-krim
rss-vad-fan-hande
rss-frandfors-horna
svd-ledarredaktionen
rss-flodet
rss-svalan-krim
krimmagasinet
dagens-eko
spotlight
olyckan-inifran