Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Elon Musk Questions Why Wikipedia Needs So Much Money

Elon Musk, owner of the X app, has questioned why the Wikimedia Foundation is soliciting donations, stating that Wikipedia does not require so much funding to operate. Musk has asked the nonprofit organization to explain to its readers what the money is meant for. Despite his controversial nature, founder of Wikipedia, Jimmy Wales, has made it clear that the company is not for sale and Musk's comments have not affected its operations. The Wikimedia Foundation claims to have raised $165.2m in fiscal year 2022 from over 13 million donations.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Norway’s Wealth Fund Watchdog to Review Cryptocurrencies by 2025

    According to market news reported by , the supervisory authority of Norway's wealth fund will conduct reviews on shoe manufacturers, cryptocurrency, and gambling companies in 2025, which may lead to divestment.
  • OpenAI responds to Musk's lawsuit: The application is repeated and still unfounded

    recently Musk requested a US court to block OpenAI, an artificial intelligence research center, from illegally transforming into a for-profit enterprise. A spokesperson for OpenAI said that Musk's application is repetitive and still baseless.
  • Musk says SpaceX could be worth more than $1 trillion

    a netizen posted on social media platform X claiming that there are 9 companies in the world with a market value exceeding one trillion US dollars, of which 8 are American companies. In response, Musk replied that SpaceX may one day become one of them.
  • South Korea postpones cryptocurrency tax again until 2027

    at today's press conference, Park Chan-dae, the leader of the largest opposition party in South Korea, the Democratic Party of Korea, announced that they will abandon their plan to implement a cryptocurrency capital gains tax in 2025 and agree to postpone it for another two years until 2027. The proposal to "delay the cryptocurrency capital gains tax" was put forward by the South Korean government and the ruling party, the People Power Party. The Democratic Party of Korea previously stated that delaying taxation was a political trick of the ruling party.
  • Japan's Financial Services Agency proposes relaxing reserve requirements for trust banks to issue stablecoins and implementing travel rules

    the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA) recently presented some ideas regarding cryptocurrencies and stablecoins to the Financial System Committee's Payment Services Working Group. It was mentioned that the FSA is unwilling to allow banks outside of trust banks to issue stablecoins. As for stablecoins issued by trust banks, the FSA hopes to relax the reserve requirements that currently mandate all assets be held in the form of bank deposits. However, the FSA also hopes to implement travel rules that require KYC for transfers of stablecoins issued by trust banks.
  • Japan’s Financial Services Agency proposes lightweight legislation for non-exchange crypto intermediaries

    Japan is considering new lightweight legislation for cryptocurrency intermediaries that are not cryptocurrency exchanges. Recently, the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA) presented its own ideas to the Payment Service Working Group of the Financial System Committee.
  • EU report recognizes potential of permissionless blockchain in traditional finance

    the EU recently released a report exploring the potential of permissionless blockchains in traditional finance (TradFi). The report suggests that permissionless blockchains should at least be considered as an option for traditional finance and financial market infrastructure, but should be used with caution.
  • Former Coinbase CTO: Visa and Mastercard and other tech giants have received threats of "censorship" due to their relationship with Libra

    the impact of Operation Chokepoint 2.0 has expanded from the cryptocurrency industry to technology giants such as Visa and Mastercard. Balaji Srinivasan, former CTO of Coinbase, shared a screenshot of a letter sent by US legislators to Visa, Mastercard, and Stripe urging them to withdraw their support for the Libra project backed by Meta.
  • Coinbase CEO: Anti-money laundering policy is a failure

    Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong stated on the X platform that anti-money laundering (AML) regulations are a failed policy that costs approximately $213 billion annually and harms the interests of legitimate consumers (as seen in multiple bank de-risking events), and according to United Nations data, only prevents about 0.2% of illegal activities. This sounds like a job that should be handled by the Government Efficiency Department (DOGE).
  • Vitalik: I don’t agree with the way the US government efficiency department pays too much attention to the government’s handling of small spending mistakes

    Vitalik Buterin, co-founder of Ethereum, responded to the content of the US government's small expenditure mistakes released by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), stating that he does not agree with the department's handling method. The examples cited only account for a small portion of the total expenditure. If the government's optimization goal is to avoid mistakes that look bad on Twitter, it will miss many valuable opportunities, and those large-scale projects that actually waste more will continue to exist because they look decent. For small-scale public funds, a venture capital (VC)-like approach should be taken, accepting a large number of possible mistakes, as its goal is to ensure that opportunities that can bring 1,000 times return can be seized. Prudence should be focused on large-scale transactions.