P2P Foundation
Formation | 2005 |
---|---|
Location | |
Founder
|
Michel Bauwens |
Website | http://p2pfoundation.net |
P2P Foundation: The Foundation for Peer to Peer Alternatives is an organization with the aim of studying the impact of peer to peer technology and thought on society. It was founded by Michel Bauwens.[1]
The P2P Foundation is a registered institute founded in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Its local registered name is: Stichting Peer to Peer Alternatives, dossier nr: 34264847.[2]
Mission[edit]
The P2P Foundation serves as a networking site for those who support developing peer to peer processes "for many systems within the current socio-economic and cultural-political order".[3] Its Choke Point Project aims to map the entire internet. It won the Golden Nica Award for "The Next Idea" 2011.[4]
Nakamoto controversy[edit]
Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of bitcoin, released one of the first papers describing bitcoin on the p2p website.[5] When Newsweek ran an article claiming Nakamoto is Dorian S. Nakamoto from Temple City, California, Nakamoto's user profile posted that he was not Dorian.[5][6] The p2p foundation verified that the account was the same account that posted one of the first papers describing bitcoin.[5][7] On September 2014, Nakamoto's p2p account was allegedly hacked and a post was made to his account that said his information was being sold on Darknet.[8][9]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ "An interview with Michel Bauwens founder of Foundation for P2P Alternatives". www.furtherfield.org. 2011-07-01. Retrieved 2011-09-09.
- ^ Stichting Peer to Peer Alternatives, Open kvk, (Retrieved Jan. 6, 2015).
- ^ "P2P Foundation:About". p2pfoundation.net.
- ^ Kat Austen. Ars Electronica celebrates subversion , New Scientist, CultureLab, 5 September 2011
- ^ a b c Catherine Shu, “Real” Satoshi Claims He Is Not Dorian Nakamoto, Tech Crunch, (March 6, 2014).
- ^ Ian Paul (7 March 2014). "Both Satoshi Nakamotos say accused Satoshi Nakamoto isn't Bitcoin's creator". PCWorld.
- ^ Julianne Pepitone. "Desperately Seeking Satoshi: Bitcoin Creator Hunt Turns Bizarre". NBC News.
- ^ "Bitcoin open source implementation of P2P currency". ning.com.
- ^ Jeremy Kirk (9 September 2014). "Will Bitcoin's creator be unmasked for $12,000?". PCWorld.
External links[edit]
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