Way back in 2015, when Bitcoin was only a few years old, the online news site CCN reported on the potential of the cryptocurrency and the blockchain that supports it to revolutionize charitable giving. The the story began: โThe benefits of blockchain technology are creating new operating models for many types of organizations. Charities, which manage large amounts of money, require complex accounting and conduct a lot of research, have much to gain from blockchain technology as digital transactions and smart technology increase.โ
The story went on to discuss a report by the London-based Charities Aid Foundation, which examined how blockchain technology might affect the way charities raise money and operate. Back then, nonprofit Bitcoin companies were few and far between. Even today, there are relatively few compared to for-profit companiesโbut people have taken notice of Bitcoinโs potential to drive philanthropy, and stories like the one that ran on CCN are all over the internet. Still, many locals may be unaware that Truckee is home to one such non-profit.
Founded by Connie Gallippi, BitGive lays claim to the title of first Bitcoin 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Gallippi started the company in 2013 after having worked 15 years for various nonprofits in the Sacramento area.
โMy brother, actually, was involved in the early days of Bitcoin โฆ so thatโs originally how I heard about it,โ Gallippi said. โAt first, I was just really inspired by the potential and the possibilities, but when I actually decided to start BitGive was when I immersed myself in the energy of it.โ
She accompanied her brother and his business partner to a Bitcoin conference in Silicon Valley.
โSo I went, and I didnโt have any intention of getting professionally involved,โ she said. โI was in a senior role at that point in my former career. But I was immersed in the energy of this sort of budding industry, and it was powerful. โฆ There were investors walking around, Silicon Valley-level curious investorsโand these sort of really brilliant, developer-types and engineers whoโd caught onto this too. The combination of those things was really quite magical. โฆ My immediate thought was, โIf this takes off like the Dot Com Boom, they need a philanthropic foundationโan arm of some sort to give back, to siphon off a fraction of whatโs going to happen here to move the needle on issues.โ
Since attending the conference six years ago, Gallippi has worked to bring her vision to life. When BitGive launched its GiveTrack 1.0 donation platform in December, it got a write up in Forbes Magazine. The platform is designed to boost transparency in the giving process, allowing donors to give directly to causes they care about. Plus, the blockchainโa shared public ledger that records all transactions and who owns what at any given timeโlets donors see their money move in basically real-time.
โThe tech itself, it allows you to move moneyโespecially cross-border, but, really, anywhereโmuch faster and cheaper and more securely,โ Gallippi said. โSo itโs like a completely separate system from the traditional, you know, institutions and government systems that we use. Itโs like the internetโwhen the internet came out and we could write an email instead of putting it in the mail and relying on the post office. You could send money right now to someone in east Africa almost instantly, and they would get it directly.โ
In fact, BitGive has been involved with charities in Kenya, as well as the Philippines, Mexico, the U.S., Brazil, Nepal, South Africa, New Zealand, Ghana, Ethiopia, Afghanistan, Chile and other countries. Current charities raising money through BitGiveโs GiveTrack include Run for Water, which is fundraising to bring the community of Waraba, Ethiopia, fresh drinking water; Code To Inspire Inc., the first computer coding school for girls in Afghanistan; a charity running three projects in Venezuela to help orphans, pets and hospitals; and a group raising funds to secure bone marrow donors for cancer patients in the Ukraine. These projects are in the fundraising stage. There are several more that have finished this stage.
โWe have three that are under implementation, so theyโll start using the fundsโand weโll be able to see them moving on the blockchain. And then theyโll be reporting on what theyโve done. So we havenโt quite seen the full, like, A-to-Z experience yet of the version-one product until we have some of those projects done and reported on. But thatโs coming soon.โ
Charities preparing to use their donated Bitcoin isnโt the only new thing for BitGive. The company also formed a new partnership in April with Uphold, a digital money platform thatโs been integrated with GiveTrack, allowing donors to give to any of the charitable projects on the GiveTrack platform using cryptocurrencies like Ethereum, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash and Dash as well as 23 traditional global currencies. Before this, donations on GiveTrack could only made in Bitcoin.
Gallippi believes the these new technologies have the potential to restore the publicโs faith in charities and philanthropyโa faith that has been shaken in recent years by widespread news reports of fraud by traditional charitable organizations. And being able to donate using a regular currency thatโs then converted to Bitcoin will bring in non-Bitcoin donors. But the recipients of the donations still need to be able to use Bitcoin, at least to a degree.
โThey essentially fundraise in Bitcoinโand they can take it as far as we can,โ Gallippi said. โWe help them figure out if there are merchants and vendors and ways they can use it. If there arenโt, then they have to exchange it for their local currency. โฆ Weโre really holding their hands throughout the whole processโbecause this stuff is really brand new. No one knows, really, how to use it. Even people in the developed countries who say theyโre experts in Bitcoin or cryptocurrency are really just trading it or holding it and analyzing the market. They donโt actually know, really, how to use it or what might be happening in some developing economy about crypto.โ
Often, it can be difficult to use cryptocurrency in developing countries. Not many places accept it, and sometimes governments even have a ban on it. Gallippi is hoping that in the coming years, regulations surrounding its useโhere and abroadโand the technology necessary to make it possible will advance.
โThe investment so far in this industry, in this technology, has been very focused on completely other things besides what weโre doing,โ she said. โSo everyone is investing in trading and investing in coins and exchanges in the developed worldโFirst World stuff. So itโs all about basically recreating Wall Street in crypto. This has nothing to do with the people in Kenya whom we want to help. So, until the industry invests in building out an ecosystem that includes developing economies and developing countriesโin ways to use crypto or in ways to at least convert itโwe have a challenge of actually, really, leveraging what the possibilities are.โ
