Skip to main content

Hal Finney's wife talks about a Bitcoin charity event

Hal Finney's wife talks about a Bitcoin charity event

She said that the goal of the event is to raise money to help people with ALS.

Hal Finney's wife, Fran Finney, has planned a charity event to help people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Finney talked about the event on Twitter and told Bitcoin users that they should run a half marathon and post about it on social media between January 1 and January 10, 2023, to help raise money to fight the disease.

Fran Finney sent out the news through Hal Finney's official Twitter account. She had previously reactivated the account to keep it from being deleted when Twitter got rid of old accounts.

"Running Bitcoin" is being held with the help of the ALS Association Golden West Chapter. It was named after Hal Finney's first Bitcoin tweet, which was sent just a few days after Bitcoin went live in 2009. On its website, the organization says that it helps people with ALS by giving them loans of equipment and educational materials.

The charity said that it wants to use the event to raise money by giving some donors official Running Bitcoin T-shirts and rare Hal Finney collectibles..net/YwotbKdP4sVunJGfdhmgww/e8f260a6-84bf-4222-a093-e1ef14e44c00/

Hal Finney was one of the first people to use a cryptocurrency. In 2004, he made Reusable Proof of Work (RPOW), a system that let people who received Hashcash coins use them again. People often think of RPOW as an early form of cryptocurrency, even though it didn't have a decentralized network but instead used a central server.

Finney also added code to the Bitcoin codebase in 2008 and early 2009, before it was released to the public in January 2009. Satoshi Nakamoto sent him 10 BTC in the first transaction ever made using Bitcoin.

Before August 2009, when he was diagnosed with ALS, Hal Finney ran a lot. After fighting the disease for many years, he was frozen in 2014 to keep him alive.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

In response to customer abuses, Wells Fargo and the CFPB reach a $3.7 billion settlement.

With regard to checking accounts, mortgages, and auto loans, Wells Fargo and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reached a $3.7 billion settlement. Some of the misbehavior occurred as recently as this year. The CFPB announced in a statement that the business was compelled to pay an unprecedented $1.7 billion civil penalty as well as more than $2 billion to customers with 16 million accounts. Many of the "necessary activities" connected to the settlement, according to the San Francisco-based bank, have already been finished, it was stated in a separate statement. In its statement, the government stated that the bank's illegal actions caused its customers to suffer financial losses totaling billions of dollars and, for many of them, the loss of their homes and vehicles. Consumers' auto and mortgage loan fees and interest rates were improperly assessed, their vehicles were wrongfully repossessed, and the bank misapplied its customers' payments to their loans. Th

Al-Falih: Despite worldwide swings, the Saudi riyal is still stable.

ABU DHABI — Khalid Al-Falih, the minister of investment, emphasized the strength of Saudi Arabia's monetary system and currency. "Thanks to the Saudi Arabian riyal's stable currency as a result of the Kingdom's sensible economic policies, all other currencies in the globe saw swings. He revealed this while giving a speech at the Saudi Budget Forum 2023 in Riyadh on Sunday. "The debt rate in the entire world economy, even the leading countries, is increasing, while the debt rate in the Kingdom lowers to 25%," he said. Al-Falih called Saudi Arabia's budget "historic," particularly in view of the difficulties the rest of the globe is experiencing. According to the minister, the Kingdom has the highest rate of economic growth in the entire world. He emphasized that the non-oil economy expanded at a rate of 6% in response to those who claim that Saudi Arabia's economic progress is solely due to the rise in oil prices. Al-Falih complimented the st