updraftplus domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131hustle domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131wpforms-lite domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/aonyeani76/cryptocurrencypanther/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131“The whole ‘hodl’ mentality is actually in essence the same thing. We’re holding on to the thing and we’re waiting until the reward later on,” Tucker says.
Whether cryptocurrency is indeed permissible, however, is a matter of debate. In recent months, prominent religious authorities have issued fatwas warning followers to stay away from cryptocurrencies, arguing that their wild price fluctuations and shadowy origins make them more akin to gambling, which is also forbidden by the Koran.
“Cryptocurrencies as commodities or digital assets are unlawful for trading because they have elements of uncertainty, wagering and harm,” Asrorun Niam Sholeh, head of religious decrees for the Indonesian council of Islamic scholars, told reporters in November after issuing a fatwa against using crypto. “It’s like a gambling bet.”
Though no less devout, Tucker is part of a younger, tech-savvy vanguard arguing that crypto offers Muslims a viable alternative to the traditional financial system. Tucker studied Islamic law with internationally respected scholars in Medina, the city where the prophet Muhammad is buried, and now runs CryptoHashReview, a consulting firm that advises crypto projects on how to comply with Islamic law.
“If the system is this bad, how could I possibly justify staying in it if I have another avenue?” Tucker says.
Debates like this aren’t unusual for Islam. The religion has a rich history of scholarship on financial issues, and Islamic law, or sharia, has a robust financial component. For generations, religious leaders have debated the passages in the Koran that deal with money. Generally, Islamic finance seeks to set out rules for business and investing that ensure that one group does not take advantage of another or use money to oppress someone else.
Other financial innovations like currencies that aren’t backed up with gold reserves, credit cards and commodity options trading have all sparked debates in the past.
The stakes are high. As prices for bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies rose rapidly last year, millions of people in the Islamic world began investing in them, especially in Indonesia and the Persian Gulf states, which have large populations of digitally-connected young people.
Proponents say the crypto space will produce the next wave of tech innovation, bringing wealth and opportunity to those who jump in. Skeptics argue that the crypto world is littered with scams and destined for a crash that could wipe out the savings of everyday investors who can least afford such losses.
Anas Amatayakul has spent his life studying Islamic law and history, speaking at conferences around the world and teaching at some of the top universities in Thailand, his home country. He speaks with the patience and persistence of a longtime teacher. Asked about his views on cryptocurrency, he says, “Do you have some time? I have to tell the background” and launches into the story of God creating Adam.
Amatayakul, who also has led the committee advising the Islamic Bank of Thailand on sharia, says that he’s not against technological change but that the world of cryptocurrency is moving so fast that he advises fellow Muslims to stay away from it for now.
“This is to safeguard people in matters of wealth,” Amatayakul says. Many people have sought his advice on cryptocurrency, he says. One of his former students, now studying in Cairo, even got into a dispute with his roommate because they were driving up the electricity bill by running energy-intensive software that “mines” or creates new crypto coins.
There is no central authority in Islam who can make a final ruling on crypto. Scholars write books, give lectures and gather together at universities or religious conferences to hash out new issues. Many Muslim-majority countries have sharia councils, made up of respected religious leaders, who issue fatwas and give explanations for their decisions. Though not binding, the councils can influence government policy, and religious Muslims often look to them for guidance.
Though cryptocurrencies have been around for years, they have soared in value recently. The value of cryptocurrencies taken together tripled from $770 billion at the beginning of 2021 to a high of $2.9 trillion in November, according to CoinMarketCap. A crash in January wiped out nearly half of that, but the prices for popular crypto coins are still exponentially higher than they were just a couple of years ago. A single bitcoin bought in 2013 for $30 or $40 is worth around $40,000 today.
According to a November report from Pew Research, one in six Americans have invested in or transacted with cryptocurrencies, although there are few practical uses for them beyond speculation and investment at the moment. A handful of companies, including Microsoft and Whole Foods, do accept cryptocurrency as payment, but usage is extremely limited.
Crypto is so different from other financial products because transactions are recorded using technology known as blockchain software that runs on many different computers around the world. Instead of a bank or government being the arbiter of who owns what, the blockchain allows transactions to be recorded without a central authority.
Islamic finance has adapted to changes in the past. Traditionally, investments and currencies had to be backed by physical assets such as gold, Amatayakul says. But when fiat currencies such as the U.S. dollar, which are not backed by gold, became more popular over the course of the 20th century, scholars studied and eventually incorporated them into Islamic finance. Today, fiat currencies are allowed because they are issued and guaranteed by a recognizable authority, in this case the U.S. government, Amatayakul says.
“But for cryptocurrencies, they are all unknowns. Who issues it?” Amatayakul says. The crypto world is littered with scams known as “rug pulls,” whereby a proponent of a new currency will collect real dollars from investors and then disappear.
Tucker concedes that crypto is still full of questionable investments, and that a lot of the interest in it, from Muslims and others alike, is driven by the potential of making money by speculating on it. Many people ask him whether particular cryptocurrencies are sharia-compliant, he says.
Recently, someone asked him if a coin called WifeDoge was compliant with Islamic law. Dogecoin, a cryptocurrency that started as a joke about the Internet meme featuring a Shina Ibu dog known as “doge,” shot up in value last year when Tesla chief executive Elon Musk began tweeting about it. But Tucker says he had never heard of WifeDoge. Perplexed, he looked it up.
“Lo and behold, there is a coin called WifeDoge,” he says. “It has a whole website, it has a picture of doge and the female version of doge in a wedding gown,” he says. “I said, ‘What are you doing?!’ ”
Tucker says such stories help him understand why Islamic scholars are pushing back against cryptocurrency. Still, he says he thinks the resistance arises mostly from a lack of understanding of the fast-moving technology.
“I’ve been in this space since 2017. I have a tech background. I’m technically young, so being young, it’s easier to understand these concepts,” Tucker says. He tells the story of meeting with a scholar and trying to explain how blockchain works.
“He was there for seven hours, seven long hours,” he says. “It was at that moment I realized we’ve got a long way to go because it is such a paradigm shift.”
Whether the Islamic world dives into crypto or avoids it could have an impact on the price of cryptocurrencies and the future of the technology. Four of the 10 biggest sovereign wealth funds are run by majority-Muslim countries in the Persian Gulf, together holding hundreds of billions of dollars, according to the Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute. Although those funds are not required to invest only in sharia-compliant assets, large portions of them are.
“I think it’s real,” Khaldoon Al Mubarak, head of one of the UAE’s sovereign wealth funds, said in a December interview with CNBC when asked about cryptocurrency. “While many people are skeptics, I do not fall in that category.”
Muneer Khan, head of Islamic finance and Middle East practices for the London-based law firm Simmons and Simmons, has worked in Islamic finance for 20 years, advising banks on how to craft financial products that adhere to sharia.
“There has always been an element of debate, especially around newer, less-well-understood forms of finance,” Khan says from his home in Dubai. “There are many sharia scholars around the world, but there are relatively few specialists in the area of finance, and there are even fewer scholars who understand modern-day finance.”
That creates a situation where spiritual leaders who may not fully understand cryptocurrency are making proclamations about it that are then followed by others. “For the average man on the street, it might be a big ‘I won’t do this anymore.’ It’s a warning they will rely on without understanding the nuances,” Khan says.
Still, some majority-Muslim countries, such as the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, are looking at creating their own digital currencies.
“The governments are looking at how they can diversify their economies away from hydrocarbons. Part of that is looking at fintech and part of fintech is digital assets,” Khan says. Young people in Muslim countries are also increasingly interested in crypto as a way to increase their opportunities.
“On the whole, there’s a divide between older generations and younger generations, and crypto is seen as a leveler, an equalizer, a fresh opportunity for a reset,” he says. “That is no different in the Muslim world.”
Khan expects adoption in the Muslim world to increase the same as elsewhere. Besides, he says, there are elements of cryptocurrencies that actually may appeal to conservative Muslims. “Not having interest and not having exorbitant fees and having the efficiency and less friction in terms of fees and costs — these are all inherently sharia-compliant aspects,” he says.
But for now, many Islamic scholars aren’t convinced. The raft of scams, the highly speculative nature of crypto, the connection with money laundering and crime, and the difficulty in understanding who exactly is behind certain projects all add up to a situation where most people should avoid cryptocurrencies, says Amatayakul.
“Cryptocurrencies and bitcoin is in the age of childhood,” he says. “We must allow it to grow up and become an adult.”
Days after Twitter Inc (NYSE:TWTR) announced that users can now tip using Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), supporters of Shiba Inu (CRYPTO: SHIB) want SHIB to be included as an option too.
Twitter first announced the feature of tipping with cryptocurrencies in September 2021, when the company began allowing users to send and receive tips in Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC).
A dedicated SHIB community on Twitter that goes by the name “MILKSHAKE” recently requested Twitter to add Shiba Inu as a tipping option.
MILKSHAKE’s account has over 270,000 followers on the social media platform.
Request post for @Twitter to add $SHIB as a tipping option. @TwitterSupport @verified @_tessr @HiCommunities
— MILKSHAKE (@shibainuart) February 16, 2022
Some followers also supported the cause and explained how SHIB would be a better option than Bitcoin and Ethereum.
It will happen soon enough. I mean, what stable person buys anything or tips anyone in Bitcoin? And with wild gas fees and constant need for transactions, Ethereum is to valuable to waste. Shiba Inu is the perfect token for gifting. It’s the social coin.
— CashSmart the Affluent (@CashSmartLLC) February 17, 2022
Crypto insights handle Mr Whale that posts regular updates on cryptocurrency price movement believes that nobody will use the Bitcoin tip jar. “It’s time Twitter integrates more coins, who agrees?”
Twitter has also introduced non-fungible token (NFT) verification for paid “Twitter Blue” subscribers in January.
Also Read: If You Had $1,000 Right Now, Would You Put It On Dogecoin, Axie Infinity Or Shiba Inu?
AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi
Rob, who is from northern England, told Fortune he dabbled in cryptocurrencies to supplement his $68,000 yearly salary so he could create a better life for his partner and their son.
Unexpectedly, he came across shiba inu, which was founded in August 2020. And upon reading the coin’s 28-page white paper, he was all in.
“After reading that, I was hooked,” Rob, who declined to revealed his last name, told Fortune. “I just believed the words.”
He then decided to invest $8,000 in shiba inu slowly and intended for his holdings to grow to tens of thousands of dollars.
But the coin’s stunning rally in May, which pushed its price 1,200 times what it was worth in February, multiplied Rob’s holdings beyond his imagination.
“I come from quite a poor background. I could never have even fantasized about having this much money,” Rob said, adding that he checked his account every hour for a time to make sure the gains did not vanish. “But it wasn’t gone. It wasn’t a dream.”
He withdrew $500,000 worth of shiba inu coin from the exchange and deposited the sum into his bank account, he said. This was around the time he quit his job.
Then another surge in the coin’s price further catapulted Rob’s windfall to over $1 million, according to documents reviewed by Fortune. Elsewhere, he invested in other coins in the shiba inu ecosystem like leash.
While Rob’s situation is rare, anecdotes like this have grown in frequency thanks to the wild swings in crypto prices and the emergence of various new meme tokens.
Shiba inu, an ethereum-based alternative to dogecoin, has rallied 99 million percent over the last 12 months and briefly became the 10th largest cryptocurrency by market cap this month, even surpassing dogecoin at one point. It’s now ranked 11, according to data by CoinMarketCap.
While digital assets are known to have passionate communities behind them, shiba inu’s has proven to be one of the most zealous. And this is exactly why Rob stuck around, he said.
“I made three very close friends [through Shiba], and we formed a little group,” he told Fortune, adding how even the anonymous project lead, who goes by Shytoshi Kusama on Twitter, was responsive to him. That was something he did not experience in other coin communities.
Still, it remains to be seen whether meme tokens, which are often driven by jokes and social media, are here to stay. Experts have said many of them will die down.
But for Rob and other shiba inu supporters Insider has spoken with, what sets shiba inu apart is its use cases, such as the shibarium blockchain and non-fungible token artworks, among others.
“I am emotionally attached, which can be quite dangerous in crypto environments,” he told Fortune. “But we believe so strongly that there is more to achieve with shiba.”