Kickstarter wants to become a blockchain company, but not without your blessing.
Last year, the company outlined plans to reshape its crowdfunding business by using blockchain technology to create a "decentralised crowdfunding protocol" that would allow anybody to launch and fund projects anywhere on the web.
According to Kickstarter, that protocol would live on Celo -- a carbon-negative, public blockchain -- and be open-source for people around the world to "build upon, connect to, or use."
Given the warranted skepticism that seems to accompany most blockchain initiatives -- largely due to their propensity towards environmental damage and speculative spending -- some onlookers were taken aback by the company's pivot.
Now, Kickstarter has seemingly cooled its interest in the technology and acknowledged it needs to at least consider those concerns before pushing ahead with its plans.
"Since our announcement, we've had thousands of conversations with our community over emails, support tickets, social posts, and Zoom calls to understand your concerns about these technologies. The environmental issues, scams, speculation, and risks are real, and we share these concerns," said the company.
"These new technologies are tools that are only as good as what they're used to build. It’s our responsibility to make sure they serve creators, backers, and the entire creative ecosystem, and that we are designing thoughtfully with full awareness of the challenges.
"It's clear to us now though that before we do anything else, we need to listen to your feedback so that we can better address your concerns."
What does that mean in practice? Well, Kickstarter says it won't implement its new blockchain protocol unless it has been tested, adding
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