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Crypto Mining for Charity: Your Processing Power Could Save the World


Want a new way to improve the lives of children across the globe? Just do what you’re probably doing right now: browsing the internet.
The Australian branch of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) just launched The HopePage. Open the site in your browser, and it’ll use your computer’s processing power to mine the cryptocurrency monero. Any mined coin is automatically donated to UNICEF Australia, which spends it on clean water, food, and vaccines for vulnerable children.
This isn’t the first time UNICEF has dabbled in crypto mining to raise funds. In February, the organization launched its Game Chaingers project, which sought to raise funds for children in Syria by targeting computer gamers.
Tony Andres Tang, UNICEF Australia’s digital engagement and content manager, was sure to make the distinction between The HopePage and these past Coinhive exploits. “We are transparent in the fact we are borrowing a computers’ processing power, and provide the ability to choose how much power is donated,” Tang said in an interview with iTnews“The HopePage is entirely user-initiated, and they have the ultimate power to decide whether to participate or not.”

Other organizations are turning to crypto mining to bankroll their humanitarian efforts. In October, creative developer/designer Mike Bodge built Donate Your Tab, a site that lets users choose a cause from a dropdown menu and then mine monero to support it. A number of other sites, including The Charity Mine, Mining For Humanity, and Mining for Charity, seem to have started to mine crypto for charity, only to eventually abandon it.
People actively donated crypto to those “charities,” and scammers might assume its even easier to dupe people into donating via a more passive mining operation.
But UNICEF is a real organization with a solid reputation, so The HopePage is probably the real deal. If the organization is able to raise funds through this project, perhaps other legitimate charity organizations will follow suit.
That’s good news all around. Who wouldn’t want to make the world a better place while admiring cute animal photos on the internet? Answer: no one.

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