Even in Section 10: Privacy: Nakamoto never once uses the word term crypto in conjunction with another term or noun. He rather outlines his model for privacy in terms of Public Keys, Private Keys, a person's Identity, and Trusted Third Parties.
I think any marketing expert would likely agree that an "Electronic Payment System" or a "Digital Currency" is far more marketable, and likely would be more widely accepted. And more importantly the use of a less "secretive" term; would likely lead to an increased and faster adoption rate.
To the neophyte who knows nothing about blockchain technologies and what they could potentially offer the global economic system, or in fact reshape it for the better of society; 'Crypto' may sound a bit untrustworthy. As if it in and of itself, has something to hide.
And that is something most people don't want to admit to. That they have skeletons in the closet.
Interesting and thought provoking post, merited.
The cute, lovable, huggable Linux penguin could provide contrast in terms of how crypto currencies could be rebranded and marketed differently to have a more friendly mascot and public image. The example of linux could also be evidence that even if everything about bitcoin were defined by a cute penguin mascot it wouldn't gain much marketshare or penetrate further into the public consciousness.
Any move bitcoin or crypto currencies made could easily be drowned out by the media's claims of it being a safe haven for drug users, criminals, money launderers and terrorists. There may not be a high enough signal to noise ratio for bitcoin or crypto to have a voice of its own, or even an image of its own. Virtually everything people hear about them will be determined by the media and it will represent a lion's share of influence in terms of what public opinion on bitcoin and crypto currencies are.
I completely agree. And the sad truth is that the media's negative bias is in large part influenced by the advertising dollars the major news networks generate from the Advertising Slots and Inserts which, just so happen to be be, in large part- financial institutions. Banks make up a huge portion of their overall advertising revenue. Specifically on the networks which cater to financial news, such as MSNBC, Bloomberg, and so on. The News are not about to alienate themselves from a revenue stream which likely pays for their entire operating costs alone- all other advertisers aside.
The entire banking system is understandably 100% against Bitcoin; as the very intent of Bitcoin is to remove the man in the middle "Trusted Party" to offer people the "choice" for a Peer to Peer Electronic Payment System.
PayPal, which handles enormous volume for Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and Discover, along with all of the major Banks, which all offer Visa/MC Debit/Credit Card Options see no place for that in the marketplace.
Which is why rather the news reporting agencies bias; which is highly negative; in many ways compromises the editorial integrity of the news networks themselves. The Integrity of their stories, is something they push heavily as a main component of their branding. Fair and Balanced, News You Can Trust, CNN, The Worlds Most Trusted News Network.
Which is why; I can't recall ever seeing any real stories on Bitcoin's rise. The news completely ignored the surge, but covered the crash. They report on the fact that the Darknet Marketplaces; which likely constitute a minuscule amount of the overall global drug trade; is a haven for criminals using this new "CryptoCurrency".
I'm curious... Who Even Coined the Term "CRYPTOCURRENCY".
The Nakamoto Whitepaper doesn't use that term. He mentions only once that a cryptographic proof would be used in place of the trusted third party (to prevent double spending/counterfeiting).
But somewhere along the line someone must have coined that term; as I doubt it was used prior to the Nakamoto Whitepaper; which clearly called the proof an "Electronic Payment System".