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Jack Dorsey and Peter Todd Urge Signal App to Adopt Bitcoin

Several Bitcoiners, including Jack Dorsey, have reinforced their push for the privacy-focused messaging app Signal to adopt Bitcoin through a new “Bitcoin for Signal” campaign, which aims to integrate Bitcoin with the Cashu protocol to enable payments within the app.

“@Signalapp should use Bitcoin,” Dorsey posted to X on Thursday, retweeting a post from pseudonymous Bitcoin developer Cashu, who is behind the Bitcoin for Signal campaign.

Bitcoin for Signal aims to implement Cashu’s “Chaumian Ecash” solution, which integrates Bitcoin with the Cashu protocol to enable Bitcoin payments on Signal.

“Bitcoin belongs in Signal. Cashu ecash enables truly private Bitcoin payments inside the world’s most trusted encryption messenger,” the Bitcoin for Signal website states.

Cashu’s pitch for Signal to adopt Bitcoin. Source: Bitcoin for Signal

The campaign has also been endorsed by Bitcoin developer Peter Todd, who wants Bitcoin to replace, or at least expand on, Signal’s current crypto payment solution, MobileCoin (MOB).

“I’ve been wanting to try MobileCoin. But it’s such a failure I can’t even buy any. Signal App needs to accept reality and just add Bitcoin support,” Bitcoin developer Peter Todd said.

Signal implemented MobileCoin in April 2021; however, it has been criticized for being overly centralized with a small set of validators.

Pseudonymous Bitcoin developer Calle and Satoshi Labs co-founder Pavol Rusnak also threw support behind Bitcoin for Signal.

Given Signal has around 70 million monthly active users, a successful implementation could make it a significant platform for peer-to-peer Bitcoin transactions. 

Dorsey has previously argued that Bitcoin will be a failure if it’s only used as a store of value and not for everyday payments — like how Satoshi Nakamoto intended.

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Source: Jack Dorsey

Bitcoin wasn’t built to be a privacy solution, critics argue

However, several critics have noted that Bitcoin lacks privacy features integrated into its base layer, which may make it an unsuitable cryptocurrency to pair with a privacy-focused messenger app.

“Jack, why use a fully public blockchain for a privacy chat?” asked Aztec Network engineer José Pedro Sousa.

Techlore, a digital rights advocacy page, argued Bitcoin would jeopardize the privacy of Signal users.