A Lighthouse at the End of the Tunnel

Binance-USD

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Jul 10, 2023
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I first learned about Mike Hearn's wonderful Lighthouse fundraising platform
last year and proceeded to download it from his GitHub page and get the client
running on my Ubuntu install without too much hassle. I donated to a couple of
campaigns using the Lighthouse desktop client, most notably the amazing Medic
Mobile campaign. I found it all fairly easy and was impressed with the
completely decentralized nature of the tool.

I wanted to tell everyone I knew
about this powerful new fundraising tool, but the problem was that my family,
friends, and most of the folks I work with would have switched off after just
reading those first few sentences! Another problem was that from within the
Lighthouse client, it wasn't possible to search for Lighthouse campaigns.
The task of publicizing campaigns fell squarely on the shoulders of the campaign
creators. You had to search a site such as Reddit for a project, download the
campaign project file and then import it to the Lighthouse client. Fast-forward
to the present day, and I'm happy to announce that there is a much more user-
friendly way for members of the Bitcoin community to find Lighthouse campaigns.
The folks at Lightlist.io have a created a web-based portal that allows those
who don't want to mess with installing the client on their desktop an
althernative where they can easily find and contribute to Lighthouse campaigns.


The Lightlist.io founders: Because the (Lighthouse) crowdfunding platform is
decentralized, there is no central authority or gatekeeper that can deny
projects to receive funding. But it also lacks a central content
discovery service that lists all available projects so you can find the ones you
like to support. This is where lightlist.io comes in. We crawl the internet for
you, curate and present the projects to you in a beautiful way. Anyone wishing
to donate to a Lighthouse campaign can now visit the Lightlist.io site and make
a direct donation using a Bitcoin wallet on their mobile or smart phone. I
pledged some Bitcoin to a currently active campaign to raise funds for The
Ronald McDonald House in Albany so that they can purchase a hospital grade
breast pump for their latest house. Jeff Yule, the executive director for The
Ronald McDonald House Capital Region (RMHC) stated: Ronald McDonald House
Charities of the Capital Region is proud to accept Bitcoin donations! We are
currently seeking donations via Lighthouse to help us buy a Medical Breast Pump
for our new house! At the time of writing this article, the RMH campaign had
reached 80% of its goal of raising 5.6 BTC, in large part due to gift matching
from both the folks at LightList.io and the NY Bitcoin Group.

Cheryl,
mananging editor at Let's Talk Bitcoin (as well as member of the NY
Bitcoin Group), happens to live in the Albany, NY, area where RMHC is
located. She asked Yule and NY Bitcoin Group founder Paul Paterakis to tell how
RMHC started accepting Bitcoin for donations. Yule explained why he was open to
the idea: "Like all non profits, we are struggling to grow our donor base. Even
though we are a mature organization (33 years and counting) our need for
hundreds of active volunteers requires us to always be growing our base. We felt
that Bitcoin offered us a unique opportunity to reach out to, perhaps, the
hardest segment of our community to reach. Nearly every development/fundraising
seminar these days talks about how to reach the tech generation and do so in a
manner that generates donations. This seemed like a no brainer." They have
raised over US$5,000 in Bitcoin donations so far, including the present
campaign. Much of their revenue already comes in the form of micro donations --
through penny campaigns at schools, change collected in canisters near the
registers at McDonald's restaurants, through bottle drives, and even from
collecting aluminum bottle tabs and selling them to local recyclers. Paterakis
and Yule both saw how Bitcoin donations could fit right in. Cheryl and I would
thoroughly encourage our community of LTB readers to take a look at Lightlist.io
and perhaps support one of the many campaigns and let us know about your
experience. Many thanks, Martin