Michael J. Casey

Michael J. Casey est président de The Decentralized AI Society, ancien directeur du contenu chez CoinDesk et co-auteur de Our Biggest Fight: Reclaiming Liberty, Humanity, and Dignity in the Digital Age. Auparavant, Casey était PDG de Streambed Media, une entreprise qu’il a cofondée pour développer des données de provenance pour le contenu numérique. Il a également été conseiller principal à l'Initiative de la Monnaie Numérique du MIT Media Lab et maître de conférences principal à la MIT Sloan School of Management. Avant de rejoindre le MIT, Casey a passé 18 ans au Wall Street Journal, où il occupait son dernier poste en tant que chroniqueur principal couvrant les affaires économiques mondiales.

Casey a écrit cinq livres, dont « The Age of Cryptocurrency: How Bitcoin and Digital Money are Challenging the Global Economic Order » et « The Truth Machine: The Blockchain and the Future of Everything », tous deux coécrits avec Paul Vigna.

En rejoignant CoinDesk à plein temps, Casey a démissionné de divers postes consultatifs rémunérés. Il conserve des rôles non rémunérés en tant que conseiller pour des organisations à but non lucratif, y compris l’Initiative de la Monnaie Numérique du MIT Media Lab et The Deep Trust Alliance. Il est actionnaire et président non exécutif de Streambed Media.

Casey détient des bitcoins.

Michael J. Casey

Dernières de Michael J. Casey


Vidéos

Africa: A Battleground in the Future of Money

“Money Reimagined” takes a look at Africa’s burgeoning role in the future of finance. Hosts Michael Casey and Sheila Warren speak with Elizabeth Rossiello, CEO of African fintech firm AZA Finance. The company just announced its partnership with the powerhouse exchange FTX to help accelerate Africa’s integration into the Web 3 economy. As we learn in this episode, the African crypto industry is growing fast along with its population of eager adopters.

Money Reimagined

Vidéos

Washington’s Relationship With Crypto: Where Is it Headed?

Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., joins “Money Reimagined” with Sheila Warren and Michael Casey to reflect on the impact of the infrastructure bill, explain the difficulties of applying regulation to an evolving technology and take a look at where policy on stablecoins and token investing might be headed.

Money Reimagined

Publicité

Analyses

S'il y a un moment pour la liberté financière, c'est maintenant

Alors que l'Ukraine collecte des fonds en ligne et que la Russie est exclue du système financier, la proposition de liberté de la cryptographie a été mise à l'épreuve.

(Ismail Ferdous/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Vidéos

Transparency and Security Versus Financial Freedom

The ease with which crypto account holders around the world have been able to send donations to Ukraine this week — amounting to over $51 million as of Thursday — has led to both amazement and concern over the power that crypto puts in anyone’s hands. For the first time, people are able to send money directly, within minutes, to a country’s government to help it fight a war. Does easy access to bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies also make it possible for Russia to get around the traditional financial system for the purpose of evading sanctions? “Money Reimagined” dives into this discussion with Jonathan Levin of Chainalysis, a data analytics firm that leverages the transparency of the blockchain to track the movement of crypto funds.

Money Reimagined

Vidéos

Taxes Versus Privacy in Crypto: Old Rules, Modern Technology

With NFT purchases and other crypto transactions leading to nasty surprises this tax season, “Money Reimagined” hosts Michael Casey and Sheila Warren sit down with two guests to discuss current tax dilemmas and why some existing rules aren’t a good fit for crypto. They also consider the impact blockchain technology may have on tax collecting and reporting in the future. Joining the show are David Kemmerer of CoinLedger and Dan Jeffries, author, futurist, systems architect.

Money Reimagined

Publicité

Analyses

La solution improbable aux failles de Politique de confidentialité des crypto-monnaies : le gouvernement

L'industrie ne peut T changer les problèmes du Web 2 sans le soutien d'États comme les États-Unis

(Rachel Sun/CoinDesk)