Hacker Noon Raises $1M From Former Ripple CTO for Content Micro-Tipping

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Hacker Noon’s 4 million monthly readers are about to get a taste of crypto-powered micro-tipping firsthand. 

The tech publication has closed a $1 million strategic investment from micropayments firm Coil, a blockchain-agnostic product built on the Interledger protocol and headed by former Ripple CTO Stefan Thomas. 

The terms include a three-year partnership between the Colorado and San Francisco-based firms, including the use of Coil’s Web Monetization technology. 

“Avoiding something like a paywall with a microtransaction is extremely valuable,” Hacker Noon founder and CEO David Smooke in a phone interview with CoinDesk. 

“Hacker Noon is home to an incredibly dedicated community of technologists and software developers,” Coil Chief Growth Officer Jonathan Greenglass said in a statement. “We’re thrilled to be working with Hacker Noon to provide its community with a simple way for readers and writers to participate in the value exchange between one another.”

Read more: Bitcoin’s Lightning Becomes Latest Protocol to Court Publishers With Micropayments

With a simple web tag, the Coil integration lets readers pay Hacker Noon writers based on their screen time, Smooke said. Those funds are first pulled from ad revenue generated by Hacker Noon sponsors. Funds not directed toward individual writers will be pooled for charity, Smooke said. Coil advertises memberships starting at $5 per month.

Activating the Coil Web Monetization tag.
Source: Hacker Noon

At first glance, microtransactions seem like an apt solution for journalism or any online publication: a happy compromise between subscription and ad-based revenue models. Yet to date, the tech has received little love.

Smooke, who founded Hacker Noon in 2016 with his wife, Linh Dao Smooke, and business partner, Jay Zalowitz, said it’s still too early to write off the option.

Read more: Hacker Noon Is Storing Content on a Blockchain After Ditching Medium

The Hacker Noon micro-tipping feature comes after the blogging platform left Medium in 2019 following managerial disagreements. Medium allocates portions of subscriber fees to writers based on its “claps” feature. 

Moreover, both Hacker Noon and Coil have pledged to support user privacy with the new payments feature. Smooke said Hacker Noon doesn’t “want to do the New York Times thing” and “collect social graphs” of its readers.

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