BitcoinMagazine·3hNeutral2 min di lettura

La Trezor Academy pubblica un documentario sull'economia Bitcoin in Africa e apre donazioni per l'istruzione

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Bitcoin Magazine Trezor Academy Releases Documentary on Africa’s Bitcoin Economy, Opens Education Donations While Western financial media has spent much of 2026 tracking Bitcoin’s crash from its October 2025 all-time high near $126,000, Trezor Academy has released a documentary that documents a different story. Seeding Bitcoin: Trezor Academy and Africa’s Bitcoin Revolution follows educators, merchants, and community members across Sub-Saharan Africa who are using Bitcoin not as a speculative asset but as a functional monetary tool. The film captures Bitcoin education centers in South Africa where students as young as teenagers complete a Bitcoin diploma course and receive weekly rewards in bitcoin, which some use to buy groceries for their families. It profiles a shopkeeper who refused Bitcoin due to volatility concerns until a local educator introduced him to stablecoin settlement, after which he became an adopter. It documents a woman who traveled 14 hours to attend a grassroots Bitcoin conference and a former drug addict whose life has shifted since engaging with the local Bitcoin circular economy. The through-line across all of them is exclusion from the existing financial system. Speakers in the film describe populations — refugees, orphans, people without formal addresses or government-issued ID — who cannot access bank accounts, credit, or formal payment infrastructure. Bitcoin, as one participant puts it, “doesn’t recognize if you’re poor or rich, what color your skin is, whether you have some government ID or not.” Chainalysis recorded more than $205 billion in on-chain value received across Sub-Saharan Africa in the year to mid-2025, up around 52% year-on-year — the third-fastest regional growth rate in the world. A larger share of those transfers fell under $10,000 than in any other region, a pattern consistent with everyday use by individuals rather than institutional flows. Remittance costs tell part of the story: sending $200 to Sub-Saharan Africa through traditional channels carries fees close to 9 percent, the highest of any region according to the World Bank. On Bitcoin’s Lightning Network, the equivalent transfer can cost a few cents. Currency instability adds another dimension. When Nigeria’s naira was devalued in March 2025, on-chain volume across the region spiked as people moved savings out of local currency. For communities that have lived through rampant inflation across multiple generations, a fixed-supply asset outside government control carries practical rather than ideological appeal. Trezor Academy: Global bitcoin education Trezor Academy, which has run more than 300 meetups, graduated over 2,000 students, and now operates in more than 30 countries, built the documentary around local educators teaching peers in their own languages. “This program will not teach everybody in Africa about Bitcoin,” says one educator in the film. “What we’re doing here is planting seeds through local educators from which Bitcoin circular

Fonte: BitcoinMagazine

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