I was under the impression that it's getting a lot more difficult to actually cash in any significant amount of bitcoin for actual...cash.
When you're the CEO of an organization, you're the public face. You're expected to manage public situations including "scandals".
Handling this was the "practical test" part of his job interview.
He failed. He hid and tried to ignore it and let it just burn and spread. I think it would have been possible to properly manage the situation if he'd had the right set of skills and talents for the role of CEO of Mozilla.
It doesn't even matter what the nature of the "scandal" actually was.
He was also the guy who was raving about the idea of cramming some closed, proprietary video codec into Firefox to do "remote desktop" stuff, which I'm sure the large number of people who keep complaining about Mozilla bolting weird crap onto Firefox instead of focusing more on making it a better browser would have loved...
I realize that out of all the weirdness in this story this may be an odd, minor one to fixate on, but:
"Like many other cryptocurrency, NFT, and DAO projects, CityDAO’s community lives on Discord
"Why is your cryptoNFTDAOCurrency project using this 'blockchain' thing?"
"Oh, you see, Blockchain is a distributed, decentralized, open system where anyone can set up their own independent node and participate, and the system is secure and cannot be manipulated or controlled by any central authority!"
"Gee, that sounds swell, where do you guys have your meetings where you discuss all your important data?"
"Well, we put it on this centralized, proprietary business where there are lots of ways for other people or the central authority of the business to be able to mess with it..."
Why would a project like this not use an open, decentralized system like Matrix or any of the various ActivityPub-based systems for this sort of thing that they could host and control themselves?
(I'd ask why they don't set up such a system with blockchain on the backend but I imagine nobody wants to pay $20 in "gas" every time they want to say something.)
Okay, I understand what you mean, but that phrase still amuses the heck out of me.
All programmers are playwrights and all computers are lousy actors.