Before crypto became flashy and full of billion-dollar logos, it was a movement rooted in privacy, freedom, and code. That’s where the cypherpunks came in. These were developers and cryptographers from the 80s and 90s who believed that privacy wasn’t negotiable: it was a basic right. Their famous 1993 manifesto, written by Eric Hughes,
Bitcoin, released in 2009 by Satoshi Nakamoto, was the first successful cypherpunk currency. It offered a form of decentralized money, not tied to banks, so people would have the power to transact without permission. But over time, Bitcoin and many of its successors have become more corporate,
Monero (XMR): Privacy That Can’t Be Turned Off
Monero launched in 2014 as a fork of Bytecoin, with the pseudonymous author Nicolas van Saberhagen originally proposing its privacy-focused protocol, CryptoNote. It was built from the ground up for one thing: untraceable money. The Monero ecosystem is maintained by a collective of volunteer developers and contributors, not a single foundation or corporation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZi9xx6aiuY&embedable=true
Monero uses a Proof-of-Work (PoW) consensus protocol with RandomX, a mining algorithm specifically designed to resist Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASICs) hardware miners —machines that could lead to a certain degree of centralization, as it’s happened with Bitcoin. This helps keep it more accessible and decentralized, with a wider distribution of miners around the world.
Monero users don’t have to rely on any institution to stay private. It’s remained resilient even as regulators have pressured popular exchanges to delist it globally.
Ethereum Classic (ETC): Holding the Line on Immutability
Ethereum Classic was born in 2016 during one of crypto’s most
ETC operates as a smart contract platform, just like Ethereum, but it’s taken a much stricter stance on decentralization, autonomy, and censorship resistance. It uses Proof-of-Work, not Proof-of-Stake (PoS) like modern Ethereum, and continues to be mined by a globally distributed network –although through mining pools, with the majority
Its community values resilience and ideological consistency.
Zcash: Another Solution for Privacy
“I told her [his wife], ‘I’ve decided to do this. It’s scary. I might end up in jail. I might get murdered or extorted. I might go broke. I might be sort of crushed by it somehow. But it’s way too important not to do’”. Those were the words of Zooko Wilcox, a long-time cypherpunk, when
Built from Bitcoin’s code but enhanced with zk-SNARKs (cryptographic proofs to obscure data), it lets users send either transparent transactions (like Bitcoin) or fully ‘shielded’ ones, hiding sender, receiver, and amount on the ledger. The launch involved a special “ceremony:” a complex, multi-location process where participants generated and destroyed parts of a master key to ensure no one could counterfeit coins in the future. It was part spy movie, part math project, and even included key figures
Zcash runs on Proof-of-Work, splitting block rewards between miners and a development fund. While mining power concentration
In any case, Zcash remains one of the few widely used cryptocurrencies with privacy at the protocol level. It’s still standing after diverse market ups and downs and
Nostr: The Protocol for Free Speech Online
Nostr isn’t a blockchain or a cryptocurrency, but it’s a close friend to both. This is a censorship-resistant messaging protocol designed for decentralized social media. First proposed in 2020 by the pseudonymous developer fiatjaf, Nostr exploded in popularity after Bitcoin advocate Jack Dorsey backed it financially.
Here’s how it works: Instead of having a single point of control (like Twitter or Facebook),
Its first and most popular app so far is Damus, launched on iOS in early 2023. As of May 2023, Nostr
This protocol aims to break the monopoly that big tech has on speech. In an age of takedowns, shadowbans, and moderation-by-algorithm, it offers an option where censorship just doesn't stick.\
DarkFi: Anonymous Finance as Resistance
DarkFi isn’t shy about what it stands for. Created by a team of privacy advocates, including
It offers a full ecosystem that includes its own layer 1 (L1) blockchain, private chat service (DarkIRC), a task coordination platform, and potential for anonymous Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAOs). Released into public testnet in May 2025, the project aims to create a world where users can organize, communicate, and transact without surveillance.
Its main chain runs on Proof-of-Work using the RandomX algorithm, the same one used by Monero. RandomX favors everyday CPUs, making it more resistant to mining centralization than ASIC-heavy and GPU-heavy networks. On the privacy side,
As their developers
Gnosis: Tools for Collective Power
Gnosis started in 2015 with a focus on prediction markets, but it has grown into a full ecosystem dedicated to decentralized infrastructure. It includes Gnosis Chain (a sidechain compatible with Ethereum), Gnosis Safe (a multi-signature wallet), and CowSwap (a DEX using batch auctions to minimize fees and front-running).
Its consensus protocol is still Proof-of-Stake (tied to Ethereum) with a validator set that includes independent node operators from around the world. We’ve seen that, currently, Ethereum
Sebastian Bürgel, Gnosis VP,
Obyte: No Middlemen
Obyte, launched in 2016 by Anton Churyumov, is a decentralized platform that lets users send money, create smart contracts, and build dApps without miners, “validators,” or any other middlemen. That’s because it doesn’t use a blockchain. Instead, it runs on a DAG, or Directed Acyclic Graph: a data structure where transactions link to each other directly.
There are no blocks, no miners, and no need for staking. Each transaction references previous ones, which adds it to the interconnected ledger. Only
The
Obyte fits cypherpunk values like a glove. It avoids gatekeepers, embraces censorship resistance, offers privacy options, and prioritizes decentralization not as a buzzword but as a design principle. No mining monopolies, no staking cartels: just people transacting freely.
While much of crypto has shifted toward speculation and compliance, we can say that these projects keep the cypherpunk spirit alive. They’re rooted in freedom, not__FOMO__. Whether it’s Monero shielding your transactions, DarkFi defending your identity, or Obyte removing the middlemen entirely, these protocols aren’t manipulated by central parties. This is the original promise of crypto, still in motion.
Featured Vector Image by vectorjuice /