Until recently, bitcoins were mostly used as a way for people to buy drugs on the internet, or as a playground for people who really love economics to play economics. But now, says the Washington Post, the Federal Election Commission is considering letting political candidates accept them as campaign donations.

To the extent that political campaigns are swayed by funding, the decision to allow bitcoins into the fray could have some interesting effects. Bitcoins are a fabricated currency, a monetary system tied to nothing other than the idea that someone, somewhere, wants to buy them. A lot of people do want to buy them, though, and the price of bitcoins, which come in a limited supply, has soared over the past year.

Where at around this time last year a single bitcoin was worth a few bucks, they are now valued at more than $400 each, with the potential to climb much, much higher. Since bitcoins are not restrained by anything physical their cost could, theoretically, climb indefinitely—or crash without notice. Such rampant growth could give political purchasing power to whole new groups—if they were lucky enough to catch the currency’s growth.

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