Richard Branson holding digital currency summit on private Caribbean island

Caribbean Conservation Summit
A flamingo walks along the beach on Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands, Friday, May 17, 2013. Richard Branson, the adventuring CEO and founder of the Virgin Group of companies is co-hosting a two-day meeting at Necker Island, his home in the British Virgin Islands, where he has developed an ultra-exclusive eco-resort that showcases renewable energy technology, reintroduced flamingoes, imported lemurs and other creatures. (AP Photo/Todd Vansickle)
Photograph by Todd Vansickle — AP

This post is in partnership with Entrepreneur. The article below was originally published at entrepreneur.com.

By Nina Zipkin, Entrepreneur

Most people wouldn’t turn down a few days in the Caribbean, but the sunny locale isn’t necessarily the first place that comes to mind when you think of cryptocurrency.

But this May, Virgin Group founder Richard Branson is set to hold the on Necker Island, his 74-acre private island in the British Virgin Islands, to discuss the future of Bitcoin, Blockchain and digital currency. (Blockchain is the software infrastructure that supports Bitcoin transactions — not to be confused with Blockchain.info, which is a digital wallet service.)

Branson is sharing hosting duties with Valery Vavilov, the CEO of Bitfury, a company that develops servers for “Blockchain transaction processing,” Pro kiteboarder Suzi Mai and VC Bill Tai, the co-founders of MaiTai Global and George Kikvadze, the managing director of the Georgian Co-Investment Fund.

The Summit participants — who are likely to be on the receiving end of Branson’s penchant for practical jokes — hail from the worlds of venture capital, finance and technology, including Lars Rasmussen, Facebook’s former engineering director and inventor of Google Maps, futurist Marshall Thurber, James Newsome, a former chairman of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Matthew Roszak, the founder of Tally Capital and Young Sohn, the president and CSO of Samsung Electronics.

The discussions will be moderated by The Wall Street Journal senior columnist Michael J. Casey, The Economist’s Globalization Editor Matthew Bishop and Hernando de Soto, president of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy.

Branson has been a supporter of exploring Bitcoin for some time. Last fall, ahead of the first the Global Digital Currency Conversation Forum in Australia, Branson explained his rationale for investing in the cryptocurrency, writing “There’s a real desire for greater levels of control, freedom and scrutiny over what happens with our money, Bitcoin addresses these concerns and that is why so many people believe it represents the future.”

More from Entrepreneur:

Is Bitcoin Speculative Foolery or a Financial Services Breakthrough?

Winklevoss Twins: Bitcoin Is Like a ‘Child Taking Its First Steps’ But Will One Day Win the Finance Marathon

‘Days Felt Like Years’: What Morgan Spurlock Found When He Tried to Survive on Bitcoin for a Week

Subscribe to the Eye on AI newsletter to stay abreast of how AI is shaping the future of business. Sign up for free.