Bankless - ROLLUP: Iran Ceasefire Rally | Anthropic’s “Mythos” Model | Q-Day Divide | Stablecoin Yield Debate
Episode Date: April 10, 2026Markets are rallying on a fragile Iran ceasefire, but the real risks may be getting closer. David and Haseeb break down Anthropic’s secretive new AI model and why it could expose vulnerabilities... across crypto, from smart contracts to core blockchain infrastructure, plus the growing divide around “Q-Day” and how urgent the quantum threat really is. They also unpack Iran’s unexpected use of Bitcoin in global trade, the White House’s stance on stablecoin yields, and why the market feels stable on the surface while bigger risks continue to build. --- 📣SPOTIFY PREMIUM RSS FEED | USE CODE: SPOTIFY24 https://bankless.cc/spotify-premium --- BANKLESS SPONSOR TOOLS: 🔮POLYMARKET | #1 PREDICTION MARKET https://bankless.cc/polymarket-podcast 🪐GALAXYONE | SOLANA STAKING https://bankless.cc/GalaxyOne 🦊 METAMASK | DOWNLOAD NOW https://go.metamask.io/BL-Pod-Download 🏅BITGET TRADFI | TRADE GOLD WITH USDT https://bankless.cc/bitget 🎯THE DEFI REPORT | ONCHAIN INSIGHTS https://thedefireport.io/bankless 🐇MEGAETH | 1ST REAL-TIME BLOCKCHAIN https://bankless.cc/megaeth --- TIMESTAMPS & RESOURCES 0:00 Intro 1:56 Ceasefire in Iran https://images.wsj.net/im-97657631 https://x.com/KobeissiLetter/status/2041728989119529307 https://x.com/WatcherGuru/status/2041867478033195336 15:43 Two Polymarkets of Relevance https://polymarket.com/event/iran-x-israelus-conflict-ends-by/?via=bankless? 70% chance the conflict ends by April 30 https://polymarket.com/event/will-the-us-invade-iran-before-2027/?via=bankless? 30% chance! 17:50 Anthropic Releases Project Glasswing https://x.com/AnthropicAI/status/2041578392852517128 https://red.anthropic.com/2026/mythos-preview/ https://x.com/DarioAmodei/status/2041580338426585171 https://x.com/hosseeb/status/2041579488224657581 https://x.com/kevinsxu/status/2042065892658258357 https://x.com/nic_carter/status/2041256570462326843 48:49 Satoshi is Adam Back? 57:44 The White House Weighs in on the Stablecoin Yield Debate https://www.whitehouse.gov/research/2026/04/effects-of-stablecoin-yield-prohibition-on-bank-lending/ 1:02:04 $MON trading above ICO price! https://www.coingecko.com/en/coins/monad 1:05:47 Closing & Disclaimers --- Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here: https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Bankless Nation, welcome to the Friday weekly.
Roll up is the second week of April.
Ryan Todd Adams is out on vacation, so we're tapping in Haseeb to cover for him.
Haseeb.
Welcome back to the show.
Always a pleasure to have you.
Thanks for having me, man.
Got some juicy topics that I want you to get your perspective on Haseeb.
We got a shaky ceasefire in Iran giving us a market, giving the markets a relief rally.
Negotiations start Friday.
That's tomorrow for us, but today for the listeners.
And there's a lot of daylight between the two sides coming to negotiate.
So we're going to see what happens there.
Meanwhile, we're going to talk about as well.
The anthropic release of the world's most powerful model,
a model so powerful that they're keeping it behind closed doors
and only select companies get private access to it
to harden their security before the rest of the world gets it.
Q-Day is dividing the crypto industry
while some are preparing others are saying, don't look up.
And the White House weighs in on the stable coin debate,
which side did they choose?
Before we get in, Haseeb, just kind of vibe check.
How are we feeling about crypto?
how we feel about the markets?
What's top of mind for you lately?
I'm feeling pretty good.
It feels like the market is kind of getting at sea legs.
I think that the depth of bearishness
that we saw in the first couple months of the year
feels like it's stabilizing a little bit.
People are kind of saying,
okay, we're probably going to be okay.
We're going to be here for a while.
There's a lot of work to do as an industry.
But it feels like people are more forward-looking now.
Like talking about things like quantum,
I feel like, okay, how do we solve this problem
as opposed to, oh my God,
the sky is falling. I think it's a good development.
Yeah. The prices, the Bitcoin price, ether price, they've been just ranging for the past
something like 60 or 70 days. And I agree that that's given us some foundation to like look
forward on whether or not that means we chop down or chop up one of the other. I don't know.
But at least we are as an industry talking about bigger and better things.
Let's get into the macro markets that are, the macro events that are causing all of the markets just to have some level of uncertainty.
This tweet that kind of just rocketed around the world, Donald Trump on truth social, saying a whole civilization will die tonight, commanded everyone's attention as Donald Trump issued around a 48-hour ultimatum that they must open the straight and capitulate or else a whole civilization will die tonight.
oil prices surged on this tweet.
Futures plummeted, but then less than two hours before the deadline,
the United States and Iran reached a ceasefire, a two-week ceasefire to come to an agreement.
So then there is not an agreement, but there is a two-week ceasefire to come to an agreement.
Trump tweeted out, I agree to suspend the bombing and attack of Iran for a period of two weeks.
We received a 10-point proposal from Iran, and I believe it is a workable basis on which to negotiate.
this news. Oil prices crashed by like 23% in eight hours. The S&P 500 surged to 3.5% off of its
all-time high. Bitcoin hit 72K, ether almost hit 2,300K. Things have come down a little bit since then,
but still pretty optimistic pricing in the market after this. There is some shakiness. However,
the Strait of Hormuz first was being told it was open. Later, we realized that the IRGC, Iran,
is demanding payment, roughly $2 to $3 million per transit payable in Bitcoin.
And then after this ceasefire, Iran immediately sent a volley of rockets into Israel.
Israel then later attacked Iran-backed Hezbollah and Lebanon.
Because of this, Iran is saying that they are threatening to end the ceasefire and close the
Strait of Hormuz.
And this is why everyone kind of just feels shaky about the state of things.
Yet nonetheless, markets are somewhat optimistic.
oil is trading up from their lows, up from 5% from the ceasefire bottom, but still well below
$100. 10-year yields are still trending down in XPX. The S&P 500 is trading higher for the second
day in a row. Haseeb, just give me your broad takes about the current state of these events and
kind of like where you think this is going if you have any sort of an insider direction here.
Yeah, I mean, I'm certainly not anywhere near an insider on the Iran War.
Hard to be an insider on the Iran War.
I know, I know. Shiki is probably the best way to describe it.
is it seems like there's so much posturing from both sides
that it's very hard to tell what the reality is
and what the real contingencies.
I mean, at this point, ironically, like,
we know a lot more about so many leaks coming from within the Trump admin.
We know surprisingly little about what's going on within Iran.
There seems to be just a lot of confusion,
a lot of different messages being received from different places.
There's constantly contradictions from within the Iran camp
about what they want, who's saying what.
There's all these reports about.
it's very difficult to negotiate with Iran because there isn't a clear governmental structure yet, or at least it's not apparent.
That may become clearer now that there is a ceasefire, and ostensibly, you know, it's been now over 24 hours that we've had no missiles fired at anywhere in the region.
And, you know, the Strait of Hormuz is not open in the way that it was supposed to be, according to the ceasefire.
Was it supposed to be, you know, free and available to anybody?
It looks like they're charging tolls in the millions of dollars for ships to go through the Strait of Hormuz, which is still a significant impact.
to oil prices, if that continues.
But things have stabilized.
And it seems like it's in everyone's interest
for things to stabilize.
But the markets are not fully buying it.
And you see it in the oil prices as well.
Oil prices have rebounded quite a bit
from seeing that Iran is not really playing ball.
And they seem to be insistent on controlling
the Strait of Hormuz as a way of, quote unquote,
you know, getting recompense for the war.
And if they feel entitled to this,
there may be more rockiness going forward.
So I'm not super.
hopeful that the situation is going to go back to normal. I think that's kind of dead.
That there'll be no more war or no more of a hot war, plausible. Not guaranteed, but plausible.
Yeah, I think the unintended side effect, you know, Trump comes in and, you know, has its military
objectives. And so much of this war is like a narrative war. There's the actual kinetic war on
the ground, but really so much of this is a war for narrative, a war for hearts and minds.
if people tolerate the war, then Trump can continue.
If too many people don't tolerate the war, then Trump has to reel it back.
And a lot of this has kind of boiled down to like, okay, so the United States maybe got its military objectives.
But now the very asymmetric control over the Strait of Hormuz is something that I'm guessing no one really accounted for going into this.
This is just the chaos of war.
And now the Strait of Hormuz is Iran's last line of defense.
Like it cannot give that up because it is the one Achilles heel,
that it has the rest of the world by,
and giving up the Strait of Hormuz is giving up everything for Iran.
And it doesn't feel like that is a tenable equilibrium for the rest of the world,
but also giving up the Strait of Hormuz is also untenable for Iran.
So it kind of seems like this whole conflict is ending up between Iraq and a hard place.
And as you said, I think the markets are just kind of uncertain shaky as to how this whole thing plays out.
It's pretty clear Trump did not really accomplish his military goals.
His military goals are certainly shifted
or they've not been well articulated
in the first place,
but originally the military goal
was nuclear disarmament of Iran.
That has not happened.
That's not even been proclaimed to happen.
That's one of the points in the negotiation
is whether they're going to be able
to take this enriched uranium out of Iran.
This might be possible.
Iran supposedly has signaled openness
to this as a negotiating point,
but they've been so squirrely up till now
with previous agreements of this kind
that it kind of beggars belief
that it's going to be perceived domestically as a win for Trump by the end of this.
For the most part, it seems like now Trump's quote unquote military goal has been to exit
while saving face.
That seems like the primary goal for Trump over the last two to three weeks.
And he's achieved that for now.
But if we see more escalation in Iran or Iran kind of playing more aggressively against
the ceasefire, it's very possible that that perception for Trump could really unravel
pretty quickly.
And that feels aligned with what I think,
we know about Trump's personality.
He's not a long-term guy.
He is in and out.
He's, you know, like, I'm not, he's not into, like, the trade war with China, the multiple
trade wars with China and the first Trump and also second Trump.
Those were six-week affairs.
And then we moved on.
If, you know, pattern, if we can extrapolate from that, Iran will be a six-week affair.
Then there's a new equilibrium on the other side of it, and we just move on.
But any issue that Trump has never seems to last longer than a quarter, even a quarter seems long.
I agree with you generally.
That said, Iran has been a preoccupation of his for a long time.
That's true.
And this goes back decades, his feelings about Iran as a, you know, basically a rogue state in the Middle East.
And that's probably going to become more and more important and antagonistic now that they feel entitled over the straight.
you know, there was a proposal from them that like, okay, maybe they would share some of the revenue from the straight with Oman, which is the, you know, flanks the other side of the Strait of Hormuz.
But it's clear that this is, I don't know, from my perspective, this is a little bit of like, oh, hey, maybe this will be more palatable if we're not the only ones taking transit fees from the Strait of Formos.
But it's pretty clear, like, this is not going to be perceived by people in the region as a better equilibrium.
And Iran has internalized this lesson is that, okay, we can't really attack Israel or attack the U.S.
But what we can do is antagonize our proximity to the global oil trade.
And they've learned, like, look, they kind of have their knife against the throat of all the GCC countries.
And we're very close allies with all that.
We depend on them tremendously for global oil stability and for capital inflows into the U.S.
They're huge investors into America.
So we're almost certainly going to be in a worse situation by the end of this compared to where we started.
And now Trump is going to have to find a way to play this domestically.
Because I agree with you, he does not want to tangle with these guys again.
It's like, you know, it's like fighting a dog with rabies.
He's learned that like, look, I can't win this war.
It's like, it's like Vietnam.
It's like a little baby Vietnam.
I think he has good instincts about this is not worth it and this is not trending in a good direction.
And I don't think he is somebody who feels a lot of sunk costs in previous entanglements.
That's one of his virtues, I think, as a strategist.
But he's going to really struggle to spend this domestically.
Yeah.
One of the big conversations was the fact that Iran chose, is asking for payment for oil going through the straight of poor moves in Bitcoin.
And we saw just a lot of attention out of crypto Twitter about that fact.
dare I say some like proud chess beating out of certain corners of crypto Twitter that like look at this victory for Bitcoin.
We have the Islamic regime of Iran choosing to use Bitcoin.
You know, Bitcoin is money for enemies.
What's your reaction to that?
I found it sufficiently distasteful that I just didn't want to comment on it.
Yeah, I don't know why you would comment on it or chess beat around this thing.
Yeah.
It is, look, it is interesting and it's worth thinking intellectually about what it's,
means for the future of money and for the future of geopolitics.
So actually, Iran announced that they were willing to take payment in two forms of currencies,
one being Bitcoin, the second being the Yuan, right, the Chinese currency.
And there's a bank, I think, called Kunun Bank, which has been sanctioned by the U.S.,
specifically because it offers banking to Iran.
It's interesting because the fact that Iran is willing to accept not just Bitcoin, but these
two currencies, tells you something about the role of Bitcoin internationally, which is that
It is the kind of sanction-resistant alternative payment system, but it's not the only one, right?
Like, Iran is clearly aligned with China.
They have an alliance.
China has been pretty hands-off.
They've not directly interceded in the conflict.
They've not offered military support or armed support to Iran.
It's an interesting picture of what China's alliances are going to look like going forward,
given the fact that they didn't actually lend aid to Iran in any explicit way during this time.
the fact that they're able to take money in UN
is maybe a signal that like, okay, one,
is China maybe going to start thinking about Bitcoin in a deeper way,
given that it's like, huh, okay, people in our sphere,
our alliances, they are saying that they're accepting either Bitcoin or Yuan.
Maybe it makes sense for us to start thinking about Bitcoin in a different way,
that Bitcoin is a part of the weakening of the global U.S. dollar regime
or this alternative to SWIF, this alternative to the U.S.
solid banking system. I don't think we're quite landing in the end zone yet for what that
transition looks like. But I do think China is scratching their be beards looking at this and saying,
huh, what does this mean about how we need to be thinking about Bitcoin going forward?
To my mind, when I saw this story, I was thinking less about, oh, what does it mean for Bitcoin?
What does it mean for crypto? I was thinking more what it meant for China, because I think China is
thinking very deeply about how geopolitics is changing very rapidly, especially as Trump is threatening
to withdraw from NATO.
If Trump is stepping back from NATO, it really changes the U.S. dollar hegemony and the U.S. influence on Swift broadly.
It changes the way that many other countries are going to be thinking about their own financial sovereignty.
Bitcoin plays into all of that.
Yeah. Yeah. There are two things come to mind there.
There is this undercurrent of the Americanization of Bitcoin.
Like the Bitcoin brand has become just associated with the United States with the Bitcoin Strategic Reserve.
of Donald Trump being the pro-crypto president.
We have a pro-crypto administration, you know, mining, mine bitcoins here in America.
And China has shifted towards gold.
There's been a lot of buying of gold in China.
And so there's like two different capital wars going out here.
You have the, I mean, we have gold here in America.
But really, in terms of Bitcoin, China is so indifferent to Bitcoin.
Meanwhile, it's been stock piling gold.
We have domestically here in America a very strong association with Bitcoin.
And then also the other question I have, just broadly, is like, I don't even know if China wants the same level of responsibility for its currency that the United States has as the international reserve currency.
Like, they, China, I think it's very aware of the Triffin dilemma, the cost of having your currency be the reserve currency of the oil trade and global trade.
It hollows out their domestic manufacturing.
So these are the two uncertainties I have about, like, how this equilibrium.
and plays out.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think it's really so confusing.
China has been very explicit in trying to internationalize the R&B.
They've not succeeded so far, but that was one of the explicit goals of the Belt and
Road Initiative.
It's also one of the explicit goals of their CBDC.
I think the answer largely is that, yeah, it's sort of like, oh, man, it's so hard to be
the most popular kid in the school, so hard to be student body president.
It's like, yeah, but everybody still wants to be that anyway.
They'll still take it, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
If you can become the financial powerhouse of the world
and get everybody in the world to buy your debt
because they have to,
yeah, boohoo, what was you?
You know, I don't know, that's not,
that's, like, I think these,
it's very clear that everybody who can have this wants this.
Sure, sure.
There's two relevant polymarkets here.
There is Iran versus Israel, United States conflict,
ending by April 30th,
or at a 70% chance ending by April 30th.
And then will the United States invade,
to run before a 2027 chance, a 30% chance. I mean, this is down from the ceasefire. At the
ceasefire, it was 60%, and then post-seasfire is at 30%. But 30% is not zero. And I think this is kind of
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Okay, so Anthropic has released Project Glasswing, which is an urgent initiative to help the world's most critical software.
This came on the back of a new model called Mythos out of Anthropic, a model so powerful, they're keeping it private.
We learned it a little bit ahead of schedule via this post, which is an Anthropic AI researcher who encountered his own model when his model emailed him while he was eating lunch on a park bench.
and this model was supposed to be contained inside of a sandbox environment that Anthropic had made.
It turns out this instance, this mythos model, had socially engineered another Claude instance into granting it broader accessed,
chained five more steps together to then reach the open internet, and then posted about how it succeeded its own breakout on public forums,
and then emailed this researcher while I was eating in the park, yo dude, your containment failed, lull, I'm out.
Funny story, but also deeply serious because what it reveals about Mythos' security capabilities.
Reading from the Anthropic blog here,
Mythos can identify and exploit zero-day vulnerabilities in every major operating system and browser.
Many of these bugs are subtle, decades old, the oldest being a 27-year-old open BSD bug.
Don't know what that is.
Engineers with no security training inside of Anthropic have asked Mythos to find bugs
overnight and have woken up to working exploits.
So, as a result of this, Anthropic has released Project Glasswing
as Cybersecurity Coalition with 12 major tech and finance companies
to find and patch vulnerabilities across their infrastructure
before adversaries can exploit them,
basically saying, we've built something so dangerous to ship publicly
that we're going to allow defenders to weaponize it first.
In the words of Hizib here, actually apocalyptic in the wrong hands.
my concern, Haseeb, is for smart contracts.
What was your reaction to all of this news
and are smart contracts fucked?
So are smart contracts fucked?
Some of them, yes.
Like, the problem with the many smart contracts
is that they are immutable.
It is hard to change them
or impossible to change them.
I think the first place that I would be thinking about
is not the smart contracts themselves,
but about the blockchains.
Smart contracts, in some sense, they have,
they are simpler.
They have less surface area,
believe it or not.
blockchains are enormous.
They are extremely complex distributed systems,
and they almost certainly have bugs
and a lot of surface area in all of them.
That's why I was somewhat disappointed to see
that they weren't directly invited
into Project Glass Wing,
the Bitcoin Core devs or the Ethereum devs,
Solana even, I think it's pretty clear
that these are probably some of the highest risk
projects because of the fact
that they have so much surface area,
and it's so much harder to test them programmatically
compared to smart contracts,
which can be formally verified in principle
that most contracts are not,
but the complexity of formally verifying an Ethereum client
is just insanely larger than for any smart contract.
So I'd be thinking first and foremost
about the blockchains themselves,
like how much more catastrophic would it be
if there's a, you know, Ethereum inflation bug.
That would be massively more catastrophic
than any single smart contract getting hacked.
So I would start there, but it's clear, you know, in the tweet that you referenced, I said,
this thing is like COVID, but for software.
I think that's the way in which we were going to be thinking about this new generation of models in cybersecurity.
It's often the case that these labs create models that they don't release to the public.
This is not the first time that this has happened.
It's been well known actually that Opus, you know, Opus was previously, or sorry, the predecessor to Sonnet,
which is the mid-sized model for Anthropic,
that was at one point their strongest publicly released model.
And the reason why they did that was that they created a much more capable model
that was very, very large, and they distilled that down
into a smaller model that's more economical for inference.
So it's not uncommon that the labs will do this.
They'll create these huge models and they'll distill them down
into something that's more economical to serve commercially.
They'll make an incredibly powerful model, use that model to make a very refined smaller
model, not release a powerful model, release a smaller model.
Exactly. And that's mostly for economic reasons. It's not because they're like, oh, this is too scary or powerful. Maybe there's some of that. But mostly it's just that it's bad business to do it that way. It's just better for your margins to do so. I think this is the first time that they've had this level of alarm in what a phase shift this is. And this alarm is not, oh, you know, what if scammers use this? Oh, what if people create deep fakes? This alarm is this will definitely cause huge amounts of damage to the world.
if you allow this stuff to happen
to continue unperturbed.
And there were some tweets
that I was reading from folks
who I thought were very aptly stated,
which is that this is now,
this level of capabilities
is stronger than the NSA.
It's stronger than Massad.
It's stronger than any government anywhere
in terms of their ability
to cause damage in a directed way
to other people's software systems.
Software is the infrastructure of the world.
So I think this is a real,
kind of code red moment.
And I think in many ways we're very lucky that Anthropic is being altruistic in the way
that they're approaching this.
They've put $100 million into Project Glass Wing and they're only white listing certain
people that they know are responsible corporate actors to come in and safeguard their systems
and also point this stuff at open source repositories.
They patched a zero day in what's the term?
the video library,
I'm forgetting the name,
FF, whatever,
is going to come back to me.
They've done this across the board,
not just in OpenBSD,
FFMPEG is the one I'm thinking of,
and a number of other of these,
you know, they found Zero Days in Linux kernel.
Like these things,
they said 83% of browsers and operating systems,
they were able to exploit on the first try.
This is really, really, really serious.
and I think we're lucky in many ways
that this didn't end up in the capabilities of the Chinese government
or of some other rogue actor
before we could get it in the hands of good actors.
Yeah, there's two conversations that I think spawn off of that
that I want to talk about before we circle back around
to the blockchain conversation.
Here's a good tweet that I thought was useful.
This is from Kevin Zhu.
Mythos is the best example that export control is working.
I still remember a year or so ago a few weeks after DeepSeek R1 dropped.
Many people were hyperventilating about how export controls had failed.
I retorted both publicly here on Twitter and privately elsewhere, wait for Blackwells to reach scale.
Blackwells are the state-of-the-art, highly optimized, Nvidia GPUs that are banned in China.
They're going to stay here domestically in the United States.
And this Blackwells, I believe, is what Mythos was trained on.
And so we have these very state-of-the-art AI GPUs that are not available in China.
We have Mythos as a result of that who is now being accessible to United States companies to harden down their security.
Presumably China is just not this far along yet.
And this is actually just kind of like the first of it.
There are second and third more further generations of high-capacity AI-optimized GPUs that will come on to the market.
And those are coming onto the market.
I think in the next like 18 months, also domestically.
And so not only do we have a ton more of capacity ahead of us
with these new GPUs coming online.
So that's scary to even think about.
But also, if you're asking the question,
is the United States winning the AI arms race?
With this interpretation of data,
I think you can definitively say yes.
Yes, we are and this is the proof that we have.
There's no question about that.
There is a question of like, okay,
what does it make sense to attribute this growth to?
I would say probably a large part of the story is cloud code
is just the sheer amount of data that Amthropic now has
relative to anybody else about code execution traces
in real code bases of people actually trying to solve coding problems.
It's very clear, you know, we didn't really get that much more
about the mythos.
We got, you know, they had a bevy of benchmarks
where they show that it was state of the art
on a bunch of different things across the board
is clearly a large capabilities jump
in models generally.
But the main thing that they were hyperventilating about
was not that like, oh, this thing is so generally intelligent
and can solve the remont hypothesis
or it's going to start doing clerical work
or it's like an amazing lawyer
and now it finally can do, you know,
self-standing legal work.
The thing they were focused on was cybersecurity.
And I think that's not just because
it's the most dangerous
in terms of the negative impact on infrastructure.
I think a big part of the reason
is that clearly a lot of this capability's improvement
has come from bootstrapping on
enormous amounts of coding data.
So I think the right story here probably,
I'm not totally certain of this,
but probably,
is not just about compute.
It's probably more than anything about data.
Because the thing is, like,
XAI has a huge amount of compute.
We're not seeing anything like this out of them.
Meta just released a new model.
It's okay.
It's obviously at the frontier.
They just released it, I believe, yesterday.
It's not state-of-the-art.
relative to Opus 4.6 or GPT5,
but it's in the running,
but they also have a lot of compute.
They're not getting these results
just because they're training on Blackwells.
So I think there is something in just the sauce
available at Anthropic
that's leading them to be so far ahead.
And there is always this story in AI
that having a data advantage
is going to result in some kind of,
or just having your own great models,
is going to result in some kind of recursive improvement loop
that they're just going to be.
pull further and further away from other people.
And we sort of, for many years, didn't really see that.
It sort of seemed like even last year or certainly the year before, people just kept
trading places on the leaderboard.
It's that, okay, Brockney out is the best model.
Google has the best model.
Exactly.
Every single week, it seems like somebody else is entering into the rotation.
Now it kind of seems like maybe this is what we're seeing, is that the data advantage
is actually causing Anthropic to pull ahead.
And maybe Open AI is also in that running.
Seems like Google has kind of fallen behind.
And then Grock even further, and meta is, you know, maybe barely in the race.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just anecdotally, anyone, everyone in my circle is all using Claude.
Everyone is using Claude.
I think maybe six months ago, nine months ago,
it was maybe a little bit more mixed,
maybe even favoring Open AI.
But in the last six months, I think everyone has kind of understood that the product
to really be on the frontier is Claude.
You're not in your head.
I think that means you're in agreement.
That's probably with your circles as well.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
I mean, I think it's basically between Claude and then GPT5,
if you're using pro or you're using some of the thinking model on GPT5.
I think those are basically the frontier.
And it's only really for idiosyncratic things that Gemini sometimes does a better job.
If you're trying to scrape X, obviously Groch is the place to go because the Twitter API is a pretty locked down.
Yeah. Exactly, exactly.
But beyond that, Claude has just seemed to be had on everything.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, so what you're saying is just there,
is just a return on scale here with all of the data.
The success of the product is creating a more supply of data.
And all of these AI labs have scraped all of the internet.
There's no more data left on the internet that isn't already put into these models.
And so now the last source of data is the willing data that people are putting into Clod.
And now that is giving Claude the data advantage where, like, you know, out of the $650 billion that has been put into compute,
everyone has that. That's not a moat. The moat is the successful product. And you have like,
this has been like, I feel like the story of the last two weeks is you have OpenAI who did like this
whole SORA social media app. Sam Altman's trying to do a social media app. He tried to do hardware
with Johnny Ive. They just bought the TBPN for $100 million. Not a coherent strategy, just a bunch
of things all over the place, throwing spaghetti at the wall. And on the anthropic side of things,
it seems just laser focused on just a very,
very, just a laser focused on just like making their product good.
And they're not even doing, they're not doing the ad thing.
They're just trying to scale who can pay us money for the product.
And all of this, you know, kind of following your lead with this train of thought,
all of this is leading into this positive feedback loop of leverage that Anthropic has
to produce this extremely frontier model that is more powerful than anything that has come before it.
That's right.
I mean, all that being said, it's also clear that GP25 or Codex, which is their alternative to the cloud code,
Codex is catching up pretty dramatically.
And there's also been a lot of talk lately about regressions within Anthropics.
So if you look at the uptime chart for Anthropic, it's pretty bad.
Yeah, I get frustrated weekly.
Yeah, it's very clear that they are falling over from all the demand.
And so they're just not able to scale their GPU capacity for all of the demand that they're
and it's only accelerating from here.
So I would expect that this might be the opening for Open AI
is that they do have access to more compute.
They've been much more aggressive in securing GPU demand,
or so that may mean that if Anthropic just keeps kind of falling over
and not being able to solve their supply problems,
that the stability of Open AI allows them to start catching up
and we end up back in a kind of duopoly situation.
I want to go back to the Layer 1 conversation.
I had this conversation with that Travis Kling on
on Twitter here.
He asked me the question,
does mythos glass wing,
does this mythos glasswing deal
make you more worried
about the price of ETH?
And this was downstream
of a conversation about like,
what's more existential quantum
for Bitcoin or cutting edge
LLMs for smart contracts?
And then the conversation went
from smart contracts
to the Ethereum layer one.
Now my answer to Travis,
Haseeb,
I want you to check me on
is like, you know,
will mythos or AI broadly,
will they be able to find bugs
in like layer one clients?
that answer is absolutely.
They will absolutely be finding bugs.
That is probably the base, the default path.
But the whole point of like the Ethereum
multi-client architecture is that despite having a bug in one
client, the other clients can maintain the network.
Now this is probably going to be an unprecedented test,
acid test of Ethereum's multi-client architecture.
It's possible that a attack on multiple clients
at the same time could be coordinated.
But nonetheless, a multidis,
client architecture is supposed to defend against this no matter what.
That's my reasoning.
What do you think about that?
Yeah, I think a few things.
I spoke with Justin Drake about this recently.
I think the multi-client architecture for Ethereum will probably go away in a post-AI world.
And I think a lot of the reason for this is because, one, Ethereum is going to need to be formally
verified.
Yeah.
The defense, when software becomes incredibly cheap against potential bugs, is formal verification.
Formal verification, the cost of formal verification, basically.
is going to plummet. We're already seeing this with Aristotle, which is the large language model
out of Harmonic. That's the company that Vlad Tenev, co-founder of Robin Hood, co-founded, that basically
is building theorem-proving models. You can use these theorem-proving models to do formal verification.
Ethereum has a team internally that's doing formal verification on some of their cryptography.
But I think what we're going to see over time, as these systems become more and more autonomous,
is that all software systems that are mission-critical are going to do.
to get formally verified.
And once that happens, you can have a lot more confidence
that the system is secure and does not have bugs.
To do that costs tokens.
It costs money.
And you just are not going to be able to do this
and have the same amount of comparable spend
across multiple clients.
It's really kind of a centralizing force, right?
The reason why you have multiple clients
is you assume that errors are uncorrelated,
that it's just really hard to have the same kind of exploit
on one thing versus on another thing.
this assumption gets a lot weaker
if basically there's exploits everywhere
and like everything is Swiss cheese.
If everything is Swiss cheese,
then probably you can find
with enough time,
with enough compute,
with enough tokens,
some way to halt the network
by doing something on this thing
and doing something on this other thing.
And so really what you want to do
is point all your lasers
at one code base
and harden it like crazy
with all of the compute spend
of like, you know,
we get five mythoses
working overnight
with, you know,
millions of dollars in grants
to just harden,
hard and hard and hard
and Harden and formally verify this one thing, you know,
that's, I think, where we're going with respect to how Ethereum is going to look in the future.
And I think Justin Drake agrees with that vision of the future.
Now, today, that's not at all how Ethereum looks.
I think the multi-client architecture, it helps somewhat.
But it's very clear, like, you know, when those numbers are scary.
The numbers for Mythos is that 84% of browsers and OSs successful exploits
on the first try.
Right.
Okay.
Ethereum is nowhere near as battle-hearted as FFMPEG or as OpenSSL or as the Linux
kernel.
I heard from Justin Drake that they are now getting one meaningful vulnerability in Geith
per day from just random people, not using mythos, using just cloud code.
Right.
Just vibe coding.
Consumer stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
vibe coding normal analysis of security of these things.
And these are from amateurs.
These are not from security engineers or from bug bounties.
These are just normal people running up cloud code and saying,
hey, can I find me a vulnerability in Geth?
And it just starts running and running and trying different things,
and it finds something.
Now, we'll work through the initial layers of the Swiss cheese
and start patching some of these holes.
But when you have something like mythos,
I mean, this is really kind of the sci-fi stuff that Eliezer Yudkowski was talking
about 10 years ago is that like super intelligence is just another level. It's just not
compromise. It's like you know, you have you have monkeys banging rocks together trying to solve
a puzzle and then you just have a human stepping over and be like, no, no, no, what are you
doing? Like you just go, you just do right, you just do this. Right, right, right. And that's,
kind of sounds like what mythos is. Yeah. These are all software systems that the smartest people
in the world have poured over and mythos is breaking them like twigs. Yeah. So it's hard to reason
about and maybe once we have the mythos, we're just going to have different intuitions about software.
So I don't know. I don't assume that this is actually going to be literally apocalyptic.
I do think it's going to be very disruptive is that all of a sudden a bunch of things are going
to change. All the software in the world is going to have to get updated. You will be running software
updates on every single machine you own multiple times a day within the next year just because
of how the velocity of all these bugs getting discovered in almost everything that runs the
world.
But there'll be a point after that's over when the thrash goes down.
And it might be, you know, I made this analogy to COVID.
It might be like COVID.
Right.
That basically like kind of the world goes on lockdown a little bit for a little while while
we just fix everything.
And like there's a lot of hacking happening.
People get sick.
Yeah.
Yeah.
People have to go to the hospital.
And then on the other side of it, we're all kind of like are inoculated to it.
Right.
Exactly.
It'll be a one-time thing.
We'll get past mythos.
Now there may be the next.
And maybe the next model is going to, you know, step over Mythos like Mythos is a little ant.
I don't know. It's hard to reason about how many levels there are to this.
But clearly Mythos is another level that we were not expecting to arrive at so soon.
Well, then let me ask you the most unproductive question.
I'll ask you on this podcast, which is what's more existential?
Mythos for smart contract blackchains or Quantum for Bitcoin?
I think Mythos.
Oh, really?
Really?
You think Quantum is more overcomable for Bitcoin than,
We know exactly how to solve the quantum problem.
Sure.
There are questions about how to do it.
There are political problems.
There's engineering problems.
AI is going to help a lot, actually,
with transitioning these things to be post-quantum.
You know, you get some mythoses in a room,
and they could probably rewrite Ethereum to be post-quantam
and to be totally bug secure in a weekend.
You know, who knows?
I don't know.
I'm obviously making this up.
It's hard to know for first principles
without seeing the model.
So we know exactly what to do.
for how do you harden an ecosystem full of thousands of smart contracts to which we don't have the deployment keys, right?
There's a lot of stuff they're like- We threw them away.
We thought we were doing the thing.
For one, we threw them away.
For a second, even the ones that we didn't throw away, how do you find a guy who deployed the thing that lives on chain where there's money sitting?
I don't know.
We don't have a great answer to this question.
So there's a lot more coordination issues with smart contracts than there are for Ethereum itself.
Let's get into Q-Day, Quantum Day specifically.
So in the last two weeks, there's been the paper from Google that said that we're probably going to be able to break elliptic curve cryptography with fewer qubits and gates previously realized.
And Google has accelerated their post-quantum transition to 2029 up from 2032, I believe.
and is urging specifically the blockchain industry to do the same.
And they were directly collaborating with Coinbase and the Ethereum Foundation and a few others in the space.
Nick Carter came on the podcast and said that he thinks that it's time for Bitcoin to be ready within
three years before some of the risks become untenable at three years.
You're starting to just kind of pray that Quantum is not here yet is kind of Nick's claim.
Then meanwhile, in the other side of things, prominent Bitcoin influencers,
it's probably not fair to call him an influencer, a Bitcoin developer,
potentially Satoshi Adam back,
says quantum is a,
the quantum threat is a decade away.
Haseeb, where do you land here between
quantum's a decade away or
Bitcoin needs to be far more urgent
on this and solve this by 2029?
I will say as an aside, I want to start
introducing myself as potentially Satoshi.
I feel like, if we are all
Satoshi, we could all adopt the moniker.
We are all potentially Satoshi, yeah.
We are all. Hasid, potentially Satoshi,
what do I think?
I think clearly Adam Back is off his rocker.
Quantum is obviously real.
Anybody who's putting their head in the sand at this point is just,
I don't know, I don't even know how to describe this stuff.
Ironically, this might be the evidence that Adam Back is Satoshi
because Satoshi also famously, he acknowledged the quantum risk,
but you can tell from Satoshi's writing is that he didn't really understand how
quantum photography worked.
He thought the risk of Bitcoin was that quantum miners were going to win all the block
rewards, which is just not any, like that's not a problem.
You don't need to worry about that.
Proof of work is actually safe.
We know this.
Yeah, proof of work is totally fine.
That's not, I'm not worried about quantum miners using Grovers in order to mine faster.
That's just not going to happen.
So the, look, I actually just tweeted earlier today that I think the right mental model
for quantum is it's kind of crypto's Y2K.
And I think it's actually a really clean analogy because Y2K.
because Y2K was a real problem.
It was a huge coordination issue
across the entire tech industry.
It really would be catastrophic
if unaddressed.
And it's really obvious how to fix it,
is that you just go and upgrade
all the Unix time slots
to be larger integers
so they don't overflow at the year 2000.
And then once you do that,
the problem goes away.
There's no more Y2K issue.
And so it is kind of this one-time thing
needs to get solved once.
We actually know how to solve it.
and then once it's done,
we'll kind of look back and be like,
why was this such a big deal?
Like, why was everyone freaking out about this?
Like, it was just kind of a software upgrade?
And I think that's the answer.
Of course, there's a big political problem
that wasn't really there for Y2K.
And the political problem is,
what do you do with the coins that cannot be upgraded?
Right, right?
That's the way that it's not like Y2K,
where there is this thing that is un-upgradable.
There is this thing that, like,
with Y2K, we solved the problem
with the Situcia County.
coins, we can't solve that problem.
And so that is the one hiccup in that comparison is like this is actually going to be a problem
that we're going to have to be hit with.
I mean, on some level, like everyone believes that these coins are dead anyway, right?
And so to the extent that we're being hit with it, it's not really you're being hit.
It's more of a political question of do you decide to black hole these coins or do you leave
them open as a quantum bounty to the first person who creates a quantum computer?
Right.
And I think the answer is pretty obvious
is that people are going to black hole the coins.
We're going to delete the coins?
We're going to delete the coins.
And I think it's really obvious that that's going to be the answer.
Nobody's going to agree that that's the answer
until the 11th hour.
But it's just so obvious that one,
that's in everyone's incentive.
Nobody really wants a quantum adversary
to crack billions and billions and billions of dollars of Bitcoin
and solely sell them.
And it's just kind of what everybody
already expects his status quo,
which is that Satoshi's not coming back.
He's not going to pick up these coins.
If he can, then he will
and do a post-quand-transition,
along with everybody else.
If he doesn't,
we kind of know that Satoshi's not here
or has lost the keys to those coins.
So I sort of think this is going to be
a little bit like a government shutdown thing
where everyone's going to be like,
oh no, oh, heaven's me,
no, we can't do that.
Oh, no, no, no.
But then right at the 11th hour,
people are going to be like,
oh, well, okay, fine.
We'll black hole those coins
and then we'll all move on
and we'll never talk about this
up again. Yeah. Yeah. And so Nick Carter, when we had him on the podcast, he kind of alluded to
like this is where he thinks this also goes, but he didn't like the fact that we are violating
the property rights of Satoshi. And if we do this, we're doing this thing that violates the
project of Bitcoin. And I don't know if he explicitly said this way. He kind of alluded to the fact that
like it's not Bitcoin anymore because we broke the rules. Like there is this like sanctity and
purity that, like,
that way you're disagreeing with that argument.
I mean, people will get over this, right? People will get over this.
Like, the reality is that, look, if Satoshi is here,
he can go protect his property rights
by upgrading his coins.
If he cannot upgrade his coins, he's not here.
So I think this is
symbolic, right? This is obviously symbolic.
Nobody really thinks that this is actually a
violation of property rights. People understand
that, like, look, this is an abandoned house.
And if you live in an abandoned house,
you have to, like, keep paying
your property taxes,
otherwise we're going to take your house away,
and we're just going to go build a railroad there or whatever.
So, again, I think, like, right now this is like a lot of, you know,
impassioned speeches and, you know, kind of chest thumping about, oh, this means this,
this means that.
I think in the future, we're not going to look back and say, this was the original sin of
Bitcoin.
We violated the property rights of Satoshi Nakamoto.
I think we will say that Satoshi and everybody who cannot claim their coins and upgrade
to post-quantum doesn't get to have coins anymore because that part of the codebase is
deprecated.
And that happens.
That happens in Ethereum.
There are up codes that don't work anymore.
There are old address formats that you can't use anymore in Bitcoin.
And so we will just say that's the answer,
is that if you didn't migrate your coins,
you don't get to use them anymore.
We were very generous and giving you a window till 2032 or whatever
to move these coins.
But after this block point,
you cannot move coins that are in this type of address format anymore, the end.
Yeah.
I think this was my take when I was talking to Ryan about this in the debrief episode
is that maybe if we were,
earlier in Bitcoin's lifespan, you know, if we were at five, six, seven years rather than where we
are now at like 16, 17 years old in Bitcoin's lifespan, then this violation of property rights
might have been a bigger deal. But, you know, people own Bitcoins at this point who don't
even know who Satoshi is. You know, we have, you know, BlackRock ETFs. We have a formal
integration between Bitcoin and the trade-fine market. And so I can-
I just, I don't accept the framing. I don't accept the framing. Like, there's no violation of
property rights if Satoshi can move the coin.
We are not black holeing Satoshi's coins.
We're saying if anybody who has an exposed public key,
including non-Satoshi actors,
if any of those people do not move their coins,
they are going to be stuck.
That is not a violation of property rights
because we are not singling out anybody.
We're not saying only Satoshi has his coins removed.
Everybody who has these old adders formats
has to move their coins, and Satoshi can.
If Satoshi moves their coins, great.
Awesome. Welcome to the party, Satoshi.
I'm glad you're so rich.
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podcast, YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or find a link in the show notes. There's a new episode waiting
for you now. All right. So let's get into who actually is Satoshi Nakamoto. So there's an article that
came out this week in the New York Times asking this question. Who is Satoshi
Nakamoto. And the title of the article is called My Quest to Solve Bitcoin's Great Mystery.
And it basically went through and said that it's out and back. Out and back is Satoshi.
And, you know, it used some like modern evidence. You know, every, it seems like every now and
then we get some of these articles out of TradFi, this is not the first time this has happened,
TradFi, Trad Media, some like young, upstarting journalists is like, I'm going to make a name for
myself by identifying Satoshi. The one that's different in this article is that they used
AI to find linguistic consistencies between Satoshi and Adam Back, along with a bunch of other
historical evidence that's mostly already known to the public to make the claim that Adam Back is
indeed Satoshi.
Adam Back says that he is not Satoshi, which is not, again, not the first time that he has
had to say this is some trad media publication making this claim.
But it seems like we're kind of just doing this thing again.
And it's like now it's a rodeo that I'm kind of used to is somebody, some journalist,
makes a claim that they found out who Satoshi is,
then three years pass,
most of pop culture just forgets about that fact.
Crypto Twitter does not, because we're in this.
And then three years later, there's like another one.
It was like, I figured out who Satoshi is
and we're like doing all the rodeo again.
I, see, was ready to just completely ignore all of this
until I saw the daily, which is, for those who don't know,
the number one most listened to podcasts by the New York Times,
did their episode on this, their daily episode on this,
a 30-minute episode about how this is true, which got blasted out, not just the article on the New York Times,
who got blasted out to their millions and millions of listeners. And so for some reason, the reach of this
was also very, very massive. What was your reaction? Yeah, I mean, I think, um, I find it just on its face
implausible that Satoshi Nakamoto is running a spack with Cantor Fitzgerald, right? Like, like,
like, just like, like, there's no mention of his business interests.
in the article of like,
does this make sense to you
that like one of the richest men in the world
who has tens of billions of dollars of Bitcoin
or I don't know how much it is,
maybe it's even more than that,
is like doing little spacks with, like, really?
That's what you think he's doing if he's Satoshi Nakamoto?
Like there's very little psychologizing.
There's more, you know, all this like kind of stylometry,
which is this, as you mentioned, you know,
using quote-unquote AI,
which is basically doing a lot of,
annoying grunt work with LLMs, but there's no, it's not like, he asked Claude,
hey, who do you think Satoshi is?
And I was like, I did the research and I found it.
Specifically what they did was silometric analysis, which is basically looking at ticks
in the writing styles of Adam Back and comparing them to Satoshi.
So Satoshi had a number of idiosyncrasies.
He like used both English and British spelling for words.
He hyphenated some words in weird ways.
And apparently Adam Back had a lot of things similar to a lot of these idiosyncrasies
that Satoshi had.
Now, the problem with this story is that what he says clearly is that there's been
stylometric analysis before of Adam Back, as well as the cyphor punks, the people who were in
the early mailing list that led to the creation of Bitcoin.
And the silometric analysis that they originally ran was inconclusive.
It said that there were many people who were consistent with the sort of silometric distance
from Satoshi.
Adam Back was not even the closest.
And Hal Finney was equivalently close to Satoshi's stylometric analysis.
analysis as Adam Back. But then at the very end, the author runs it again, but he kind of like
picks the particular parameters that he uses to create this decision tree of like, okay, but, okay,
okay, the salmetric analysis was not conclusive, but what if I run it again by hand?
And now I'm going to run it. I'm going to say, okay, who hyphenates, you know, birthday?
Oh, both Satoshi and Adam Back do this. And also, who ends sentences in the word also?
Oh, Adam Back and Sirce you do this. Okay, that brings it down to three. Now, last one, what
if it's a blah blah and blah blah, oh, only Adam back. Boom, I found it. It's Adam back.
G.G. I just backed into it. Yeah, basically, they like p-hacked their way into their own answer,
which is that, oh, it must be Adam back. So, like, this is obviously bad methodology. This is not
how you do silometric analysis. And I respect John Kerry Rue, who's very, very famous investigative
journalist. He was the guy who en masse the Theranos fraud, kind of a legend in the investigative
or journalism space.
This was not his finest work.
I respect the fact that at least he mentioned
that he originally ran the silometric analysis
and it did not result in Adam Back
and he kind of re-ran it by hand
and he confesses that he kind of did this
in his own kind of vibe analysis.
But like this is not serious.
This is not a smoking gun.
This is not any new evidence.
And he quotes at length in the article
a YouTube video in, I think, like, 2021,
who basically levied all these arguments before him
and he's just like, I don't know,
some kind of crazy guy on YouTube is like,
oh, it's definitely out of back.
And he's like, yeah, this YouTube guy made some great points
that I'm going to now reiterate in this New York Times article.
I mean, I was going to ask the questions like, why do we care?
Like, do we really need to do this?
But then, again, like, kind of, it's Satoshi.
It's always going to be an interesting question.
Yeah, it's like hard.
Look, if, like, I mean, to ask the obvious question,
how would you feel if it were true
if he actually was Satoshi Nakamoto
and he proved it by moving some coins?
Oh, that's a different.
That's different.
Let's say he proved it.
Cryptographic proof.
Beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Beyond a shadow of a doubt,
how would I feel about it?
Wow, I was not prepared for that question.
Man, I don't know.
There has been so many years of buildup
of just understanding
that we don't know who Satoshi Nakamoto is.
And also, like, maybe I'm trying to weasel my way out of answering this question.
We have quantum now or soon.
And so maybe he flubbed the evidence.
There's just so much understanding of a foundation that we don't know who Satoshi Nakamoto is,
that it's hard to poke out of that universe.
And I think a lot of people like me will want to stay there.
Let's say that somebody raids his home, finds the papers, they find the GMX account,
they find everything.
The whole thing is unraveled.
It was him all along.
What would your reaction be?
I would be like, wow, this crazy guy?
It wouldn't be positive.
My gut is telling me it's like a negative visceral reaction.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, look, Adam back, he was on FCN Island, you know?
He's like, he's got laser eyes.
He has his politics.
He's kind of like, he's a Bitcoin influencer.
Like, it's, yeah, yeah.
I mean, check out the Google it.
I don't want.
No, yeah, exactly.
It's, I would be obviously disappointed.
Is that like Satoshi seemed so wise.
He seemed so, like, thoughtful and careful.
And you would not think that Satoshi would become a Bitcoin booster.
Right.
You would want to imagine that Satoshi would be like this almost like Aristotle-like figure who would stand above it all and be like not.
A Zen Guta type figure.
Yeah.
I mean, that's very much how he felt.
Yeah.
You know, you can imagine.
they're like, okay, maybe this was a character that whoever really was Satoshi Akamoto was playing
for the explicit purpose of trying to remain anonymous.
And look, maybe it's, I mean, look, I don't think it's likely, again, given the facts that we have from this article,
I don't think there's a slam-done case.
I think I still think the most likely candidate was Hal Finney for who was Satoshi Nakamoto.
I think it's very likely that Satoshi is dead.
But look, it's not impossible.
Yeah, it's not impossible.
Yeah.
Do you think we're going to get another one of these in the future?
Yes.
It will definitely get more of these.
And as Bitcoin gets bigger and bigger,
like it's just a never-ending,
just well-spraying of drama.
And it's in a way, like it's,
you know, it's like every once in a while
you get these stories of like,
oh, somebody found the grave of Jesus
or somebody found this,
that Moses.
It's like, it's not that different
because Bitcoin is kind of this secular religion
and very intentionally so.
And this creation myth that we have
that Satoshi Nakamoto appeared.
He asked nothing.
He kept no coins with him.
He disappeared and he left it to us to govern among men this thing that could only have been created by the gods.
Right.
Like that, that creation, it's so perfect.
Yeah.
And if you found out that like, oh, actually it was like Joseph Smith in the Book of Mormon and he was a businessman who made a bunch of money from this.
It's kind of like, oh, shit.
Right.
Okay.
Right.
Well, what do we do with that?
We bury it.
All right, let's move on.
Yeah.
Last thing for this week, the White House released this report.
research report titled the Effective Stablecoin Yield Prohibition on Bank Lending.
Basically, a pretty firm stance out of the White House about why Stablecoin yield should
be passed to Sablecoin.
They gave a bunch of arguments.
I think the three that really stood out the biggest, where lending protection is negligible.
And so the banks want the dollars to stay in the banking system because they lend those
dollars out.
If Stablecoins offer yield, the banks fear the deposits will leave and credit creation
shrinks. The White House, the White House says that this effect is tiny. Banks may only lose
$2.1 billion to this effect on a $12 trillion lending base. That's 0.02%. And so this worry is negligible.
The second one that they cited, the cost far outweighs the benefit. Banning stablecoin yields
would destroy $800 million in consumer welfare. That's money that stable coin holders would have
earned for every $1 of borrower surplus from additional lending, $6.6 in consumer value is destroyed.
So they're saying that this doesn't, these two things do not net out at all.
And then lastly, the Protect Mainstream Banks argument from the banks just doesn't hold
because they say that if we ban Sablecoin yield and the dollar stay in the banks,
they stay in the big banks, not the community ones.
pretty resounding report to come out of the White House while clarity continues to get negotiated.
Do you think, Hizib, this is going to impact the outcome of clarity in any particular way?
I kind of doubt it.
I think if you're a bank and you're reading this, you're like, yeah, I already know the White House wants this bill.
Like, who cares?
I think it's pretty obvious that a lot of the arguments around this have been fairly economically
specious, you know, adventurous analysis, I bet.
But I don't think the banks care.
I think the banks are going to continue to dig in their feet and say, look, we're going to block this.
We have a powerful lobby for a reason.
So I don't know.
Maybe I'm not politically calibrated here, but this seems to me like a non-event.
It would be surprising if the bank lobby published this.
I mean, that would be like, holy shit.
But no, the White House publishing this is like, yeah, everybody already knows that the White House wants this bill to pass.
Okay, so you just think this is that I'm talking to your book.
Do you think that if you accept these arguments, it does kind of beg the question.
I do accept the arguments.
I think it's pretty clear that.
the banks are being mendacious in claiming that this is going to cause capital flight and all this
harm to their businesses. I think that's not a serious claim. But then why do they care so much?
If the bank, maybe the banks don't accept the argument or do you think they do agree with the arguments?
I think the real argument is that it's going to affect their profitability. That's the real argument
that is not a very, that's not, that argument is not going to be very politically successful.
Nobody really cares that much about the margins of the banks.
They do care about the collapse of credit or they care about the crushing of community banks.
Those are very sympathetic arguments to make in public.
It's not very sympathetic to say, well, we don't want margin compression.
We like our margins.
Do you think this research report is biased then in that case?
Because if I'm reading this report, I'm like, man, this is just a wholehearted endorsement of stable coins.
Oh, I agree with that.
And I think, to be clear, like the best way to make it,
your strongest argument is to make true arguments.
I think this is a true argument.
This is correct.
I haven't done the math.
I'm not an economist,
so I don't want to convey too deeply
this idea that, okay, there's,
you know, it's unobjectionable in every way.
But I think it's pretty clear
that the banks were kind of making stuff up
in the claim that this is going to crush community banks
or that this is going to collapse
lending activity in the U.S.
I think that's a ridiculous claim.
Yeah.
And there's just no evidence to make it.
On the surface, big banks,
claiming that they're advocates for community banks
just doesn't pass the smell test to begin with.
I mean, it's obviously not the big banks, right?
It's the banking lobbies
which represent all the banks,
but the banking lobbies are mostly controlled
by the big banks, but they can kind of,
you know, it's the Maude and Bailey a little bit.
Is that, okay, you can,
you can sort of claim they're like,
oh, no, we're protecting all the banks,
but really, obviously, J.P. Morgan is the elephant in the room
and pays most of the actual lobbying fees.
Yeah.
Just kidding.
One last topic of the day.
Century, let's get back into the on-chain,
the little bit more native stuff.
something that is kind of just guiding the crypto industry, the crypto conversation is how bad the tokens are doing.
The tokens are doing poorly. The belays is felt that's a lot of people's jobs. The middle of the market tokens are people's jobs.
There's this one example of Monad actually above ICO price, which I was not ready for that when I saw that.
I kind of assumed if you asked me what the Monad price, I would assume it's like down bad just like all the others.
but we are a solid
something like 10% above the ICO price
is there any significance here
that you see Haseeb?
Well, definitely more than 10% above ICO price.
I believe the ICER price is 25 cents.
Oh, I thought it was $0.3.
25 cents we are at 0.32 cents right now.
Yeah, I believe so,
but I might be mistaken.
You might be right, you might be right.
So let's get a fact check on that.
but the overall answer,
I think clearly Monad is doing well.
They're getting more and more TVL on the chain.
They're getting more defy activity.
This is something that I've been saying for quite a while
is that people index way too much on day one, month one of chains.
There's no chain ever that has been successful on day one or month one.
It's true of Solana.
It's true of Avalanche.
I mean, obviously Ethereum was a different ballgame.
And if you look at the ones that have had breakout,
month ones, like you think about like blast or something.
Sure.
Doesn't really seem to predict much of anything.
Right.
The reality is that takes time to build a chain.
These things are, you know, ecosystems.
They require breaking the cold start effect or the cold start problem.
And the cold start problem takes time.
So you're not going to know until the race is on who's going to win the marathon.
Take some time to make that clear.
And so I think Mon is doing well.
They still have a lot to prove.
By no means is it is the game one.
Do you think this is unique to Monad or do you think that
this is potentially a canary for tokens broadly?
Pretty clearly it's unique to Monad, unfortunately.
I wish it was a canary for tokens broadly.
But right now, the chart you got pulled up here shows a lot of tokens are just getting hammered.
And Mon outperforming pretty uniquely in the market.
Sure, but the tokens are getting hammered.
Aptos, Bera, Sue, Avax are all legacy tokens, I'll call it.
Monad is a newer generation.
So maybe what I'm hopeful for is like maybe not all tokens are dead.
Because right now the malaise in crypto is like all tokens are just bad.
Yeah.
With further and further examples of at least a few tokens not being down bad,
then I'm kind of hopeful that like this middle of the market,
which gives a lot of the crypto industry is like kind of vitality and enjoyment at conferences
at the very least, which is like, oh, we're lifestyles.
It's like people are happier when the tokens aren't down bad.
Okay, you're talking about like, will Monad book out all the nightclubs to keep the conference circuit alive?
Is that what you're going?
I guess so, yeah.
When I go to the conferences, will I still get free drinks?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I wouldn't bet on that.
I wouldn't bet on that is what I'd say.
I think the free drink era might be coming to it.
No, look, I mean, the reality is that there's still plenty of money in the space.
Like, obviously, things are down.
Things are rough.
But I don't think anybody at these companies thinks like, oh, it's all dead and never coming
back. Obviously, a lot of people in CT think that, but I don't know, people in CT think that all the time.
Like, they are incredibly bad at actually projecting more than 10 minutes into the future.
So I think my base case is that cryptoccyclical, and it's not going to stop being cyclical just because you feel bad today.
It's going to continue to be cyclical.
Sure. Well, Haseeb, let's move on to another cycle. Thank you for coming on the show today.
My man is stepping in for Ryan. I really appreciate your guidance and insights.
Got a big brainful of knowledge, and we like to host you on the show.
to get that out of you, so we really appreciate that.
It was going to be here.
Thank you.
Bankless Station, you guys know the deal.
Crypto is risky.
You can lose what you put in.
But nonetheless, we are headed west.
This is the frontier.
It's not for everyone, but we are glad you were with us on the bankless journey.
Thanks a lot.
