Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 106 – A tremendous birthday present
Episode Date: June 18, 2026The crypto industry spent the spring buying primaries, an octagon at the White House, and — they hope — a market-structure bill by the Fourth of July. Originally published on June 18, 2026....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed for the Citation Needed Newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at citationneeded.news.
Issue 106, a tremendous birthday present.
The crypto industry spent the spring buying primaries, an octagon at the White House,
and, they hope, a market structure bill by the 4th of July.
This issue was originally published on June 18, 26.
I was hard at work building Tech Influence Watch, my campaign finance tracker that helps you follow
how the cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence industries are influencing politics,
hence the slightly longer gap between recap issues.
The industry spending didn't slow down in the meantime.
If anything, it's ramped up as more states held their primaries, and crypto-related Trump corruption
and legislative maneuvering has continued a pace.
That means there's lots to cover, so let's get right into it.
it. Trump business interests, the artist formerly known as Alt 5 Sigma. I helped Reuters with a recent
report that concluded that, unlike their investors, quote, the Trump family always wins in its
crypto business deals. While the Trump family has profited $2.3 billion from their crypto ventures,
according to Reuters' estimates, investors have lost a conspicuously similar $2.3 billion. I saw a lot
of reactions to the piece to the effect that investors didn't lose money, they were merely paying
for pardons or other benefits. But I think Reuters did a great job of highlighting the everyday people
who've been suckered by the Trump's various crypto schemes, who genuinely believed they would make money
if they bought the Trump meme coin or shares in the family's crypto-linked businesses.
Quote, when a stock has presidential backing in a way, at least from his sons, you would think it would go up,
explained one buyer of shares in Alt 5 Sigma. Alt 5 Sigma is a Trump-linked treasury company that holds a
significant quantity of WLFI tokens issued by the Trump family's World Liberty Financial.
He's a machinist who's lost $32,700, 79% of his initial investment, not someone pursuing a pardon or regulatory relief.
And although that machinist expresses hope that his investment might recover, he may well be in,
an even worse outcome. Alt 5 Sigma, which recently renamed itself to AI Financial, has reported
in its most recent quarterly SEC filing that it is continuing to lose money, raising, quote,
substantial doubt about the company's ability to continue as a going concern within one year.
The company tries to soften this news with the claim that it has a, quote, significant financial
resource in the 7.3 billion WLFI tokens held in its treasury, but,
but also acknowledges, quote, significant market price risk if it were to sell them.
The filing reports these tokens have a fair value of $703.4 million, a figure the company derives,
in its own words, from, quote, quoted, unadjusted prices, that is, the number of tokens
times the market price, with no discount for the position's size and illiquidity.
That so-called value was stale almost immediately. In a June 10 disclosure, the company valued the same
holdings at roughly $380 million, having lost more than $300 million in paper value in just
10 weeks. Even that figure overstates what a sale could fetch, because a company in distress,
holding a fire sale on tokens issued by a related company is practically guaranteed to crash the
token price. And furthermore, the firm acknowledges that all tokens are locked until at least
late August, with some subject to extra conditions on sale. The company has since tried to take the warning
back, declaring the going concerned out, quote, substantially mitigated, pointing again to their
billions of WLFI tokens and arguing it could tap into their supposed value by borrowing against
staking or lending them. But so far, the only time the company has actually borrowed against its
WLFI holdings, but so far the only time AI Financial has actually borrowed against its WLFI holdings,
the lender was World Liberty, lending its related company cash against tokens they,
had issued. It's not clear who else might be willing to lend a struggling company cash against
illiquid tokens that have steadily declined in price. What's striking about the June walkback
is what's changed since the Q1 filing. The company has raised no new capital and reversed
none of its losses. In fact, the most significant change during the period in which the company
suddenly became more confident about its financial position is that the WLFI token price has
continued to fall, losing more than 40% of its value. The going concerned out appeared in a
quarterly report, certified by executives under penalty of law and subject to auditor review,
whereas the statement that the concern had been mitigated came in a press release that the
company, quote, furnished to the SEC, a designation that shields it from the liability that
comes along with filings like the Q1 report.
Crypto Bloodbath
Another Trumpian Birthday Party Spectacle,
or celebration of America, enjoyed lavish crypto sponsorship.
After Coinbase plastered its logo all over the June 2025 military parade,
this year's birthday event featured an octagon, emblazoned with logos for Crypto.com,
polymarket, exodus wallet, and the Cracken-owned Ninja Trader platform.
Several of these sponsors also hosted various events related to the fight.
Crypto.com paid out the fight bonuses in its CRO crypto token.
The Trump family's own World Liberty Financial earned some free marketing from Dana White
when he announced they would be a, quote, presenting sponsor of the event
and would be providing an additional $250,000 bonus to winners of Fight of the Night
denominated in their USD1 stable coin.
The president throwing a for-profit UFC event on the lawn of the White House was dubious enough,
but using it to then promote his family's crypto projects, from which he personally substantially
profits, is brazen even for Trump. In elections and political influence. Cryptocurrency and
artificial intelligence industry super PACs have surpassed $100 million in nationwide spending, driven
largely by a recent flurry of spending in New York House races ahead of the June 23rd primaries.
They still have more than $200 million sitting in reserve for their remaining primaries and for the
general elections later this year. The spending comes despite,
or perhaps because of broad voter skepticism towards both industries.
A plurality of voters recently polled by Politico
believe that investing in crypto isn't worth the risk
and that the risks of artificial intelligence outweigh its benefits.
However, the industries are betting that exorbitant campaign spending
can shift public sentiment toward industry-friendly candidates before voters catch on.
The industry-funded PAC's ads rarely mention AI or crypto,
and although ads must disclose who paid for them, benign names like defend American jobs and
think big mask the purpose of the PACs. So far, they're mostly succeeding in flying under the radar.
Politico's poll found that a 29% plurality of Americans incorrectly identify oil and gas groups
as the highest spenders in the midterms, not crypto or AI. And crypto lobbyists have been very explicit
about their goals. At a May Crypto Conference, Fellowship PAC leader and Tether executive Jesse
Spiro attributed pro-Crypto legislative and regulatory changes under Trump to CryptoPack spending.
An executive from the Solana Policy Institute Dark Money Group explained that the spending
needs to continue. Quote, you can make the down payment on a house, but you've got to keep
paying the mortgage, he said, expressing the perhaps not unreasonable belief that Congress is
something that can be bought like a house.
AI proxy war in New York. New York's District 12 has become a major battleground in an AI industry
civil war. The target is Alex Boris, a Democratic State Assembly member and former tech worker who
has made AI regulation a part of his platform and who co-sponsored the Rays Act, an AI
regulation bill that was signed into law in New York last year. Early in the race, he didn't
enjoy as much name recognition as some of his opponents, Michael Lashir, a former aide to the
retiring incumbent, Jack Schlossberg of the Kennedy Political Dynasty, and prominent Trump critic,
George Conway. But two rival AI industry super PACs have turned his race into their proxy battle,
elevating Boris's profile in the process. On one side is the Open AI and Andreessen Horowitz
backed leading the future network, which has spent $8.15 million to oppose
Boris. On the other, the Anthropic-backed Public First Network has spent almost $9 million supporting him.
Crypto-executive Chris Larson has also funded his own Super PAC to support candidates who advocate
for AI regulation, called You Can Push Back, and it has added another $1.9 million in support for
Boris. Altogether, the AI-focused packs have spent $19 million and counting on Boris alone.
Each side claims the others started it.
Quote, we knew from day one that Anthropic, its investors, and the dark money groups they fund
would spend millions to send Alex Boris to Congress, and that is exactly what they have done,
claimed Josh Velastow, an operative running the leading the future network.
Public First presents its entire existence as a response to leading the future,
describing itself as a, quote, counterforce against those who aim to buy their way out of
sensible rulemaking.
For leading the future, it's a risky gambit modeled on the tactics of the crypto packs,
with which it shares both funders and operatives.
If they can defeat one pro-regulation candidate in a crowded primary,
they can wield the high-profile victory as a threat against others
who might consider adopting AI regulation as a platform pillar,
much as Cryptopax made a few high-profile examples in early 2024 primaries
that they then held over the heads of candidates in other races
and incumbents planning to run for re-election.
But if the AI industry opposition raises Boris's profile too much,
and he wins his primary, the whole thing could backfire spectacularly.
Crypto spends in the South.
The pro-cry network scored a big win
when Democrat Christian Menofy defeated vehement crypto and Trump critic Al Green
in the May 26th Democratic primary runoff for Texas District 18.
Both candidates were incumbents.
now forced to challenge each other thanks to redistricting.
The Fairshake Network's $6.5 million in support for Menefi
eclipsed all other spending in that race.
The network had also claimed a, quote,
six-zero sweep in the May 19th primaries across Alabama,
Kentucky, and Georgia,
although this was something of a characteristic fair shake overstatement.
In Alabama's Republican Senate primary,
the network's record-breaking $12.2 million for Barry Moore,
the most any crypto or AI-focused network has spent on a single candidate thus far,
couldn't secure an outright win.
Moore fell short of 50% support and faced a runoff,
though he did eventually win on June 16th.
Another combined $680,000 came from the Cantor Fitzgerald-funded
and Tether-linked Fellowship Pro-Cryptopac,
and the Andresen and Open AI backed leading the future AIPack network.
In the Kentucky Senate primary, the Fairshake Network's $7.2 million to back Republican Andy Barr
likely had less to do with his victory than President Trump's intervention.
With promises of an ambassador nomination, Trump successfully helped to clear the field
when he pressured Barr's toughest opponent, Nate Morris, to drop out and endorse Barr.
Barr, who currently sits on the House Financial Services Committee and chairs its subcommittee
on financial institutions and monetary policy, has been a valuable ally to the cryptocurrency industry.
Fairshake supported four Georgia House candidates with varying levels of investment.
$4.2 million for Democrat Jasmine Clark in District 13, $709,000 for Republican Houston Gaines
and District 10, $455,000 for Republican Clayton Fuller in District 14,
and $431,000 for Republican James Kingston,
in District 1. All four won their primaries, though Fuller, who had won the District 14 special
election just three months earlier, was already a shoe-in. In the three races backing Republicans,
the leading the future AI-focused PAC network joined Fairshake's efforts. The two networks appear
together often, which is not tremendously surprising given they share significant backing from
Andresen Horowitz, and longtime Fairshake spokesman Josh Velasto is a strategist for leading the
June primaries. June brought the California primaries, where crypto spent across nine house races
exclusively supporting Democrats. Abundant Future, another Chris Larson backpack, spent $888,000 to oppose
socialist-leaning Shoykut Chakarbardi in District 11, and he was defeated in the nonpartisan primary
by the more establishment Democrats, Scott Wiener and Connie Chan. In South Carolina,
Pax supported incumbent Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, and Farshake supported incumbent Republican
William Timmons in District 14, both defeated their primary challengers. In Oklahoma, just over
$2 million, roughly split between crypto-NAI packs, backed Kevin Hearn in the Senate race to fill the
seat vacated by Mark Wayne Mullen. Hearn likely didn't need the boost, handily winning the primary,
but his authorship of the Industry Friendly Clarity Act and other pro-crypto moves while in
House was nevertheless warmly rewarded by the industry. In Congress, the Clarity Act,
Cryptocurrency Market Structure Bill, failed to pass by its predicted September 2025 deadline,
and its end of 2025 deadline, and its April 26 deadline. At the beginning of the year,
we began hearing worried estimates of how soon the bill would need to pass before all hope was
lost of it getting through under this Congress. In March, Senator Bernie Marino, or
publican from Ohio warned, quote, if we don't get the Clarity Act passed by May, digital asset
legislation will not pass for the foreseeable future. Well, here we are, sailing through June and
toward the new deadline of July 4th, set by Patrick Witt of the President's Council of Advisors for
Digital Assets, based apparently on the fact that he believes it would be, quote, a tremendous
birthday present for America. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat from New York, has provided a separate
estimate of early August. There was a flurry of excitement in the crypto industry in mid-May,
when the bill finally emerged out of Senate banking after months of negotiations, despite
objections from Democrats and banking lobbyists. The vote passed 15 to 9 with the support of
all committee Republicans and two Democrats, Ruben Gallego from Arizona, and Angela Alcibrooks
from Maryland. Both Democrats voted in favor of the bill, despite previously pledging not to,
unless ethics language was added to limit President Trump's crypto involvement.
It wasn't.
Both have since suggested they now might not cast their final votes for the bill without such
ethics language, though they have not shown their word to be very good thus far.
Crypto is pushing hard to rush the bill through before midterms potentially change the balance
of power in Congress, and Coinbase's Stand With Crypto Advocacy Group penned a letter on June 7
on behalf of dozens of crypto firms, pressing senators to bring the bill to a floor vote.
Pressure is also coming from within the government,
with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also urging senators to support the bill.
But despite getting past the Senate banking hurdle,
the bill doesn't seem all that much closer to being signed into law.
Good news, in my view, for an industry-written bill devoid of consumer protections
and officeholder ethics requirements, largely aimed at deregulating the crypto.
sector. Conflict of interest, corruption, and self-dealing concerns continue to pile up around the
president, such as his controversial settlement with himself in a lawsuit against the IRS,
a resolution that prevents the IRS from auditing Trump's or his family member's tax returns,
and, as yet unsuccessfully, attempts to establish a $1.8 billion, so-called anti-weaponization fund.
As the pile of corrupt deals and crypto-related quid pro quos grows larger, pressure mounts on Congress
to add anti-corruption language to the bill, against the wishes of Republicans who are perfectly
willing to battle over such provisions behind closed doors, but would rather not be seen publicly
voting to enable Trump's self-dealing to continue. There's also been a growing rift between Trump and
Senate Republicans, particularly during recent budget reconciliation negotiations, where some Republican
senators supported amendments to block Trump's ballroom project or his anti-weaponization fund.
And as more states hold their primaries each week, we may see more Republican incumbents,
like Bill Cassidy and John Cornyn lose their primaries, and, along with their chances of re-election,
they're imperative to vote in lockstep with Trump's agenda.
There's also the scheduling issue.
Crypto reporter Eleanor Tourette pointed out in her recent newsletter that there simply isn't
enough time for the bill to pass by Witt's July 4 target.
The Senate is only in session for five more days between now and then.
As Tourette explains, quote, to make that timeline work, the Senate would first need to merge
the banking and agriculture committee texts, secure the 60 votes needed to invoke closure
on the motion to proceed, achieve closure on a manager's amendment, adopt that amendment,
and pass the legislation. The House, which is out this week, would then need to approve the
Senate's changes and pass the bill again before it could be sent to President Trump's desk for signature.
And all of that would need to happen with multiple contentious negotiations left to resolve.
The Senators hoping the bill could pass the full Senate by the August recess have another 20 days or so
in session to avail themselves of. But those days are shared with other pressing legislative priorities,
such as renewing the lapsed Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which Trump
has demanded Senate Republicans link to his similarly controversial Save Act voter suppression bill.
And if the August recess arrives before the bill passes, its prospects grow far more dire.
In Regulators. CFTC
The New York Times has published an extensive.
extensive investigation into the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's handling of Polymarket,
crypto.com, and Gemini, three companies with extensive ties to President Trump and his family.
1789 Capital, a venture firm partly owned by Donald Trump Jr., made an eight-figure investment into
Polymarket last year, with Trump Jr. joining its advisory board.
Crypto.com has been a Trump campaign mega-donor and has a long list of business partnerships with President
Trump's Trump Media and Technology Group, the parent company of Truth Social. Gemini and its founders,
the Winklevoss twins, are also major Trump donors and are investors in the Trump's American Bitcoin
firm. Both polymarket and crypto.com were prominent sponsors of Trump's recent UFC event at the White House.
According to the Times, when senior officials at the CFTC raised concerns about fairness,
fraud protections and adequate agency review, then acting CFTC chair Caroline FAM and her senior
counsel, Brigitte Wiles, stepped in to clear the hurdles from the crypto company's paths.
At least five officials who raised concerns like these or enforced laws pertaining to crypto
were placed under investigation and put on leave.
According to the Times, quote, current and former agency staffers said in interviews that the
commission's workforce took away a clear message.
don't cause trouble for these industries.
Pham is no longer at the CFTC, having stepped down shortly after her replacement was appointed
to immediately take a job at Moon Pay, a Trump-linked company that handles the cash-to-crypto
conversion for Polly Market.
Wiles also resigned from the CFTC several months later to take a job with Gemini Titan,
the prediction market arm of Gemini, whose application was prematurely approved after an abnormal
intervention by Wiles herself. But although FAM and Wiles are no longer at the CFTC to fast-track
prediction market applications, the industry still has a strong ally in the agency's new and only
commissioner, Mike Seelig. Under Seelig's direction, the CFTC has sued several states that have
attempted to enforce gambling regulations against prediction market firms. And although there have been
several high-profile allegations of insider trading on polymarket and other prediction market platforms,
Seelig's CFTC has gone after the traders, but not the companies, which have a responsibility
to police traders and, in Polymarket's case, prohibit U.S. traders entirely.
The widespread use of polymarket by Americans is an open secret, and a recent study estimates
that about a third of trading on the platform comes from U.S. customers.
The CFTC has also approved Kalshi and Coinbase to offer crypto-perpetual futures, often abbreviated to
perps, which are a type of derivative that never expires. A standard futures contract is a bet on
what an asset will be worth on a specific date. A perp removes that deadline, allowing traders to bet
on a token's price indefinitely without ever owning the token itself. This is an invention largely
limited to crypto, which has no dividends or economic fundamentals to anchor its value the way a
stock or a bond does. The biggest draw, however, is leverage. Perps are typically
traded with borrowed money at ratios that offshore venues have pushed as high as several hundred
times a trader's actual stake, which means a small fluctuation in the wrong direction can wipe out
the position entirely. The combination of indefinite duration, high leverage, and no underlying
asset is largely why U.S. regulators deemed the instruments too risky for retail traders up until
now. The approval followed a social media post from President Trump that claimed that regulators
under previous administrations had, quote, nearly destroyed the American crypto industry by prohibiting
crypto-perps trading. The approvals quickly met pushback from traditional finance. Terry Duffy, the outgoing
CEO of the CME group Futures Trading Giant, announced that his firm will be suing the CFTC over the
approval. At a recent conference, Duffy expressed, quote, grave concerns with the instrument,
describing perps as, quote, a disaster waiting to happen, and comparing them to the expansion.
of speculative housing-related instruments that preceded the 2008 financial crisis.
He also said he had concerns about making such contracts available to retail traders.
Quote, I don't like to see people that don't understand products to potentially get blown
out of a contract they shouldn't be in in the first place.
SEC.
After issuing guidance in January that boiled down to a stock doesn't magically stop being a
security just because you put it on the blockchain, the SEC looks like.
like it may be about to reverse course on that stance, delivering a massive win to the
crypto industry and potentially massive losses to retail investors. The industry has already
been testing such offerings, mostly overseas, recently resulting in a multi-platform snafu,
where traders who participated in pre-sales of tokenized SpaceX stock ended up empty-handed.
But now the SEC appears to be on the cusp of allowing crypto firms to sell tokenized stocks to
U.S. buyers through an innovation exemption. That would mean firms would not need to comply with all the
usual SEC disclosures and investor protection rules. Several massive crypto firms, including Coinbase,
Robin Hood, and Cracken are eager to sell such assets to U.S. retail customers.
In-crime. The Second Circuit of Appeals has upheld Sam Bankman-Fried's conviction and 25-year sentence,
as I covered in more detail in a noted post last week.
This leaves a presidential pardon as one of Bankman Fried's only realistic paths to freedom,
and with little social, political, or financial capital left available to him,
his chances of that seem limited as well.
Still, two of the Senate's top crypto industry advocates,
Cynthia Lomas, the Republican from Wyoming, and Rupin Gallego, the Democrat from Arizona,
seem concerned enough that it could be a possibility that they've introduced a resolution
to, quote, express the sense of the Senate that under,
No circumstances should Samuel Bankman-Fried receive executive clemency, including a pardon or commutation.
Should it pass, it would not be binding on the president.
Another former FTX executive also faced some disappointment in court this month.
Judge George Daniels, the federal judge overseeing a campaign finance case against Michelle Bond,
wife of jailed FTX executive Ryan Salem, declined to dismiss the case after over a year of arguments that prosecutors had promised
to drop their case against her if Salem entered a guilty plea in his criminal trial related to
FDX. Salem indeed pleaded guilty in September 2023 and is serving a seven-year sentence.
Daniels concluded that the evidence, quote, undisputably indicates that the government did not
promise to not prosecute Bond in exchange for Salem's guilty plea, and that, quote,
no reasonable party would believe that Salem's guilty plea guaranteed immunity from prosecution for
Bond. Bond is facing allegations that she entered into a, quote, sham consulting agreement with
FTX, for which she was paid $400,000, which she then used to illegally finance her unsuccessful
2022 New York Congressional campaign.
Another convicted crypto fraudster, Celsius founder Alex Mishinsky, has filed a pro se motion
to vacate his 12-year prison sentence. His argument rests on the claim that he received
ineffective counsel from Mukasean Young.
who he says prioritized a fast resolution to the case because they were under financial stress.
He also claims that, quote,
counsel's financial desperation is most evident by his unethical and secret effort to secure a conflicting client,
FtX's Sam Bankman freed, without informing Mishinsky.
But a Kershio hearing was held in February 2024 at the request of the prosecution,
and Mishinsky confirmed he was aware of the potential conflict and waived it.
Outside the U.S.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, under scrutiny for accepting millions of pounds in campaign
contributions from tether-linked crypto-billionaire Christopher Harbourn appears to be hoping to shift
the focus of the controversy.
He's claimed without evidence that the Guardians' reporting on Harbourn's 5 million-pound gift
to Farage in 2024, shortly before Farage reversed his decision not to run for office, was
based on a Russian hack and leak operation. Farage is not believed to have reported his claims that his
phone and bank accounts were hacked to the police, although opposition parties have called for him
to provide evidence of a hack to the UK authorities. The Labor Party subsequently sent a letter
to national police and intelligence authorities stating, quote, if Reform UK have not reported this to you,
please treat this letter as a formal report of what appears on the basis of media reports to be an
allegation of a serious crime. Kieran Martin, former head of the UK intelligence agency's National
Cyber Security Center, told the Guardian, quote, an aspiring Prime Minister has essentially claimed that
Russia has launched an unprecedentedly aggressive intervention, a malicious intervention in British
politics, and he's not produced a shred of evidence to support that claim. It is a very, very serious
thing to allege. It would be a national security issue. If it is true, the government should be in
emergency session in COBR right now, considering their response to the most serious Russian
intervention in internal British affairs for years. Martin added that, based on Farage's public
statements, quote, this is an entirely unsubstantiated claim and one without any merit.
The Web 3 is going just great recap. There were 16 entries between May 8 and June 18th.
$79.42 million was added to the Gryft Counter. Astec Connect was hacked.
for a second time in less than a week.
Pudgy Penguins shut down their Pudgy Party NFT game after losing millions in less than 10 months.
The deprecated project Aztec Connect was exploited for $2.1 million.
Radium users lost $1.34 million after a legacy smart contract was exploited.
The Humanity Protocol lost $36 million to an employee laptop compromise.
A thief stole the remaining 7200 unsold the Getsold.
Kiss NFTs in a digital museum heist. The Gravity Bridge was drained of $5.4 million. DX sale was
exploited for $7.3 million. The Squid Router module, unrelated to Squid Router, was exploited for $3.2 million.
Polymarket lost $700,000 to a private key compromise. Rito Swap users lost $2.7 million to a
Havino vulnerability. The largest North American Bitcoin.
ATM operator, Bitcoin Depot filed for bankruptcy. Virus Bridge was hacked for $11.6 million,
although $8.5 million of it was returned. Thor Chain was exploited for $10.8 million,
transit finance was hacked for $1.88 million, and TACBridge was exploited for $2.8 million.
Worth a read. As a part of their coin laundry investigative series, ICIJ journalist Spencer Woodman,
outlines how the move to issue modified banking licenses to crypto firms
minimizes federal oversight and reduces the ability for state regulators to handle consumer
complaints. State authorities have largely been on the forefront of consumer protection in the
crypto sector, as federal regulators abdicate their responsibility. That article is titled
Trump Administration Curbs State Oversight of Crypto Industry, and it was published by the
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.
I've covered in past issues of this newsletter how the CFTC and Justice Department are going to bat for
prediction markets against state regulators seeking to enforce gambling laws.
The CFTC intervened in the Crypta.com versus Nevada case and has subsequently sued multiple states
who have either tried to enforce gambling laws against these platforms or look likely to.
This is particularly troubling, given the Trump family's close ties to the prediction market sector,
as I described in the regulatory section of this issue.
Now we're seeing similar intervention on behalf of AI companies, namely XAI, a company owned by Elon Musk,
the largest donor to Trump's 2024 campaign.
Wired has an article titled DOJ lawyers argue XAI is vital for national security in NWACP lawsuit.
In the news, I'm quoted in Greg Ips' recent Wall Street Journal piece about stablecoins.
where he opines that stable coins are similar to private money issued in the 19th century during the free banking era.
The proliferation of stable coins, he writes, bears, quote, the risk that this could lead to financial crisis,
much like some past experiments with private money.
That article is titled, stablecoins are private money.
That's why they're a risk to the economy.
I went on posting through it, hosted by Jared Holt and Michael Edison Hayden,
to talk about the cryptocurrency industry's massive spending on the midterm elections and how
the president is getting rich off crypto. That episode is number 114, and it's titled All My Apes Gone to D.C.
I joined Tonadzine Carmona on Dave Troy's podcast to discuss where crypto stands after more than a year under
the Trump administration, where it's headed, and what the crypto industry is doing to try to shape the
future of crypto to their agenda. That episode is titled Crypto is interested in
You with Molly White and Tonadzine Carmona, and it's on the podcast Dave Troy Presents.
Tech Influence Watch earned a shout-out in the Verge's regulator newsletter and in Gothamist,
where I spoke about the proxy war between AI super PACs for a piece titled How Big AI Money
is shaping the marquee Manhattan Congressional Primary.
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this has been Molly White.
Thanks for listening to this issue.
of the citation needed newsletter.
If you would like to support my work with a free
or pay what you want subscription to the citation needed newsletter,
or if you would like to receive these issues in your email,
go to citation needed.news slash sign up.
If you enjoyed the podcast version of this episode,
please consider leaving a rating or review
in your podcast player of choice.
