Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 51 – It's quiet... too quiet
Episode Date: February 15, 2024It's been a quiet few weeks in the world of crypto disasters... too quiet. Originally published on February 14, 2024....
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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 citation needed. news.
Issue 51. It's quiet. Too quiet.
It's been a quiet few weeks in the world of crypto disasters. Too quiet.
This issue was originally published on February 14, 2024.
This is by far the lowest rate of,
Web3 is going just great entries per day I have ever seen, an entry roughly every three days.
I gave it two weeks between recap issues to see if maybe something would finally happen,
but there have been only four incidents in the crypto world during that time.
Don't get me wrong, it's very good news that there have been few incidents these past two weeks,
since it hopefully means less harm to those who choose to engage with this industry.
However, with the Bitcoin price on a tear lately, briefly surpassing $50,000 on Monday, then again today,
and other crypto prices following, there's likely to be renewed interest among attackers,
as the assets they target can now be sold for more money.
Should these prices continue, it's likely to drive more interest in the space from laypeople
who had previously not taken an interest in crypto, like what we saw in 2020 and 2021.
Although now, in its search for new retail money, the industry is fighting against would-be investors' recent memory of collapses and catastrophes in 2022, many of which made international headlines.
While Bitcoin has not yet regained the $60,000-plus highs it saw at its peak in November 2021, it's certainly gotten a lot closer to it in recent months than it had during the nearly two years of what people were calling the crypto.
winter. From looking at past periods of high crypto prices, there's often a delay between price spikes
and the sort of mass mania that often follows, but I for one am bracing myself. And we're certainly
seeing the marketing efforts out of the cryptocurrency industry to try to come up with a new story to tell,
to try to convince people that really, finally, now is why you should care about crypto.
Chris Dixon's recent read-write-own book and the enormous marketing efforts put behind it by his andresen Horowitz employer, including apparently gaming the New York Times bestseller list, are a recent example.
But in this downtime, I've been enjoying the time to read, write, code, and think about more pleasant things, like the kind of web I do want to see, and how I can shift my own online life so that I both experience and model more of that.
More writing on that soon.
In the Courts.
Readers of this newsletter may or may not be familiar with Craig Wright,
the creator of the Bitcoin Fork called Bitcoin SV,
who has claimed for years that he is also the creator of the original Bitcoin,
that is, Satoshi Nakamoto.
He's sued or threatened to sue a whole bunch of people who have said he's a liar,
including Vitalik Buterin and a guy called Holdenot.
Personally, I don't think he's even remotely credible, and I really hate when people fling around
bogus defamation lawsuits to try to stifle speech, so I mostly try not to give him any more attention.
However, he's been in court in the UK over the past week or so, defending his claims.
It's kind of an odd case, because the whole thing is mostly focused on establishing that right is
not Satoshi.
The lawsuit is funded by a group called C-O-P-A, which,
which is backed by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey and lists Coinbase, meta, and micro-strategy among its members.
They argue that Wright's litigiousness is stifling work on Bitcoin because he keeps filing intellectual property lawsuits against developers.
For people who enjoy a good legal drama, this might be up your alley.
There are claims of forged documents, destroyed hard drives, and, quote, industrial-scale fraud by Wright.
The case doesn't seem to be going well for him, with the judge at one point saying to write,
this is just another fairy story, isn't it?
Sam Bankman-Freid's new legal team has thrown a bit of a wrench in things.
As I noted two issues ago, the lawyers from Mukasey Young are also representing Alex
Mishinsky in his crypto-fraud trial.
The Department of Justice is worried about potential conflicts of interest as a result,
and has requested Curcio hearings in both cases, which will allow Bankin-Fried and Mishinsky
to acknowledge they are aware of the potential conflicts and waive their rights to conflict-free
representation. The government doesn't think the potential conflict of interest is so severe that
the lawyers will need to be disqualified, though that is ultimately up to the court, but they're
covering their bases so that one or both of the defendants can't come back and appeal on this basis.
The New York Attorney General now wants $3 billion in restitution from Digital Currency Group and its affiliates
instead of the $1 billion they originally sought in the fraud lawsuit filed in October 2023.
Quote, the fraud and deceit were so expansive that many additional people have come forward to report similar harm,
says the amended complaint.
Doquan's still in Montenegro after yet another hiccup.
First he was going to be extradited, then he wasn't, then he was, then there was all this back and forth around where he would be extradited too, and now the extradition has been revoked for a second time.
When the judge overseeing the case against him from the U.S. SEC okayed a delay to hopefully allow Kwan to participate in his case,
he was wise to note that he would not grant indefinite extensions, even in the event that Kwan is still stuck in Montenegro by the time the new court date rolls around in March.
Kwan's partner in crime, Han Changjun, the former CFO of Terraform Labs, who was arrested along with him in Montenegro for the same document forgery charges,
has just been extradited.
He is now in the custody of South Korean authorities.
I don't believe the U.S. sought his extradition,
so that probably simplified things.
Speaking of South Korea,
authorities there have arrested three executives of Haru Invest,
reportedly including its CEO.
Things seemed to be ramping up in that investigation.
Last issue, I noted that an arrest warrant had been issued
for a key figure involved with Haru's counterparty,
B&S Holdings.
Ryder Rips and his co-defendant are appealing the final judgment in the Yugo Labs v. Rips case,
which orders them to pay $1.38 million in disgorgement, $200,000 in damages, and around $7 million
in Yucal Labs' attorney's fees.
I wonder how much they've had to pay their own lawyers so far.
Still, additional fees for an appeal will be well worth it if they have any chance of achieving
a reduction to that whopping roughly $9 million they owe, although I don't know what their odds
look like.
In bankruptcies.
John Reed-Stark, the Crypto-Critical former chief of the SEC's Office of Internet Enforcement,
has some choice words for the lawyers overseeing FTC's bankruptcy.
Quote, the FTC's bankruptcy team's lawyers should send thank-you notes to all FTCS customers.
Why?
Because thanks to the FTCS customers,
each member of the FTX legal bankruptcy team
can now probably afford to buy a new beach house in 2024.
He writes that the FTX liquidation was the obvious outcome,
and that all the talk of reorganizing or restarting the FTX exchange
just wasted massive amounts of money that went to legal fees instead of FDX creditors.
FTCS creditors displeasure at the firm's attempt to repay them
at a price per Bitcoin of $16,871, has materialized into an adversary lawsuit.
Genesis is seeking approval to sell $1.6 billion worth of crypto assets held in Grayscale's
various trust products. Some are worried that such a massive sale could have an adverse impact
on prices. In Governments and Regulators
The United Nations has reportedly been working on an investigation
into North Korea's state-sponsored cyber attacks on cryptocurrency firms,
which have netted around $3 billion in the last six years.
These groups have been linked to profitable hacks,
including the $625 million theft from the Axy Infinity blockchain bridge,
the roughly $100 million theft from the Harmony blockchain bridge,
and more than $100 million in thefts from the users of the atomic wallet software.
According to Reuters, the report will come out in the next month or so, and will outline how the profits of these attacks have funded North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
That fair shake super PAC, funded by Coinbase, Andresen Horowitz, and others, has just spent around $2 million of the $80 million in its war chest on attack ads against California Senate candidate Democrat Katie Porter.
The ad attacks Porter for receiving three contributions of $500, $2,000, and $2,900 from individuals who are executives at a pharmaceutical company, oil company, and bank, respectively.
She claims not to take corporate pack money.
No.
Instead, Katie Porter takes her campaign cash directly from Big Pharma, Big Oil, and the big bank executives, more than 100.
thousand dollars. The irony of big crypto spending 20 times this amount on an attack ad is
apparently lost on them. Why the crypto super PAC sees Porter as such a threat is not immediately clear,
as during her time in the House of Representatives, she hasn't been terribly outspoken about crypto.
It may have less to do with her own views on the topic and more to do with her close
ally ship with Elizabeth Warren, who has earned a name as one of the most anti-crypto people in Washington.
Or it could be nothing to do with Porter and instead an attempt to support her opponent, Democrat Adam Schiff.
Schiff has a statement in his platform positions about supporting, quote, the forefront of new
developments in technology from Web 3 and quantum computing to cryptocurrency and blockchain
technology, and making sure that, quote, these companies and jobs stay here and grow here,
and that the United States remains the global leader in these important new technologies.
The Trade Station crypto platform has settled with the U.S. SEC and a slew of state regulators
over allegations that they had failed to register their interest-bearing lending product.
Trade Station will pay $3 million in penalties to be split among the regulatory agencies.
The company had stopped offering its products in the United States in February 23.
Thailand's SEC has filed charges against the former CEO of Zipmex, who they allege committed fraud by making false statements and concealing information from the public.
Zipmex was ordered to suspend services in Thailand after the SEC discovered assets had been transferred out of the country before customers were informed.
Elsewhere in Crypto.
We now have about a month of data since the launch of Spot Bitcoin ETPs.
If you go to the newsletter on the web, you can see two charts, one showing absolute flows
combining both in and outflows from the ETP products, and the second gives a better picture
of how much of this volume has been money flowing into the ETPs versus out of the grayscale Bitcoin
trust.
I'll be curious to see how interest in the ETPs can.
continues over future months and how net flows will look now that all that GBTC dumping is
leveling out a bit.
BACT is a crypto platform that launched in 2018 and has enjoyed advertising that it is
majority owned by the same company that owns the New York Stock Exchange.
Part of their launch marketing included a partnership with Starbucks, where they promised to
try to make it easier to buy coffee with Bitcoin.
Over five years later, they don't seem to be.
to have made much progress on that front. Now, an SEC filing has people even more worried than they
already were over backed quarter after quarter of reported losses. Quote, subsequent to previous
filings, we have determined that we do not believe that our cash and restricted cash are sufficient
to fund our operations for the 12 months following the date of this amended form 10Q, they write,
adding that if they are unable to increase revenues or raise additional capital, they may
not be able to continue to operate. The Web 3 is going just great recap. There were four entries
between February 2nd and February 14, averaging 0.3 entries per day. Forty-one. $41.1 million were added
to the grift counter. Playdap reminds us of the importance of distinguishing between actual
value and notional value. The South Korean blockchain gaming platform, Playdap, was exploited
by an attacker who is able to grant themselves the ability to mint new PLA tokens.
They minted 200 million tokens, notionally priced at around $36.5 million.
However, with only 577 million PLA in circulation, the likely value they actually would have
been able to obtain for these tokens was substantially lower.
This was even more the case, when they came back a few days later and minted another 1.59
billion PLA. Despite the fact that this was almost three times the number of tokens that had ever been
issued, several news outlets reported a so-called $290 million hack, even though actual losses were
probably a tenth of that at most. Hats off to bleeping computer, which updated their article
and headline later on to clarify this point. Ugal Labs botches another NFT release.
Some fans of Yuga Labs, the company behind Bored Apes and the much-anticipated OtherSide Metaverse Gaming Project,
are questioning how much progress the company can really have made on the as-yet-unreleased flagship Overside Gaming Project
if they managed to screw up an NFT design this badly.
Yuga released a new NFT, intending to function as ship parts that could be combined to create a ship to be used in the game.
Players who had completed an other side mini-game would be eligible to mint these NFTs for free.
However, the free NFT cost around $30 in gas fees to mint.
Worse still, the parts were meant to be repeatedly traded and combined to make new parts and ships,
leading fans to wonder why on earth they decided to release the project on a blockchain
where each transaction often costs tens of dollars.
Apparently realizing they'd made a mistake, Ugo first responded by announcing they would gift people free catalyst NFTs to make it up to them.
This only sparked further outrage, though, as it was seen to dilute the value of the catalyst NFTs and throw off incentives.
Yuga later reversed course on this decision, instead deciding to reimburse the gas fees.
This was not Yuga Lab's first gas-related fiasco, after they caused gas fees to spike.
into the thousands of dollars across the entire Ethereum network in April 2022 during the
initial other side land sale.
Everything else.
The Dual Bits Cryptocasino was exploited for $4.6 million, and Solana went down for five hours.
Worth a read.
Giles Turnbull wrote a blog post titled Let's Make the Indie Web Easier.
I don't know how I missed this when it was originally published a month ago, especially since
several blogs I read published responses to it, but alas, better late than never.
This is a great post on how, as we preach about the value of controlling your little corner of
the web, we need to make it extremely straightforward to do so. When you start saying the words
NPM install, you've gone too far. Corey Docterow wrote a piece in the Financial Times
titled Inshootification is Coming for Absolutely Everything. In it, he elaborates on his idea of
incitification and tells us why we should care about it and why we need to join the dis-inshidification
coalition. I'm a card-carrying member. Charlie Johnson of the Untangled newsletter wrote a tiny book on
crypto titled Crypto Untangled. The untangling in this case focuses more on things like the systems
of power and the ideologies behind crypto, which are arguably more important to untangle than just
going into another technical explanation of how blockchains work.
In the news, I spoke with Emily Nicole over at Bloomberg for her article on how people who
didn't buy crypto over the past few years shouldn't feel too much FOMO now that prices are back up.
Given the fairly substantial chance, they'd have lost it to one collapse or another.
I'm quoted talking about how, even if you try to diversify your crypto holdings across multiple
projects and platforms, you can still be subject to a ton of undisclosed counterparty risk.
It's titled, Bitcoin's Bounce didn't settle the biggest worries about crypto.
I also chatted with Bradley Tusk on his firewall podcast about Wikipedia.
I love talking about Wikipedia.
We also got a little bit into conversations around overhyped technologies, including crypto
and the Metaverse.
It's titled Truth, Lies, and Wikipedia.
Finally, I loaned my GitHub's belunking skills to Alex Gilbert over at DL News, who was trying to determine
if Company A stole publicly visible but not necessarily open source code from Company B or vice versa.
Still not 100% clear, but I have a pretty good guess.
Personally, I think projects should just stop using licenses like the BSL, but that's a conversation
for a different soapbox.
The article is titled Two Booming Defi Protocols published similar code.
Was it copied?
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this has been Molly White.
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