Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 55 – Halving a bad time

Episode Date: April 13, 2024

The bitcoin "halving" looms, and that may not be as good news as coiners hope. Also, Terra committed fraud and Uniswap got a Wells notice. Originally published on April 13, 2024....

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 55, having a bad time. The Bitcoin halving looms, and that may not be as good news as coiners hope. Also, Tara committed fraud, and Uniswap got a Wells notice. This issue was originally published on April 13, 2024. Bitcoiners are all a flutter as the halving date approaches in about a week. This is very exciting for them, because the past three halvings look like they've precipitated
Starting point is 00:00:44 major price increases, particularly if you use a log scale, which bitcoins love. The halving is the moment when Bitcoin block rewards, that is the amount of Bitcoin issued as a reward to the miner for successfully mining a block, are reduced by half. This is a strategy to ensure the total supply of Bitcoin gradually tapers off before reaching its final 21 million coins. While the very first Bitcoiners received 50 Bitcoins for each block they mined, now only 6.5 Bitcoins are issued per block, and that's scheduled to reduce to 3 and 1 8th Bitcoin per block around April 19. Although responsible investment advisors will often warn that past performance is no guarantee of future results, that's largely the kind of thought process that goes into the predictions for the having. Number went up last time, so number go up again.
Starting point is 00:01:39 More sophisticated explainers might delve into supply and demand, suggesting that the gradual closing of the Bitcoin faucet amid roughly steady demand is what drives prices higher. Either way, some people are piling into Bitcoin in beliefs of guaranteed double-your-money returns, if not better. These folks might do well to be a bit more cautious. For one, it's not clear to what degree the past price movements were caused by the halving versus simply correlated with it.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Notably, the previous halving in May 2020 coincided with massive macroeconomic changes in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, which brought money flowing into riskier asset classes across the board and also brought a wave of bored pandemic-driven day traders into crypto. Furthermore, the number of Bitcoins being minted each day, around 900 now, soon to be around 450, pales in comparison to the total number of Bitcoins already minted, almost 19.7 million. While it's true that there will be a reduction in the speed at which the supply of Bitcoins is increasing, it doesn't change much when you look at the total supply overall,
Starting point is 00:02:54 and the scale of the reduction gets less and less dramatic each time the halving happens. There's also the miner problem. Bitcoin miners have already been operating on incredibly thin margins, and many washed out during the crypto winter, as low prices for their bitcoins made mining even less sustainable. Now, with half as many bitcoins issued per block, that's only going to get worse.
Starting point is 00:03:18 If Bitcoin's price skyrockets as hoped, they might break even and be able to stay in business. If Bitcoin's price falters, miners are going to have a really tough time, paying off their electricity bills and loan payments, and more companies are likely to collapse. Don't take my word for it. Despite the upwards Bitcoin price movement, in the past, fairly well correlated with stock prices for publicly traded Bitcoin mining operations, Bitcoin mining stocks have been trending down in recent months, likely in anticipation of post-having chaos in the sector. Anyway, this should be interesting to watch. In the courts, Sam Bankman-Fried has filed notice of his appeal as anticipated. He's also asked to stay at
Starting point is 00:04:03 MDC Brooklyn while his appeal is being briefed to allow him easier access to his attorneys. Judge Kaplan recommended during sentencing that he go to a federal prison on the West Coast so that he can be closer to his family, but it makes sense that he might want to hit pause on that for a while as the appeal continues on this side of the country. Doe Kwan and Terraform Labs were found liable in the two-week-long civil fraud trial over the collapse of their $40 billion-dollar Terra Luna stable coin project in May 2022. Kwan was found by the jury to have been intentionally liable. Terraform Labs was merely recklessly liable. This means that the jury believed that Kwan had actively intended to cause harm, whereas the company knew or should have known that they might be causing harm
Starting point is 00:04:50 and chose to proceed anyway. Penalties for the case haven't been decided yet, but the SEC is pursuing monetary penalties as well as orders that will prevent Kwan or his company from operating in the securities industry. Remember the guy who bragged about his, quote, highly profitable trading strategy, which involves stealing more than $110 million from the Mango Market's DeFi Project, and who subsequently tweeted, quote, I believe all our actions were legal open market actions. Well, he's about to find out if his beliefs were accurate, because his criminal trial kicked off on April 9. In opening statements, his lawyers seemed to try to use the they had it coming defense. Quote, Mango Markets and Avi Eisenberg, they weren't operating in the
Starting point is 00:05:37 regular financial world. It is speculative. They go in with their eyes open. Prosecutors, on the other hand, pointed to his decision to buy a plane ticket out of the country the very next day, and to his Google searches for terms including market manipulation criminal elements and FBI surveillance, as evidence that he knew quite well that his actions were not merely highly profitable trades. It seems that Eisenberg may, like Sam Bankman Fried, take the stand in his own defense. Shakeeb Ahmed, the ex-Amazon Bug Bounty employee who stole a combined $12 million from Kremma Finance and Nirvana Finance in a three-week period in July 2022, has been sentenced to three years in prison, $12.3 million in forfeiture, and $5 million in restitution. Several more crypto advocacy groups have filed amicus briefs in support of Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm. They make similar arguments as he did, namely that those who write software should not be held liable for the actions of those who later use that software,
Starting point is 00:06:47 and that the case threatens to dramatically expand the liability of software creators more generally. In the amicus brief by Coin Center, they write, To argue that tornado cash operators willfully and knowingly confederated to commit sanctions evasion, would be to suggest that the developers of the Linux open-source operating system, system confederated with the regime of Iran, merely by freely releasing a valuable computing tool that Iran would later use to operate computers related to its weapons programs. Crafting such a broad standard for sanctions liability would massively chill the publication of software and could be used to villainize countless researchers, scientists, and developers,
Starting point is 00:07:31 whose selfless release of free and open source software is largely responsible for the information Technology Revolution of the last half century. Ben Delo has lost his motion to dismiss the class action case against him in connection to his activities at the Bitmex Cryptocurrency Exchange and the God access that allegedly allowed Delo and his co-conspirators to view customer information and plan trades against them. Delo argued that the court didn't have personal jurisdiction as he is a British citizen. Judge Andrew Carter found that Delo had been highly active
Starting point is 00:08:06 in the United States, not least by founding a company there, and through actions including, quote, coming to New York, posting up next to a Lamborghini to draw the attention of U.S. customers, inducing them to invest in Bitmex. Attendees of the Bitcoin CoreDev Atlanta event in October 2022 are angry because the FBI subpoenaed attendee information from the event's leader in the wake of the January 2023 theft of around 205 Bitcoin. from Bitcoin core developer Luke Dascher.
Starting point is 00:08:40 At the time of the theft, these coins were priced at around $3.5 million. Today, they'd fetch a price of more than $13.7 million. Although Dascher is a Bitcoin ideologue, he seemed to have no issue with calling on the FBI to help him after the theft. In governments and regulators. The SEC issued a Wells notice to Uniswap, the top decentralized cryptocurrency exchange. Wells notices are used to inform the recipient of an impending lawsuit and to give them a last-ditch opportunity to convince the SEC that the lawsuit is unwarranted.
Starting point is 00:09:17 As has become the norm in the cryptocurrency world, Uniswap responded with outrage via a blog post titled Fighting for Defi, where they wrote, taking into account the SEC's ongoing lawsuits against Coinbase and others, as well as their complete unwillingness to provide clarity or a path to register, to those operating lawfully within the U.S., we can only conclude that this is the latest political effort to target even the best actors building technology on blockchains. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, Wally Adiamo, singled out tether by name in his prepared statements in front of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs,
Starting point is 00:09:59 where he pleaded for, quote, additional tools to protect the American people from illicit cryptocurrency operations, particularly those involving stablecoins. He elaborated, the DPRK, through numerous complex state-sponsored cyber heists, is able to acquire, launder, and store illicit revenue. It relies on anonymity enhancing technologies like mixers to hide the sources of its funds, and it leverages over-the-counter digital assets traders to acquire fiat currency. In addition, we've seen Russia increasingly turning to alternative payment mechanisms, including the stablecoin tether, to try to circumvent our sanctions and to continue to finance its war machine. Two days later, leaders from the House and the Senate reportedly met to discuss further strategy
Starting point is 00:10:49 around a stable coin bill. Efforts to draft such a bill acceptable to both sides have languished, particularly after the FTX collapse, put a massive damper on some lawmakers' enthusiasm towards the sector. They've received recent pushback from longtime crypto opponent, Senator Elizabeth Warren, who wrote a letter to McHenry and Waters, warning that, quote, efforts to create new regulatory frameworks around the $157 billion stablecoin market, including those that aim to fold stable coins deeper into the banking sector, could amplify and entrench these risks rather than mitigate them. I urge you to remember the gravity of these risks, as, your committees consider proposals to regulate stablecoins and avoid introducing stablecoin legislation
Starting point is 00:11:37 that holds the potential of unleashing another financial crisis. She's right on this one. Warren's outspokenness against crypto has earned her many enemies in the industry. Now, wealthy cryptocurrency executives including Anthony Scaramucci, Gemini's Winklevoss twins, Cardano's Charles Hoskinson, and executives from Ripple are bank-ruling lawyer John Deaton's Senate campaign to unseat her in the 2024 race. Described by Politico as a, quote, political no name with, quote, virtually no chance of winning against Warren, Deaton became known among cryptocurrency advocates when he departed from his usual fare of asbestos injury claims to file an amicus brief in the SEC case against Ripple. In January, he moved to Massachusetts,
Starting point is 00:12:27 and registered as a Republican to run against Warren. Elsewhere in crypto. Following in the footsteps of the eyeball-scanning orbs, Tun has come out with palm scanning software that promises to prove your uniqueness on the blockchain. Tun is the Open Network, a project originally created by the Telegram messaging platform. Like WorldCoin's orbs,
Starting point is 00:12:53 Tunn claims that its project doesn't actually store the biometric data, but instead generates a code they say is not reversible, even if it were to be compromised. Speaking of the choice to scan palms, the project's founder explained, quote, for most people, scanning your palm with a smartphone camera just feels less intrusive than eye scanning. While it may be true that it feels less intrusive, I wouldn't argue that it actually is less intrusive. Crypto-gaming hardware seems to be having a resurgence after a few hilarious
Starting point is 00:13:27 flops during the last hype cycle, namely polium. A new Game Boy-looking handheld, called BitBoy, promises to be both a $500 Bitcoin hardware wallet and a way to play Bitcoin-specific play-to-earn games. Despite the name, it doesn't seem to be related to Ben Bitboy Armstrong, the influencer, who claims he was, quote, extorted for his Lambo amid a messy meltdown last fall. Elsewhere, a concept for a handset resembling the Steam deck is promising a 2025 release. Although the Suey Play 0x1 has been conceptualized to be used for games built on the Suey blockchain, Suey's website only advertises 10 such games. One is a 2048 clone, another lets you bet on coin flips,
Starting point is 00:14:17 and a third allows you to buy packs of words resembling the kind you magnetically attach to fridges, and then write poems with them, marking my calendar for this one. Apparently, the Bored Apes Project has been sending its royalties to an account at FTXUS, which, as you probably recall, is bankrupt, L.O.L. The Web 3 is going just great recap. There were 11 entries between April 1 and April 12, averaging 0.9 entries per day. $130.03 million were added to the grift counter. All my burgers gone.
Starting point is 00:14:55 That BoredApe-themed restaurant in Long Beach, California, that briefly tried to accept cryptocurrency payments, has served its last burger. This was first revealed in a tweet by a local Twitter account, which posted a picture of the vacant building with a sign advertising that a local Mexican food chain will be taking up residence shortly. Someone mentioned that they had walked past and saw workers hauling old carpet out of the building to be thrown away. Hard to imagine why the new proprietors wouldn't want to keep it. For the benefit of the audio listeners, the carpet features pictures of mutant apes, whose skin
Starting point is 00:15:32 seems to be melting off in a sort of green snot. Evidently, the Bored and Hungry brand has been purchased by Hungry Dow, which Board and Hungry's owner described as a, quote, branding and franchising company. It's not clear if Hungry Dow also bought the one board ape and three mutant apes that are used in the company's branding, but as of writing, they haven't changed hands on the blockchain. They were originally purchased for a combined $455,000. Although at current average eight prices, their combined resale value is probably somewhere in the ballpark of $75,000. Australian crypto collapse. Two crypto funds in Australia have toppled, leaving at least 550 decreditors with more than 100 million U.S. dollars in claims. One of them, digital commodity assets,
Starting point is 00:16:23 was run by a man who drew in wealthy investors to invest a minimum of $33,000 each in his scheme, and who boasted of his past career as a NASA mission specialist. The other, NGS Crypto, sold crypto mining packages, where they enticed people to open up self-managed super funds, a type of retirement fund, and use it to earn returns from so-called blockchain mining. The firm advertised returns of up to 16% annually, and promise that investors would receive 100% of their initial investment back at the term's completion, even, quote, in the unlikely event that crypto mining becomes unprofitable. Memecoin Mania sees almost $29,000 poured into a promised rug pull, a project describing
Starting point is 00:17:13 itself as, quote, the world's first meme coin pre-announced as a rugpole, opened up token sales on April 1st. Its website said, quote, unlike many projects in crypto, which refuse to offer financial advice, we can confidently give this financial advice, do not buy this coin, as it will go to zero. People quickly put thousands of dollars into the token, as the creator incredulously tweeted things like, quote, two hours until the presale closes. We are at over two-eath. What is wrong with you people? After the presale ended, the tokens creator claimed that the funds they'd raised were hacked and put into a liquidity pool that was locked for a year. Well, most of the funds. Some of them went to a farmer in Kenya, who was briefly the subject of a frenzy last week as crypto traders started sending him
Starting point is 00:18:06 crypto to buy goats and name them after crypto-related topics. Everything else. $26 million was liquidated in a surprise PAC finance smart contract change. Margin FI suffered huge outflows amid a CEO rage quit. $23 million went missing amidstst F-F-I-L claims that they're being investigated. And the Sushi Swap team voted to give themselves control of much of these so-called decentralized Project's Treasury. Worth a read. I was impressed with some reporting out of Mission Local,
Starting point is 00:18:43 who wrote about Ripple founder Chris Larson's political activities in an article titled, Chris Larson is SF's top law enforcement donor. Federal law enforcement wants $2 billion. I particularly enjoyed how it went into the Jedi mind trick of a person simultaneously bankrolling law enforcement and tough on crime policies, while vigorously fighting back against attempts by the SEC to enforce laws that apply to him.
Starting point is 00:19:12 Another good article was in the Financial Times by Philip Stafford, titled The U.S.'s calming effect on Bitcoin. He wrote about how the impact of Bitcoin spot ETFs on driving up Bitcoin prices is being overstated somewhat. In the news, I went on Ed Zittron's Better Offline podcast to talk about Wikipedia and how it works. I love nerding out about Wikipedia, and I love talking to Ed, so it was a great time. The episode is titled, Wikipedia is all the web has left. That's all for now, folks. Until next time, this has been Molly White.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Thanks for listening to this issue of the citation needed newsletter. To learn how to support my work, visit mollywhite.net slash support. If you'd like to read the text versions of these episodes, sign up to receive the newsletter in your email, or support my work on a recurring basis, go to citation needed. News.

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