Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 63 – RobConf 2024
Episode Date: August 7, 2024Coinbase responds to campaign finance violation allegations, Trump panders to bitcoiners, and I talk about my chat with Lyn Alden about sexism in bitcoin.Originally published on August 7, 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 63, Rob Conf 2024.
Coinbase responds to campaign finance violation allegations,
Trump panders to bitcoins, and I chat with Lynn Alden.
This issue was originally published on August 7, 2024.
Hello to all of my shadowy backers.
Some of you who follow me on social media may have already seen the news that I filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission about Coinbase's apparent campaign finance violations.
Advocacy group Public Citizen joined me on the complaint, and I am very grateful to them for all of their assistance in evaluating what I uncovered, as well as their lawyer's legal analysis.
Public Citizen has substantial experience with campaign finance advocacy and other election-related matters
and have been very helpful in navigating what for me are uncharted waters.
I have updated last week's story with most of the developments, including a response to the allegations on Friday from Coinbase's chief legal officer Paul Greywall.
Scroll down to the Coinbase's response section if you already read it and are just looking for what's new.
For those of you who prefer to listen to my newsletters, the audio version has also been updated.
Graywell responded again day before yesterday, after news of the complaint became public,
to briefly repeat his claim that Coinbase is not a federal contractor.
A claim that we already explained in our filings is not consistent with the law.
He then reduced himself to innuendo that I must be being funded by some shadowy secret Coinbase opponent,
before making confusing and baseless claims that we are attempting to, quote,
report a political bias which does not exist by highlighting Coinbase's contribution to the House Republicans.
I will go into this in more detail later on in the issue, but for now I will leave it with this.
It is telling that Greywall is resorting to personal attacks and baseless allegations
to try to stir up Coinbase's supporters,
rather than providing a coherent explanation for the legality of Coinbase's campaign
contributions. Meanwhile, Coinbase's CEO is boasting to analysts that the next presidential
administration, whoever it is, will be, quote, constructive on crypto, thanks to the political
pressure. Quote, crypto advocates are making their voices heard as an important voting block,
he said, once again exaggerating what he and his company would like to present as a grassroots
issue, rather than a bunch of mega wealthy executives and companies spending enormous amounts
in hopes of buying friendly regulations.
Also included in this issue, I had the opportunity to interview Lynn Alden,
an investment strategist, analyst, and prominent bitcoiner.
We had a conversation on Twitter in which we disagreed on the topic of sexism in the
Bitcoin and crypto industries, which we took to a recorded face-to-face discussion.
It was an interesting conversation, and I encourage you to watch it.
I will also make the audio of the interview available on my podcast feed.
In the courts,
Coffeyzilla has released a video about the defamation lawsuit
filed against him by influencer and alleged crypto scammer Logan Paul,
which Coffeyzilla believes was motivated by upcoming reporting of his
on a different shady business venture that Paul was involved with.
This lawsuit is not about Logan Paul getting defamed.
Instead, this is about him trying to dodge accountability,
victims and blame anyone but himself for his problems, especially me.
And Logan's definition of accountability seems to mean he'll sue me, which is why I believe this
lawsuit was not designed to win, but to shut me up, to threaten me, using Logan's wealth and a
federal court system without anti-slap to send a message. Do not tell that story.
Legal commentators, Quest Authority, and Legal Eagle have both covered the lawsuit and agree that it
looks like a pretty bogus intimidation suit.
Unfortunately, for Coffeezilla, bogus intimidation suits are still expensive as hell.
That's the point.
Not only that, but his errors and emissions insurer has refused to cover this lawsuit,
because apparently his policy, unbeknownst to him, contained exclusions for defamation
suits and for any of his content that describes digital assets.
In other words, pretty much everything Coffeezilla might get sued about.
If you want to pitch in for his legal defense, he has a Patreon and some cool new march.
Or if you're feeling really froggy, you could help push for a federal anti-SLAPP law in the United States, which we desperately need.
Terraform Labs, Doquan, is now slated for extradition to his native South Korea, not the United States, after endless court battles and flip-flopping in Montenegro, where he has been held in jail since April 23.
Although the Montenegrin High Court's press release emphasized that this decision is final,
after all this back and forth, I'm not sure I'll fully trust it until he actually sets foot in South Korea.
In bankrupt crypto lender, Genesis, has finished up its restructuring and will begin distributing
around $4 million worth of assets, in kind in crypto and in dollars, to its creditors.
Holders of different types of assets will receive different percentages of their
assets back, with Salana creditors receiving the least at around 30%, Bitcoiners receiving
around 51%, and stable coin holders receiving the full 100%.
Average recoveries will be, for the time being, around 64%.
Genesis has also set aside around $70 million for legal expenses to go after third parties,
including its own parent company Digital Currency Group, or DCG.
Creditors may receive more assets later on depending on the results of this litigation and several other factors.
In governments and regulators, the SEC's long-running lawsuit against Ripple has finally come to an end.
Well, at least for now.
The judge in the case found that Ripple's institutional sales of its XRP token were in violation of federal securities laws
and find the company $125 million.
Although this is a big number, it is a substantial.
substantially less than the $1 billion in disgorgement and $900 million in penalties the SEC had sought,
and the SEC has indicated they're likely to appeal the outcome of the case.
Ripple, as they are wont to do, has celebrated the outcome as a victory.
The judge also banned Ripple from violating securities laws in the future
and seemed skeptical of the company's willingness to play by the rules going forward.
Quote, Ripple's willingness to push the boundaries of the order,
evinces a likelihood that it will eventually, if it has not already, cross the line, she wrote.
On balance, the court finds that there is a reasonable probability of future violations
meriting the issuance of an injunction.
There's a new lawsuit against the SEC coming out of the crypto world, and from a rather
unexpected source.
Jonathan Mann, sometimes called Song A Day Man, is a songwriter, best known for composing,
recording, and publishing a new song every single day for over 16 years now. For around three years,
he's been selling these songs as NFTs, which is now his primary source of income. He's concerned
about past enforcement actions against NFT projects, particularly the one against the Stoner Katz
NFT project, and what he interprets as a stance by the SEC that every NFT project is an unregistered
security. He explains, quote, because the SEC has been exquisite
random about which projects they go after, it feels like anyone could be next. Are they going to come
after me? I refuse to sit around and find out. He and Brian L. Fry, the law professor who once created
an NFT called SEC No Action Letter Request, are co-plaintiffs in a lawsuit seeking declaratory
action that their planned NFT projects are not violations of securities laws. Oh, and of course,
there's a song.
Okay, I'm really doing this, I'm still doing this, I'm the SEC.
I joined Mann on his digitally rare podcast in May 2022, and as it so happens, featured his
episode with Fry in my Worth a Read section in issue 23 of this newsletter.
A group of Democrats in Congress has written a letter to the CFTC, asking them to ban betting on
U.S. elections.
While this has to do with prediction markets quite broadly, many in the cryptocurrency
industry are taking this as a jab at Polymarket, an increasingly popular crypto-betting website
that allows people to bet on the outcomes of, well, just about anything.
Polymarket has enjoyed a recent surge in popularity, perhaps partly because of the Olympic Games,
but mostly because of the rapidly heating up U.S. election season.
Betters on the site have been gambling on everything from who will win various Olympic competitions,
to who will earn the Harris VP spot, to who will win the presidential
election, and all the way to things like will J.D. Vance say couch before August. He did. And will
Kamala say coconut before August? She did not. While I find the latter types of bets quite amusing,
the lawmakers do not, and especially not when it comes to betting on election outcomes. Quote,
political bets change the motivations behind each vote, replacing political convictions with
financial calculations, allowing billionaires to wager extraordinary bets, while some
simultaneously contributing to a specific candidate or party, and political insiders to bet on elections
using non-public information, will further degrade public trust in the electoral process, they say,
in the letter.
These lawmakers are hoping that the CFTC will finalize a proposed rule they published for comment
earlier this year, which would clearly define betting on elections, sports outcomes, and some other
things, as falling within the types of gaming event contracts that are prohibited for trading,
on CFTC registered entities.
While Polymarket is not available to U.S.-based traders after a 2022 settlement with the CFTC
that also resulted in a $1.4 million fine, that hasn't stopped more than $500 million in bets
being placed on the outcome of the presidential election alone, not to mention millions more
on other politics-related topics.
Fans of Polymarket and similar such projects often argue that prediction markets offer a
unique and valuable perspective into upcoming events, with some research suggesting they can be
superior to polls in some cases. However, polymarket predictions often suffer from a clear bias
that stems from the fact that its users tend to be crypto enthusiasts, who sometimes vote for
things they want to believe will happen, even when those things are unlikely. One good example
would be a recent bet that Elon Musk would appear as a surprise speaker at Bitcoin 2024,
which was at around 25% yes votes on the last day of the event
as impatient attendees waited for Trump's late speech
and began theorizing that it was late because Musk might join.
Even as public aviation records showed Musk's jet
flying past the conference city of Nashville, Tennessee,
on his way to an apparently unrelated engagement in Memphis.
Although Russia has historically not been friendly to the idea of its citizens
using cryptocurrencies, it has reversed that position.
somewhat with a new law that will permit businesses to use crypto for cross-border trade.
This appears to be motivated, at least in part, by the hope of bypassing sanctions against
the country from the U.S. and other nations.
Although various individuals within the cryptocurrency industry who have been interviewed
about the new law say it's merely evidence of Bitcoin's broad adoption for everyday transactions.
If you say so.
Binance is facing an $86 million tax bill in India after apparently not paying taxes on the substantial
fees they've earned from customers based in the country.
Binance was facing the possibility of a ban from the country earlier this year, though they
were ultimately able to smooth things over.
This may not help that relationship very much.
In Elections and Political Influence, Bitcoin 2024.
The Bitcoin 2020 conference, or as I like to call it, RobConf 20204, due to the unusual number of speakers named Rob, has wrapped up.
It's the largest Bitcoin event, although this year it looked a little more like a Trump rally than a crypto conference.
Zeke Fox, author of Number Go Up, Hadas Tir, and Gabby DeValle, all wrote great articles from on the ground.
I greatly angered some devout bitcoins by mentioning the number of Rob's and Matt's.
and mics speaking at a conference with only 56 women speaking. Later, I highlighted some of the
horrendously sexist comments I saw about the fact that roughly 87% of the speakers were male,
which seemed to help answer other commentators remarking that it was just a shame that women
weren't naturally interested in Bitcoin. This wound up drawing a comment from Lynn Alden,
a prominent investment strategist and venture investor into Bitcoin companies. She remarked that she hadn't,
had any notable sexist issues directed at her personally. I was happy for her to hear this,
although not exactly convinced that her experience was representative, or somehow disqualifying
of my own, particularly given her status as someone in a position of potentially financing
bitcoins' endeavors. We ended up having a long back and forth on the topic, and she ultimately
offered to do a video interview where we could go into more detail. I took her up on that and
have posted the video to my YouTube. Like I said, I'll also add it to the podcast feed.
As for the rest of the conference, organizer David Bailey tweeted two days before the event that,
quote, we're in talks with the Kamala Harris campaign for her to speak at the conference,
would be very savvy of her to reset the Democrat positioning on the fastest growing voter block
in the country. They're making up their minds today. He tweeted the following day,
quote, Kamala Harris will not be speaking. No surprise.
What can she say to us when she's actively imprisoning developers, forcing our industry overseas,
attacking proof of work?
It would have been a disaster for her.
All eyes on Trump now.
Although a disappointing number of news outlets reported this claim,
none of them verified it with Harris's team,
nor did they point out the obvious motivation for Bailey to fabricate a story like this
to drum up news coverage about the conference he runs
and to use it as an opportunity to bash Harris to the crypto crowd.
Around the same time as this rumor,
the Financial Times reported that the Harris campaign was, quote,
seeking a reset with the cryptocurrency industry.
Also sourced only to, quote, people with knowledge of the matter,
without specifying if they were members of the industry
or members of Harris' campaign.
That story is at least somewhat more likely than her genuinely considering
showing up to Bitcoin 2024 in what would have been one of
of her first appearances after being named the presidential nominee.
Trump showed up and gave a rambling speech that occasionally touched on Bitcoin topics,
though those were clearly the scripted parts in between his stream of consciousness
commentary on topics ranging from electric vehicles to Hillary Clinton to violence in Chicago.
The mask seemed to slip a bit when he signed off.
Thank you all. Have a good time with your Bitcoin and your friends.
crypto and everything else that you're playing with.
Many in attendance cheered his various promises,
firing SEC Chairman Gary Gensler day one,
and ensuring, quote, the rules will be written by people who love your industry,
not hate your industry.
Stopping the practice of selling Bitcoin seized as part of law enforcement activities
and instead holding it to, quote, serve in effect as the core of the strategic
national Bitcoin stockpile,
preventing the creation of a central bank digital currency or CBDC,
commuting the sentence of Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht,
somewhat of a martyr among libertarian in Bitcoin circles
who has served 11 years of his life sentence.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also spoke,
and he was widely recognized by attendees as more knowledgeable about the topic.
His promises were also much bolder and much more in line with many Bitcoiners' interests,
to the point that I found myself wondering how many attendees were sold on Trump at this conference
versus how many defected from the Trump camp to vote for RFK Jr's supposedly Democratic spoiler candidacy.
His biggest promise by far, announced to thunderous applause,
was that he would establish a strategic reserve of 4 million bitcoins,
worth around $225 billion at today's prices,
and amounting to around 20% of the total Bitcoin.
supply, which he did not disguise as a promise to pump the audience's bags.
The cascading impact from these actions will eventually move Bitcoin to a valuation of hundreds
of trillions of dollars.
On the last day of the conference, a group of Democratic Congresspeople and congressional
hopefuls signed on to a letter urging the DNC and, quote, prospective presidential candidates
to, quote, take a forward-looking approach to digital.
assets and blockchain technology. The letter repeated Coinbase's spurious claim that 52 million
Americans own crypto and regurgitated numbers from DCG's dubious poll that sought to convince
these very Congress people that crypto is a voter issue. Several of those signatory candidates
have received substantial backing from crypto packs, including Shamari figures, who received $2.4 million,
and Yasimine Ansari, who received $1.4 million.
Coinbase. Coinbase's chief legal officer, Paul Greywall, on Friday, attempted to refute my research into the company's apparent campaign finance violation by arguing that his company is not a federal contractor, despite having a plainly visible federal contract listed on the official government website that lists such things.
He has argued that based on a definition in the code of federal regulations that specifies that contractors are paid, quote, in whole or in part from funds appropriation.
by Congress, Coinbase is not a federal contractor because this contract will be paid from the
Department of Justice's asset forfeiture fund, that is, out of the pool of cryptos seized by law
enforcement. If Graywall's explanation were to be accepted, it would be another massive loophole
in laws intended to prevent the appearance of, or actual, corrupt, pay-to-play behavior by federal
contractors looking to secure multi-million dollar government contracts such as this one. However,
as public citizen and I explained in a supplement we filed on Monday with the FEC, Congress's
enactment of 28 U.S. Code Section 524 called Availability of Appropriations, which created the
Assets Forfeiture Fund and authorized the Attorney General to make expenditures from that fund,
was an appropriation, and funds spent from that fund are appropriated by Congress.
This is a widely and long-held interpretation supported by the courts and by the Department
of justice itself.
Graywall took to Twitter once more, after the news of our FBC filing broke, merely repeating
his claims that Coinbase is not a federal contractor.
He then attempted to insinuate that I have secret backers funding me, and took issue with
our suggestion that there is a partisan slant to Coinbase's campaign contributions.
The first problem here is that I am about as transparent as I can get about exactly who funds
me.
Individuals like you, dear reader, and if you are one of them, I think you.
Your dark sunglasses and fedora will be in the mail shortly, and I recommend you get to work
growing a mustache you can twirl.
The second problem is that we didn't make any allegations, or even implications that Coinbase is
donating along party lines, mostly because they aren't.
My only actual reporting on the partisan breakdown of Coinbase's spending is to say
precisely what he has, which is that Coinbase is funding Republican and Democratic committees and
candidates roughly equally. He was apparently irritated that we only singled out Coinbase's contributions
to Fair Shake and to the House Republicans in our complaint, and not the company's other contributions
to the House Democrats and to Senate Republicans and Senate Democrats. This was, of course,
Coinbase's own fault. The contribution to the House Republicans was the only one of the four
contributions that fell within the prohibited time period. It's rather telling, I think, that rather than
offering any coherent legal explanation for the contributions, he has instead opted to try to
cede conspiracy theories about my funding and stir up partisan anger among Coinbase's supporters.
We should have some news on the status of the Coinbase complaint fairly soon, as there is a
relatively short period of time, around 20 days, during which the FEC will verify that it is a valid
complaint, notify Coinbase, and invite them to reply. After that, the commission will vote on whether
there is reason to believe a violation of campaign finance laws has occurred. If so, they will open an
investigation or begin conciliation discussions with Coinbase, at which point the timelines grow much
longer. State primaries. Arizona held its primaries on July 30th, and three of those elections
involved crypto spending. The most substantial spending happened in District 3, where Protect Progress
contributed more than $1.35 million to support Democrat Yassan.
Osamaan Sari, one of the signatories of the aforementioned letter to the DNC in her primary.
Her race turned out to be incredibly close and is headed to a recount because she is leading
her opponent, Raquel Taran, by only 42 of the more than 38,000 votes cast in the district.
The one Protect Progress ad I've been able to find for her is a Spanish language ad explaining that,
quote, now more than ever we need strong Democrats like Yasimine Ansari, and talking up that she is a
daughter of immigrants who will protect reproductive rights and combat inflation.
This ad is jarring to watch, given the Cryptopac support for far-right Republican and Peter
Teal-backed venture capitalist Blake Masters, running only 30 miles north in the heavily
Republican District 8. Masters vocally supports fetal personhood laws and other extreme anti-abortion
laws, has pledged to slash funding to planned parenthood and others he deemed abortionists,
and ran on an anti-immigration platform in which he promoted a conspiracy theory that Democrats were, quote,
importing immigrants to shore up their margins.
Quote, the Dems are trying to replace you.
They're trying to steal your vote by diluting you with millions of third world illegal aliens,
he claimed at a debate in February.
Although Master's $580,000 in crypto funding ostensibly comes via the Defend American Jobs Pack,
not the Protect Progress Pack that has donated to Ansari and other Democrats, the two packs are both
mere fronts for Fair Shake. They draw from the same pot of money and pool of donors and are run by the same
people. Masters ultimately lost his primary to Abe Hamiday, 25.8% to 29.9%. Donald Trump had made
sure he would back a winner by endorsing both of them. Finally, Democrat Andre Churny in District 1 lost,
lost his primary race to Amish Shah.
Churny had enjoyed $415,000 in crypto spending.
It wasn't a lot when compared to Ansari in District 3,
but the District 1 race also received considerably less outside spending overall
than the much more heated District 3 race.
Churny's crypto backing made up 60% of his outside spending,
and was a part of total spending on his candidacy that roughly doubled that of Shaw.
Despite that, Shaw won the crowded race with 23.6% of the votes to Churny's 21.3%.
And we'll go up against incumbent Republican and crypto advocate David Schweigart in November.
For other states held their primaries yesterday, and three of them, Michigan, Missouri, and Washington, have races with crypto-pack spending.
In two of the four races with crypto spending, we can see, again, the close alignment of the crypto-superpacks with 8%.
with A-PAC and other pro-Israel packs, something that has also been apparent in spending against
Jamal Bowman and, to a lesser extent, to support Yasimine Ansari. The crypto packs had a lot more
success in these races, with three and likely all four of the races with spending going their way.
In Michigan's District 13, Protect Progress spent $1 million to back incumbent Democrat Sri Tanadar
against primary challengers. His biggest opponent, Mary W.
Waters ran on a platform that prominently featured her support for a ceasefire in Gaza,
whereas Tanedar's support for Israel has drawn heavy opposition in the district.
However, Waters faced a massive uphill climb in spending,
with only $150,000 raised compared to Tanadar's $7 million, much of which was self-funded,
and $2.3 million in opposition spending against her by a pack with murky origins called Blue Wave Action.
Tanadar won the race with a significant margin.
Fairshake spent $1.4 million to oppose Corey Bush in Missouri's District 1,
contributing to a whopping total of $7.3 million in spending to oust her
and another $5 million in support for her opponent
that is otherwise coming mostly from pro-Israel groups like APAC
and the United Democracy Project, or UDP.
Bush was among the first Congress people to call for a ceasefire in Gaza.
She lost her race against Wesley Bell by about 45.6% to his 51.2%.
Bell's stance on crypto topics is not clear, and the industry spending was mostly focused on ousting Bush
rather than on installing Bell specifically.
In District 3, Defend American Jobs has contributed over $257,000 to Bob Onder's Republican primary campaign.
Earlier this year, Onder and his son wrote an op-ed for the Missouri,
Times titled The Future of Cryptocurrency Policy, Jefferson, or Xi, which asked readers,
quote, whether we prefer the course taken by the Chinese Communist Party or the direction dictated
by consumers and freedom of choice. I would counsel the path of Thomas Jefferson and Adam Smith,
not Elizabeth Warren and Chairman Xi. Onder won his primary race against Kurt Schaefer by a solid
margin and will be replacing the also pro-c crypto Blaine Leukemire. Finally, in Washington,
Protect Progress put $1.5 million behind Democrat Emily Randall in her nonpartisan primary in District 6.
The degree of spending seemed to come as a bit of a surprise in an otherwise relatively low-budget race,
although the LGBTQ-focused equality pack also swooped in with around $700,000 in last-minute donations to Randall.
Her Democratic opponent, Hillary Franz, aggressively incorporated the crypto spending topic into her campaign messaging,
issuing a press release about a, quote,
MAGA donor-funded cryptocurrency super PAC,
condemning them as, quote, out-of-state crypto billionaires
attempting to buy this race at the very last minute.
However, Franz herself has a statement on her website
about, quote, working to maintain American technological dominance,
including in the blockchain and digital asset industry,
by creating a common-sense regulatory framework
that protects consumers and jobs
while allowing the industry to flourish.
Days before the don't,
donations were made, her own campaign manager marked her as, quote, very pro-crypto on the community
curated do they support it.com website that feeds data into Coinbase's stand-with-cropolitician's
rating project, earning her the same A rating on the site as Randall. The Washington primary has not
yet been called, and only 62% of the votes have been counted, but as of writing, Randall is
leading the pack, with 33.3% of the vote.
an opponent Drew McEwen, who hasn't taken a clear stance on crypto, is behind her with 30.5%.
France is in third place at 25.7%. The top two vote getters in that race will advance to the general
election. Elsewhere in crypto. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies had a bad time recently,
echoing global stock markets and continuing to pound nails into the coffin of the theory
I once heard a lot more often than I do today, that crypto prices.
particularly Bitcoin, move independently of the stock market, inflation news, and other such things.
Remember the $235 million hack of the Indian Wazir X crypto exchange from last issue?
The one that amounted to almost half of the assets held on the platform?
Well, they horrified their customers shortly after by announcing they plan to, quote,
socialize the losses.
That is, distribute tokens belonging to those who were not affected by the hack, to those that
were, essentially ensuring roughly 45% losses across the board. They later backtracked somewhat,
stating that their plan was not final and that they were just looking for input on how to
resolve the situation. However, short of recovering the stolen funds, a task that tends to get
more challenging as time passes, they may not have many options available to them.
The Web 3 is going Just Great Recap. There were 10 entries between July 24 and August.
6, averaging 0.0 entries per day. 15.51 million dollars were added to the grift counter.
Draft Kings pulls the plug. Participants in the Rainmakers game, run by the popular sports
betting platform draft Kings, were blindsided by a sudden announcement that draft Kings would be
shuddering the project effective immediately. The company announced that the shutdown was,
quote, due to recent legal developments. Players quickly assumed this referred to a lawsuit
from a jilted rainmaker's player, who had lost at least $14,000 on the more than $72,000 in
NFTs he'd purchased for the game, and then sued the company for selling unregistered securities.
The lawsuit recently survived the motion to dismiss stage.
Participants in the Draft King's Discord were stunned by the sudden shutdown,
and did not seem comforted by the company's assurance that they would soon announce a buyback
program. Quote, what kind of compensation you think we get coming to us,
pennies, wrote one. Yeah, I'm out like $20,000, someone else replied.
Bad news for BitClout. The founder of the blockchain social network, BitClout, has been
arrested on wire fraud charges and simultaneously sued by the SEC for unregistered securities
offerings. The wire fraud charges relate to Nader Diamond Hands Al-Nagy's misuse of investor funds,
which he said he had no access to, and then used for at least $3 million in personal
expenses and gifts to family. The SEC is once again emphasizing that you can't just slap a decentralized
label on your centralized project as a sort of magic word to fend off securities regulators.
Al-Naji made it particularly easy for them by doing the type of thing that crypto fraudsters seem to
love to do, putting their various misdeeds and plotting in writing. Quote, my impression that even
being, quote, fake decentralized generally confuses regulators and deters them from
going after you, he said to another member of the crypto industry.
Everything else. The Trump-themed DJT token rug pulled and people blamed Martin Schrelli or
Baron Trump. 12 million dollars was taken by white hats from the Ronan Bridge. The CFTC subpoenaed
the former company of Ben Bitboy Armstrong over crypto promotion. The Cougira token tanked as
the team's leveraged bets melted down. Convergence Fye was hacked for $200,000.
$10,000. The ZKX decentralized exchange shut down in what some VCs are describing as a rugpole.
Compound Dow passed a $24 million proposal in what has been described as a governance attack,
and monoswap was hacked for at least $1.3 million.
Worth a read.
Paris Marks just published a great episode of Tech Won't Save Us with Jacob Silverman,
who did an unbelievably comprehensible job of breaking down the weird and tangled ways in which
Silicon Valley types and tech billionaires are going all in on politics, mostly behind Donald Trump
and J.D. Vance. The episode is titled Silicon Valley is backing Donald Trump. In case you miss the
bombshell, a judge ruled on Monday that Google holds a monopoly on online search and search advertising.
This is a huge deal, although likely to be appealed, and is one of the first successful antitrust
suits against a major tech firm in a really long time. Slate covered it in an article
titled Google is officially a monopoly. Here's what that really means. In the news, I had a really
fun time talking with Zach Guzman at Coinage about the massive political spending out of the
cryptocurrency industry, my broader opinions on crypto and Web3, and a few other things. It was a good
time, and I enjoy having these types of conversations with folks on the other side, so to speak.
There's usually a moment, as there is in this interview, where the person I'm talking to realizes
that our views maybe aren't as radically different as they originally thought.
This episode is titled The Explosion of Crypto in Politics with Molly White.
I also had a great time on the Western Kabuki podcast,
recollecting that shared fever dream that was the Bored Apes NFT project.
You don't hear much about them these days,
even when you're as steeped in the crypto world as I am, but they are still around.
The episode is titled Board Ape Yacht Club, a Chimposium, featuring Molly White.
Follow the crypto also got some more shoutouts and media outlets, including CNN, Zite Online,
DL News, The Lever, which was syndicated to Jacobin, Truthout, and the Arizona Daily Star.
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.
To learn how to support my work, visit mollywhite.net slash support.
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