Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 64 – Pointing its arsenal at our friends
Episode Date: August 17, 2024As parts of the crypto industry scramble to court the Harris administration with events like “Crypto4Harris”, others insist it is Harris who must “bend the knee”.Originally published on August... 17, 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 citationneeded.news.
Issue 64, pointing its arsenal at our friends.
As parts of the crypto industry scramble to court the Harris administration with events like
Crypto for Harris, others insist it is Harris who must bend the knee.
This issue was originally published on August 17, 2020.
I write to you amid preparation for my upcoming trip to Portland, Oregon, where I will be speaking
at the wonderful and sadly final XOXO Festival.
I am really excited for this conference, which is absolutely jam-packed with some of the coolest
people on the internet, as both speakers and attendees, many of whom I've admired for years.
If any of you are lucky enough to also be attending, please try to find me and say hi.
I have discovered one great and unexpected benefit of shaving half of my head.
It makes me really easy to find at conferences.
While I'm on the topic of conferences, the excellent people at Flipboard have put together
proposal for a conversation between Mike McHugh and I at South by Southwest 2025, where we
will talk about digital ownership and online sovereignty for creators.
If that sounds interesting to you, consider voting for our panel on South by Southwest's
panel picker website.
You'll have to be quick because voting is only open until this Sunday, August 18th.
Even if you don't think you'll be able to attend South by Southwest, many of their sessions
are recorded and published later, such as my 2023 chat about popping the Web 3 bubble.
Now, let's go over what happened this week in the crypto world, where the industry is still
hard at work courting politicians, and some politicians are hard at work courting the industry.
In the courts. Both the government and Roman Sterlingov, the founder,
of the Bitcoin Fog cryptocurrency Tumblr, have submitted sentencing memoranda for his conviction
on charges pertaining to money laundering and operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business.
The probation department recommended in their pre-sentencing memo that Sterlingoff be sentenced to
20 years in prison. Prosecutors have requested 30 years imprisonment and a $100,000 fine.
Sterlingov's memo argues for a, quote, far lower sentence, though he does not specify precisely
what he thinks that sentence should be. However, he argues that 20 or 30 years, quote,
vastly exceed sentences in similar cases. The SEC has followed the New York Attorney General
in filing their own lawsuit against promoters of the Novotech cryptocurrency pyramid scheme and
affinity fraud targeting Haitians, who they promised financial freedom and, quote,
freedom from the plantation. In addition to the two founders named in the lawsuit from the New York
Attorney General, the SEC also names another six promoters of the scheme in their lawsuit.
As I mentioned last issue, the High Court in Montenegro most recently decided
Terra Creator Doquan will be extradited to South Korea, in a ruling they emphasized was final.
Now, of course, the extradition has been postponed as the, quote, final decision is reviewed.
Protoes made a chart that really helps to capture the nine months of chaos surrounding Montenegro's
decision. They've also reported that the issue is, quote, single-handedly ripping Montenegro apart,
with various high-ranking officials accusing one another of corruption. If you can blow up the entire
crypto world, why not a small-bulking country? Dream big, though. A Nigerian court has reportedly
ordered $38 million in cryptocurrency be frozen, claiming the funds were part of a roughly $50 million
they'd traced in donations to the hashtag end bad governance protests in the country.
Although cryptocurrency has long been held up as a method to support dissidents and activists,
the increasing ability for governments to trace and freeze crypto assets and the willingness
of asset issuers and exchanges to comply with such orders pose a threat to that narrative,
not to mention a threat to those involved in sending and receiving such funds.
However, there is some question about the veracity of the Nigerian government's claims to have frozen such a large quantity of funds,
as three of the four crypto addresses listed in the warrant application were non-existent or empty.
The holograph project, which suffered a $1.2 million theft in June,
claimed on Twitter that multiple people have been arrested in Italy in connection to the theft,
and that the suspects would soon be extradited to France.
Quote, significant assets and electronics have been pulled.
frozen and seized as part of the arrests, they added.
In somewhat tangentially crypto-related news,
New Zealand-based internet tycoon Kim.com will be extradited to the United States
to face trial on charges from 2012, relating to his operation of the Mega Upload File Hosting
Service, which was well known for hosting pirated material.
He has been fighting extradition since the charges were filed more than a decade ago,
and has recently stated he will continue to fight the extradition,
despite the court order.
Although the mega-upload business had no direct crypto ties,
dot com has made several attempts to get into the cryptocurrency world
with projects including Bitcash and FileShop.
Neither of the two ever went anywhere,
with Bit Cash entering liquidation proceedings in 2023
due to unpaid legal fees without ever having launched.
In bankruptcies, a judge has approved a $12.7 billion settlement
to end the ongoing case from the CFTC against,
FTC's and Alameda research. The CFTC had been a large creditor in the FTC's bankruptcy case,
leading some customers to worry that their recoveries might be diminished even further by payouts
to the agency. However, terms of the settlement show that the CFTC will forego any payments
so long as FTC follows through with its reorganization plans and payouts to creditors.
Liquidators for the Three Arrow's Capital Hedge Fund have filed a $1.3 billion claim against Terraform
Labs, arguing that Three Arrows, like everyone else, had been misled about the stability of the
Terra Stablecoin. Three Arrow's capital had invested heavily into Terra and its surrounding ecosystem,
and the stable coin's sudden and dramatic collapse in May 2022 pushed Three Arrow's capital into insolvency.
Chances are slim that Three Arrows will collect anything close to the $1.3 billion they've claimed,
even if the claim is determined to be valid.
Terraform Labs CEO in bankruptcy has stated that the company has only around $150 million in assets.
In Governments and Regulators.
The cryptocurrency industry seems to be having a hard time deciding on the narrative,
whether the SEC is tucking its tail and backing off or tightening its perceived stranglehold on the industry.
A recent and smaller than anticipated fine against Ripple, the abandonment of a lawsuit they had bungled,
the decision not to pursue action against two crypto companies they were investigating,
and the approval of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETPs have had many in the industry declaring victory over the SEC,
particularly as Biden's terrible debate performance in early July, at least temporarily,
convinced many that a Trump presidency, and thus his promises to fire Chairman Gary Gensler and install pro-crypto regulators,
was all but assured.
However, we're simultaneously seeing headlines out of industry publications
claiming that the SEC's, quote, crackdown is gaining pace.
This specific headline accompanies an August 9 report
that three unidentified cryptocurrency-focused venture capital firms
have received subpoenas from the agency this year,
apparently seeking information into, quote,
crypto asset offering intermediaries,
and into token-based investment deals.
Other such headlines about an aggressive and,
very much still ongoing campaign by the agency against the industry, have accompanied news
about a Wells notice to uniswap and an enforcement lawsuit against consensus.
And stories about a bloodthirsty SEC have certainly not been hard to find amid the industry's
embrace of Donald Trump, or in its more recent demands to a Harris administration and
friendlier Democrats. While there's no arguing that the SEC did ramp up its enforcements against
crypto firms after the great crypto meltdown of 2022, it's not clear to me that their enthusiasm
has substantially waxed or waned since then. In the crypto world, it is common for two
contradictory narratives to exist at the same time. For example, Bitcoin is a store of value
existing alongside Bitcoin is an investment that will make you rich. Or cryptocurrencies offer
financial privacy alongside arguments that those same cryptocurrencies are bad for crime because they can
be easily traced. This allows a person to choose whichever talking point benefits them at the time,
and I suspect that's at least a part of what we're seeing here. In elections and political influence,
the cryptocurrency industry had just gone all in on Trump when the Democratic Party did a last-minute
swap out of its presidential candidate, breathing life back into what appeared too many on all sides
to be a doomed campaign. Now, some in the industry are backpedaling, seemingly feeling the
to put a plan B in place should the success of their plan A indeed turn out to be less than assured.
The thing is, some in the industry seem to have gotten a little too high on their own supply.
I've noted before that despite the industry's attempts to convince incumbent politicians,
candidates, campaign managers, and anyone else who will listen, that there is a major block
of single-issue voters who will vote for people with pro-crypto policy stances,
the people in charge of actually running strategy don't seem to truly believe it.
Ads run by the Fairshake pack and related crypto-focused super PACs make no mention of cryptocurrency,
for example, suggesting that those behind them understand that it's not an issue that's likely to sway voters.
But it does seem that some of the more gullible executives and figureheads within the crypto world
have themselves been bamboozled by the questionable numbers and creatively interpreted polls.
The feeling among that group is not that they need to pursue a positive relationship with a possible
future Harris administration, but rather that this supposed crypto vote will decide the election
and that they are its gatekeepers.
This has led to some rather amusing moments, like Tyler Winklevoss tweeting, quote,
Can anyone explain why Kamala Harris didn't attend the crypto roundtable yesterday?
I understand that she's on the campaign trail, but the meeting was virtual.
All she needed was an internet connection.
technical difficulties?
This, naturally, sparked some immediate amusement from those outside of the cryptocurrency world
and its reality distortion field, with tweets like,
Can anyone explain why Michael Jordan once again failed to show up and dunk at my birthday party,
even though I told my entire class he would?
The aforementioned roundtable was hosted by Representative Ro Khanna,
a Democrat from California,
and brought Biden administration officials, including Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adi Imo,
and at least one Harris advisor
to meet with various crypto industry figures
including executives from Coinbase,
ripple, Crackin, Uniswop, and others,
as well as various industry figureheads
like Mark Cuban and Anthony Scaramucci.
It didn't go so well.
Quote, instead of finding common ground,
industry executives lashed out at White House officials,
largely over the regulatory assault
from agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission
and the Federal Reserve, wrote Fox Business.
One attendee told,
Fox, quote, executives didn't hold back on telling the administration reps how much damage they've done
to the crypto industry and to the Democrat Party with their actions against digital assets.
They basically just got yelled at.
Crypto podcaster David Hoffman wrote that the industry must, quote, make both parties bend the knee.
This sentiment that crypto is calling the shots and candidates need to fall in line or else is
bizarre, but oddly prominent in recent days.
Polls. Speaking of questionable polls, they're a new contender on the field. I had missed it,
but the Crypto Venture Capital Firm Paradigm had released a poll of Republicans in June, which trumpeted
that, quote, Republicans who own crypto are more non-white and younger than typical Republicans,
exactly the votes Trump needs in this election. Now they've scrambled together a second poll
of Democrats, making the same kinds of arguments in the other direction, quote, making in
roads with crypto owners could help Vice President Harris win back some wayward Democrats and increase
her likelihood of winning. I have a deep dive into this poll coming out next week. Some of you may wonder
why I seem to be so obsessed with the polls that come out of this industry. It's true that, in general,
releasing a bad poll is perhaps the most foolproof way to nerd snipe me specifically. However,
people really love catchy statistics and seemingly hard data, and I've noticed that these polls spread
like wildfire among people with influence, even if they're really questionable.
You need only look at the letter to the DNC I mentioned last issue, which was signed by 28
Democratic incumbents and candidates, and which polls from at least three different polls
commissioned by the industry. The shoddy Coinbase poll, the shoddy DCG poll, and a poll commissioned
by paradigm back in March that I had missed. One other figure in the letter also seems to come from a
poll, although it's not clear to me which poll they're citing. In a Crypto for Harris event this
week, Representative Wiley Nicol, a Democrat from North Carolina, again repeated the DCG sourced
claim that four and five Americans believe the current financial system favors elites.
DCG did not ask in the survey whether people believed crypto favored elites.
Crypto for Harris
That Crypto for Harris event was one of many events in this template, following ones like
black women for Harris, white dudes for Harris, disabled voters for Harris, and even deadheads for
Kamala. This event was somewhat different from the others, though, in that it was less focused on
fundraising for Harris's campaign or convincing fence-sitters to vote for her, and instead featured
a parade of democratic politicians, mostly speaking about how they were supporting the crypto industry.
This may have been because Harris has not released much in the way of policy proposals involving
digital assets, instead focusing her economic policy points on perhaps slightly more broadly relevant
topics, like housing affordability and tax cuts for the middle class. Attendees from the
crypto side included investor Mark Cuban, who also featured in a VCs for Harris event earlier this
month, investor and extremely brief Trump appointee Anthony Scaramucci, professor and author Tanya
Evans, crypto lobbyist Sheila Warren, no relation to Elizabeth, paradigm policy head Justin Slaughter,
Circle policy head Dante Desparte, and Crypto Company founders Carmel Cadet, Chrysma McFarland,
and Adela Hollivay. From the politics side came senators Chuck Schumer from New York,
Kirsten Gillibrand from New York, and Debbie Stabenow from Michigan. Representatives Wiley
Nickel from North Carolina, Don Davis from North Carolina, Yadira Caraveo from
Colorado, Josh Harder from California, Alyssa Slotkin from Michigan, Dan Goldman from New York,
Darren Soto from Florida, and Stephen Horsford from Nevada, Colorado Governor Jared Polis,
Delaware State Senator Sarah McBride, Senate candidate Adam Schiff from California, and House
candidates George Whitesides from California, and Shemari Figures from Alabama.
The event mostly consisted of attendees reading prepared statements. Senator Schumer made
some waves by promising to, quote, get something passed out of the Senate and into law by the end
of the year. Many interpreted this as a nod to Fit 21, which passed the House but has not made it
through the Senate, although Schumer did not mention the bill by name. Other politicians mostly
repeated talking points about allowing the industry to innovate, maintaining the United States
technological dominance by embracing crypto, but also, quote, providing guardrails.
Crypto Pacts
Bearshake has managed to piss off some Republicans who had hoped the industry would be a partisan ally,
and are enraged to see the PAC spending in support of Democrats, now in some cases against Republicans.
Throughout the primaries, much though not all, of the support for Democrats,
was in primaries where they were challenging other Democrats, which didn't seem to bother Republicans too much.
But now that we're exiting primary season, promises from the PAC to back Democrats like Ruben Giego,
in Arizona and Alyssa Slotkin in Michigan, in their general elections against Republicans,
have rubbed some the wrong way. Let them fight, I say. The spending has not yet materialized,
but Fairshake has promised to spend $3 million a piece on both Gallego and Slotkin's upcoming races.
Quote, people are wondering why our main trade association is pointing its arsenal at our friends,
said one anonymous crypto industry leader cited by NBC. However, the PAC is continuing,
to spend on both sides of the aisle. They've pledged a whopping $12 million to support Republican
Bernie Moreno in the Ohio Senate race, where he is opposing incumbent Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown.
Brown chairs a committee on banking, housing, and urban affairs, and suggested, quote,
maybe banning crypto shortly after the FTX collapse. This would be the largest contribution
to any single candidate from the Fair Shake PAC so far, outspending the $10 million in opposition.
directed against Katie Porter in her California Senate primary.
Last issue, results in Washington's District 6 were still being counted, but it looked like
the crypto industry favorite Emily Randall would be heading to the general election.
That's been confirmed, with Randall receiving the most support in the nonpartisan primary
with 34.6% of the vote.
She and the second place winner, Republican Drew McEwen, will be competing for the seat in the general
election. Randall's democratic opponent, Hillary Franz, who had vocally opposed the crypto-industry
spending, is out of the race. Quote, I'm especially grateful to the over 40 unions, firefighters,
and first responders, and 17 tribes that stood with me in this race. Unfortunately, this incredible
coalition was not enough to overcome the over $2.4 million of super PAC spending that flooded
into this race at the last minute, she said in her concession speech. While there were a handful of
of primary elections this past Tuesday, in Connecticut, Minnesota, Vermont, and Wisconsin,
none of them saw substantial crypto spending. The only race with any crypto spending at all was in Minnesota's
House District 6, where Fairshake spent $118,000 all the way back in September 2023 to support incumbent
Republican and longtime friend to crypto Tom Emmer. His primary was a blowout, and he won 87% of the vote
against professional golf caddy Chris Corey.
There are seven states remaining that have not yet held their primaries.
The only one that has seen crypto PAC spending in the primary stage is Massachusetts,
where Republican Senate candidate John Deaton has received $1.23 million in support
from the Commonwealth Unity Fund, which was created solely to support him.
Altogether, that PAC has raised over $2 million, though it seems to be saving some of it
for what promises to be an extremely tough race against incumbent Democrat and major crypto enemy,
Elizabeth Warren. The Massachusetts primary is scheduled for September 3rd.
Trump Crypto Holdings
Recent financial disclosures by Donald Trump reveal that he owns between $1 million and $5 million
in Ethereum-based cryptocurrency assets. This lines up with a wallet tagged by Arkham Intelligence
as belonging to him, which holds over $2.2 million in Eath.
The disclosure also reveals that Trump has earned more than $7.15 million through his licensing
agreement with NFT, Int, which issues his Trump card NFTs.
Interestingly, despite lavishing praise on Bitcoin a few weeks ago at Bitcoin 2024, his disclosures
don't show any Bitcoin holdings.
Meanwhile, the junior Trumps have been heavily promoting some kind of official upcoming
crypto project, but are annoyed that various others keep launching.
tokens that purport to somehow be related to the Trump family.
Quote, I have truly fallen in love with crypto slash defy,
wrote Eric Trump on August 6.
Quote, decentralized finances the future, don't get left behind,
wrote Donald Trump Jr. the following day.
I'm sure this will go well.
The Web 3 is going just great recap.
There were four entries between August 7 and August 17,
averaging 0.4 entries per day.
$1.4 million were added to the Grift Counter.
North Korean developers built crypto project of $1.3 million.
North Korean developers using fake identities
have reportedly been trying and succeeding
to obtain jobs with various cryptocurrency projects,
with blockchain sleuths, Zach XPT,
identifying at least 25 projects
who had hired people from a group of developers
he linked to the country.
His investigation started when a project reported
that malicious code inserted by contract developers had resulted in a $1.3 million loss to the project.
The funds were later laundered through tornado cash.
Google ad-fishing fools customers looking for Coinbase support.
Cryptoscammers continue to successfully impersonate support representatives for various
prominent cryptocurrency companies, stealing assets from customers who are looking for help.
Most recently, Fortune ran a story on a man in his 60s, who they called.
call only Fred, who lost $100,000 after Googling to find a contact number for Coinbase's support team,
only to encounter a promoted Google result that directed him to a group of scammers who were able to
empty his account. Worth a read. Andresen Horowitz co-founder and managing partner Ben Horowitz
has been fuming over an article about him and his wife, published in the San Francisco
standard titled How Billioners Ben and Felicia Horowitz made a MAGA U-turn.
They pivoted from supporting Obama's presidential candidacy and various progressive causes
to publicly supporting and pledging money to Donald Trump.
Horowitz says it's a racist, quote, hit piece, ordered by fellow billionaire venture capitalist
and business rival Mike Moritz, who owns the standard.
Quote, always the bitch asses that throw rocks at the real ones, Horowitz wrote on Twitter.
The Washington Post just published a brutal piece about Bitcoin's performance during the recent
market jitters, titled, When Markets Get Scary, Crypto proves its worthlessness. In it, the author
picks apart the oft-repeated claim that Bitcoin is a stable store of value or a safeguard against
inflation. Quote, it seems less like digital gold than a digital slot machine, writes McCartle.
In the news, I'm quoted in a recent piece about this scourge of Elon Musk deepfakes that
convince people to hand over their crypto assets or put money into scammy investment opportunities.
It's titled How Deepfake Elon Musk became the internet's biggest scammer.
Joanna Wright wrote for DL News about the FEC complaint public citizen and I filed against Coinbase,
as well as Coinbase's response to it.
That's titled How Coinbase Lawyers Clash with Molly White is roiling Crypto's 183 million election push.
That's all for now, folks.
Until next time, this has been Molly White.
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