Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 66 – Pretensions to relevance

Episode Date: September 17, 2024

FTX fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried says he wants a do-over, and some more ill-received blockchain games suggest “GameFi” has an uncertain future. Originally published on September 17, 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 66. Pretensions to relevance. FTX fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried says he wants a do-over, just as Celsius fraudster Alex Mishinsky goes to trial. And some more ill-received blockchain games suggest GameFi has an uncertain future. This issue was originally published on September 17, 2024. Hello, friends and enemies. Before we dive into the crypto news, I am auctioning off the 10-numbered prints of Free People Read Freely, the line-to-cut relief print I created and used in the previous
Starting point is 00:00:48 issue of citation needed. All proceeds will go to the Internet Archives Open Library. If you're interested in bidding on one, you have until September 20th. If you'd like to print your own copy or use the image to create something else. Stickers? T-shirts? There's a high-res, freely licensed scan on Wikimedia Commons. Go wild. In the courts, FTX. Sam Bankman-Fried has filed an appeal, arguing to the Second Circuit that he deserves a new trial because he was, quote, presumed guilty by the judge who presided over his trial. His lawyers argue that Judge Kaplan's rulings on which evidence to allow and which arguments could be presented, as well as his so-called biting comments made in front of the jury demonstrated partiality and denied Bankman Fried his right to a fair
Starting point is 00:01:34 trial. They also continue to attempt the no harm, no foul argument, claiming that, quote, FtX was never insolvent and in fact had assets worth billions to repay its customers, which they say should have been presented to the jury. They repeat that Bankman Fried didn't mean to, quote, cause loss to his customers and investors, a mischaracterization of the intent requirement in the relevant law. They've asked for the judgment to be reversed and the case retried in front of a new judge. This seems like a pretty steep uphill battle for Bankman Fried. Appeals courts already rarely reverse lower court's decisions and even more rarely reverse and reassign them to a different judge based on arguments of judicial bias. There is a high bar for this type of thing and a Supreme Court
Starting point is 00:02:21 decision has even noted that, quote, not establishing bias or partiality, however, are expressions of impatience, dissatisfaction, annoyance, and even anger, that are within the bounds of what imperfect men and women, even after having been confirmed as federal judges, sometimes display. The examples Bankman Fried's lawyers provide of Kaplan's supposedly mocking behavior seem pretty well within the norms of often cranky federal judges, with the appeal citing a fairly benign instance in which Kaplan asked Bankman Fried's somewhat bumbling defense counsel to discontinue a line of questioning during cross-examination. Quote, equally troubling,
Starting point is 00:03:00 Kaplan repeatedly mocked defense counsel and discredited their cross-examinations in front of the jury, e.g., let's stop that, please, and what part of let's stop that was obscure? And could we get to the point? And this is not an exam for new eyeglasses. I assume he can read it as well as everybody in the jury box can read it.
Starting point is 00:03:20 You can ask him who Johnny Padres was. Let's move along. He pitched for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Though I and others regularly commented on Kaplan's apparent frustration throughout the case, much of it seemed to stem from Sam Bankman-Freed being, well, frustrating. While Bankman-Freed might appreciate a ruling that you can get another trial if you simply annoy the judge enough, I suspect that's not a terribly likely outcome. Ryan Salem appeared before Judge Kaplan for a hearing on his petition to either force the
Starting point is 00:03:49 government to drop their prosecution of his partner, Michelle Bond, or to vacate his conviction. Although Salem had tried to withdraw the petition about a week after filing it, reasoning that it would be better argued in Bond's case, Caplin refused the request. In the hearing, Kaplan was reportedly, quote, visibly annoyed at Salem. He repeatedly expressed that because Salem had lied during his plea allocation when he confirmed that he was not pleading based on promises outside of the written plea deal, his conviction and sentence were, quote, based on false testimony. He also noted that Salem could be further sanctioned for lying under oath. Kaplan made no decisions during the hearing, instead opting to take some time to consider how to proceed. Celsius. The criminal trial of Celsius CEO Alex Michinsky is set to begin today on
Starting point is 00:04:38 September 17. For those who need a recap, I wrote an overview of the company's collapse and an ensuing bankruptcy examiners report in February 2023. That's titled, the Celsius Examiner's Report, a picture of fraud and incompetence. The Celsius bankruptcy proceedings have wrapped up. with customers receiving a combined $3 billion in payouts plus shares in a new Bitcoin mining venture called Ionic. This is estimated to be an approximately 67% recovery, although this is dependent both on the success of Ionic, which is already having troubles, as I explained later in this issue, and on the success of criminal and civil cases against Michinsky. In July 2023, Mishinsky was arrested and indicted on seven charges involving fraud and manipulation of the Celsius
Starting point is 00:05:25 token price. The SEC, CFTC, and FTC simultaneously filed civil cases against him. If convicted on all criminal charges, sentencing guidelines suggest he serve what is effectively a life sentence. A recent filing by Michinsky previews his defense, that he did not intend to defraud or harm anyone, and that he was merely relying on the advice of those around him. As for the token price manipulation, he plans to argue that his employees were trading sell tokens against his instructions and, without his knowledge. If I'm ever a CEO, I hope I have employees who are so incredibly loyal that they will secretly do things that earn me tens of millions of dollars in profits. Everything else. A class action lawsuit filed against Atomic Wallet in a Colorado court has been dismissed after the judge found that
Starting point is 00:06:14 the Estonian company's presence in Colorado was not sufficient to establish jurisdiction. Users of Atomic Wallet lost roughly $100 million in June 2023 in a spate of thefts later attributed to North Korea's Lazarus Group. Coinbase had less success in having dismissed a four-count shareholder complaint, alleging the company downplayed the likelihood that they would be sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The judge dismissed a portion of one of the counts, but otherwise allowed the case to go through. He stated that the plaintiffs had adequately argued that Coinbase had, quote, misleadingly described a favorable picture of the improbability that the SEC would file an enforcement action by repeatedly emphasizing that the crypto assets they listed were not securities,
Starting point is 00:07:00 and had failed to disclose the risk that customers could lose their assets in the event of a Coinbase bankruptcy. The leader of a group of violent Bitcoin-seeking home invaders was sentenced to 47 years in prison. In bankruptcies. Ionic, the Bitcoin mining firm that was created in February, out of the wreckage of the Celsius collapse in hopes of compensating creditors with its profits, is already facing challenges. Ionic's former CEO left the company in July, and plans for the company to go public, which would give Celsius creditors the option to sell their shares, were delayed. Now Ionic shareholders have forced a board meeting and issued a statement suggesting that the board
Starting point is 00:07:42 is not operating with the shareholders' best interests in mind and accusing board members of misconduct. Quote, this isn't a company that should have ever existed, said one former Celsius customer and now Ionic shareholder to decrypt. To say that the shareholders have no confidence would be the understatement of the century. In Governments and Regulators. An FBI report on internet crime in 2003 found that there had been $4.57 billion in losses to investment frauds that year, with 3.96 billion of it, or 87% being crypto-related. A judge ruled that the CFTC had overstepped when blocking the Kalshi non-cryptop-based prediction market from offering contracts pertaining to the U.S. elections.
Starting point is 00:08:28 According to the judge, those contracts do not involve, quote, unlawful activity or gaming, and thus are not within the CFTC's remit. Kalshi listed its first election prediction markets the very same day as the opinion was published. The CFTC almost immediately applied for an emergency motion from the D.C. Court of Appeals to prevent Kalshi from offering these contracts while the agency prepared their appeal. Arguing that any potential financial harm Kalshi might suffer from not being allowed to offer these contracts would be outweighed by the, quote, acute risk of short-term manipulation of election markets and threats to election integrity. The appeals court granted a temporary stay
Starting point is 00:09:08 while the emergency motion is considered, and consequently Kalshi paused trading on those election markets as they fight the order. Although Kalshi doesn't have any crypto involvement of its own, this case potentially sets the stage for future regulatory moves towards offshore crypto prediction markets like Polly Market, where almost $1 billion in bets have been placed on the outcome of the U.S. presidential election alone. Polymarket has come up in the Kalshi court case, with the CFTC citing a blog post by a Columbia economics professor describing, quote, a spectacular attempt at manipulation on polymarket, with respect to its presidential election market and a derivative market. Uniswap will pay $175,000 to settle charges from the CFTC that they were offering illegal,
Starting point is 00:09:54 leveraged, and margined commodities transactions. Both the order and the settlement were announced on September 4. According to the CFTC, quote, among the digital assets traded on the protocol and through the interface were a limited number of leveraged tokens, which provided users leveraged exposure to digital assets such as ether and Bitcoin. The order finds these leveraged tokens are leveraged or margined commodity transactions that did not result in an actual delivery within 28 days, and therefore can be offered to non-eligible contract participants only on a board of trade that has been designated or registered by the CFTC as a contract market, which Uniswap Labs was not.
Starting point is 00:10:33 This is only the latest in Uniswap's regulatory woes. Venture capital firms, including Indreason Horowitz and Union Square Ventures have reportedly been subpoenaed by the New York Attorney General as part of an investigation into Uniswap. These subpoenas are separate from the reported subpoenas sent last month to venture capital firms by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which had also sent a Wells notice to Uniswap in April. Those earlier subpoenas now appear to have also been related to Uniswap and directed at Indreason Horowitz and Union Square Ventures, according to Axios. The Federal Reserve sent a cease and desist order to United Texas Bank after an examination revealed governance issues and, quote, significant deficiencies pertaining to foreign correspondent banking and digital asset customers. This follows a recent action against Customers Bank Corp in Pennsylvania, which focused on the bank's, quote, digital asset strategy.
Starting point is 00:11:29 In elections and political influence, some crypto advocates were dismayed at the lack of any mention of cryptocurrency during the first and, likely last presidential debate. Ryan Gorman, partner at a Web 3 PR company, wrote in an op-ed in Coin desk that, quote, neither the American public nor the two presidential candidates care very much about crypto. The subhead read, despite the industry's pretensions to relevance, most people don't care about these issues. Trump Crypto Project. Rather than preparing for another debate or campaigning, Trump has been preparing for the launch of his family's World Liberty Financial Crypto Project, which kicked off with a torturous live-streamed audio interview on Twitter. Few, even in the crypto world, seem excited about this project. Many seem concerned that it could
Starting point is 00:12:18 worsen crypto's already grifty reputation. The live stream was produced in partnership with Rugg Radio, making me wonder if the programmers of our shared simulation have given up entirely. It began with 20 minutes of Trump recounting to the audibly starstruck, self-described crypto-brough interviewer, the stories of his attempted assassination in July, and the more recent incident in which a man with a rifle was discovered hiding in the bushes of the golf course where Trump was playing. The conversation eventually meandered around to the intended subject, with Trump speaking vaguely about how his children changed his mind on cryptocurrency, which he said, quote, is one of those things we have to do whether we like it or not.
Starting point is 00:13:00 Although Trump departed the stream around 40 minutes in without ever touching on the specific World Liberty Financial project, the conversation continued for almost another two hours, with a cast of characters including Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr., and several other key figures in the project. Despite the length of the conversation, details about World Liberty Financial remain scant, with much of the conversation devoted to general talking points about the potential for crypto to help those who face challenge, in getting access to financial services. Several figures in the crypto world remarked on how the conversation felt like a flashback to the starry-eyed and largely substance-free conversations from early into the 2020 hype cycle,
Starting point is 00:13:44 when many waxed poetic about the potential for cryptocurrency to, quote, democratize finance. Personally, I think it's telling that the first time anyone in the Trump family has expressed concern about equitable access to financial services is when they're hawking their crypto project. The project seems to be a borrowing and lending project similar to AVE, an Ethereum-based protocol first launched in 2017. Critically, these so-called loans on AVEA are over-collateralized loans, meaning that a borrower must supply more assets than their borrowing, making the project useful to those who hold substantial amounts of crypto and want to borrow against it rather than sell it, but not helpful to most people who face challenges accessing credit in the real world, where people generally take out loans because they don't have the assets required for whatever it is they're trying to do.
Starting point is 00:14:36 Hours in, members of the team also confirmed that the project will eventually launch a token, which will be non-transferable, won't provide any economic rewards, and will only be available to accredited investors. Despite the overall lack of wisdom behind launching a project like this, the team does seem to be trying to minimize their legal exposure, with token design that appears carefully crafted to take the project out of the crosshairs of securities regulators, and with various disclaimers trying to create an arm's-length relationship between World Liberty Financial, the Trump family, and the Trump presidential campaign.
Starting point is 00:15:13 The live stream kicked off with a long legal disclaimer to insist that those speaking were not providing financial advice and were not necessarily representing the views of the project. And at one point, a project team member described lawyers in the room, quote, staring daggers at him as he spoke. Maxine Waters named-dropped this upcoming project in a hearing about defy in front of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology, and Inclusion, citing the recent incident in which Twitter accounts belonging to Lara and Tiffany Trump were compromised and used to announce a fake token launch that has resulted in at least $1.8 million
Starting point is 00:15:52 of a windfall for the hackers. This number is only going up, especially. especially as the spoofed website and token promoted by the hackers still show up on the first page of Google results for searches for World Liberty Financial, amid headlines in the New York Times and elsewhere about the actual project. During the defy hearing, on the other side of the aisle, Chairman French Hill, a Republican from Arkansas, argued that the crypto industry needs bespoke regulation and bashed the Biden administration for, quote, using rulemaking and enforcement actions to go after defy and
Starting point is 00:16:27 its existence and the future of its use in the United States. Long-time crypto-sceptic Brad Sherman, a Democrat from California, commented that crypto was, quote, an effort to liberate billionaires from income taxation, continuing, quote, every time a billionaire successfully cheats on his taxes, a member of the Freedom Caucus earns his wings. The hearing featured five witnesses, four of whom were from the cryptocurrency industry. Cryptopax The crypto packs just dropped another few million on Bernie Moreno's Ohio Senate race against
Starting point is 00:17:01 Sherrod Brown, bringing the total spending to support his campaign to over $27 million. This is more than twice as much as they've spent on any other candidate, including in the high-budget California Senate race where they spent $10 million to oppose Katie Porter. The spending works out to around $800,000 a day. As usual, the ads they're shelling out on make no mention of crypto-crucure. instead promising that he will, quote, stop illegal immigrants from taking our hard-earned tax dollars and, quote, keep our communities safe, featuring clips of Morenoe speaking with senior citizens and hobnobbing with police officers. Currently, Moreno is busy calling for mass deportation of Haitians in Ohio and fanning
Starting point is 00:17:45 the flames of the rapidly escalating racial tensions in the state. While this is the xenophobic Republican talking point du jour, it's also perhaps a helpful distraction from the fact that his top aide was just forced to resign after belligerently trying to impede a traffic stop, in which his girlfriend and fellow Moreno aide was arrested on drunk driving charges. Two Democratic Senate candidates have also received several million more apiece from the cryptocurrency packs. Ruben Gallego in Arizona has received a total of $7.6 million in support, and Alyssa Slotkin in Michigan has received a total of $6.9 million. $1, Massachusetts Senate candidate John Deaton says he just can't understand why Elizabeth Warren is so
Starting point is 00:18:31 dang focused on crypto when there are other more pressing issues to worry about. In case you forgot, John Deaton is an asbestos injury lawyer who jumped into the crypto world by filing amicus briefs in the SEC versus Ripple case, who moved to Massachusetts from Rhode Island to try to oust Warren because of her crypto stances, and who has received more than $2 million in crypto industry funding, amounting to about 60% of all his campaign funding. Elsewhere in crypto. Talley Labs, the creator of a project that promised to let NFT holders create stories themed around their NFT characters, has announced they will be going in, quote, a new direction. The company once claimed to be run by a bored ape who came to life, named Jenkins
Starting point is 00:19:16 the Valet, who had an elaborate backstory and lore. Jenkins, however, seems to be going into retirement now, as the CEO wrote under his real name, quote, for tons of different factors, our NFT projects have lost escape velocity. This announcement comes amid all-time low floor prices for board apes, which have lost 93% of their dollar-denominated value, or 91% denominated in ETH, since their peak in April 2022. The Web 3 is going Just Great Recap. There were 11 entries between September 6th and September 16,
Starting point is 00:19:51 averaging one entry per day. $30.85 million was added to the grift counter. Flap to earn. A blockchain-based version of the 2014 hit game Flappy Bird has emerged, taking advantage of the recent TAP-to-Earn crypto craze itself driven by games like Hamster Combat. A new Flappy Bird Twitter account posted, quote, I am back on September 12,
Starting point is 00:20:16 with a video compilation showing people playing the original game. The tweet also claimed that they were, quote, working with Flappy Bird's predecessor, leading many to believe that Flappy Bird creator Dong Wynne was involved with the project. Wynne famously removed the game from App Store shortly after it surged to popularity, stating that he felt guilty that people were becoming addicted to the game. This makes the game's reappearance, complete with loot boxes, micro-transactions, and other addictive features feel somewhat dark.
Starting point is 00:20:46 On September 15, Wynne returned from a seven-year Twitter hiatus to post, quote, I have no relation with their game. I did not sell anything. I also don't support crypto. Although Wynn once held the Flappy Bird trademark, he did not sell it to this group. Instead, they registered the trademark themselves after arguing he had abandoned it. Zombie Smart Contracts A rare Cryptopunk NFT recently sold for only $10 or around $25,300,
Starting point is 00:21:15 despite a market value that's likely around $600 eath or around $1.5 million. The sale went through thanks to lingering smart contracts from a defunct NFT fractionalization platform called NIFTX, which allowed people to buy and sell shards of various NFTs. NIFTX launched in November 2020 and is now defunct, with its domain redirecting to the Cracken cryptocurrency exchange. The platform's smart contracts remain operational, however, and so despite the lack of a front-end website for the platform, the back end still remains. A trader was able to use these smart contracts to trigger a feature that allows a buyout of the fractional shardholders,
Starting point is 00:21:57 which, if not countered by someone else, automatically goes through in 14 days. The bidder proposed a purchase of 0.001-Eth per share, and without an operational NIFTex front end, basically no one noticed. The bid went through, and the trader successfully purchased all 10,000 shares, and thus the NFT, for 10-Eth. Since then, several people have offered to purchase the NFT for amounts ranging from 100 to 605-Eath. If the new owner were to accept the 60-5-Eath bid, they would 60 times their purchase price. One owner of a fractionalized share said he thought he had managed to successfully block the sale, but miscalculated. Quote, G-G to the new owner, he wrote.
Starting point is 00:22:41 He continued, quote, I don't consider this a heist. It's an arb. The smart contract worked as intended. If you want decentralized systems, you have to take the good with the bad. It's part of the game. It's why we're here. If you don't like those rules, you probably shouldn't be playing. Everything else. $6 million was taken from the Delta Prime Defi Protocol.
Starting point is 00:23:04 The EVE Online developer angered their fans with an announcement that the new game will be blockchain-based. E. Toro settled with the SEC for $1.5 million and shut down most crypto trading. Adam Newman's flow carbon refunded customers after failing to launch the goddess nature token. A hacker stole $1.45 million from the cut token liquidity pool. The Indodax crypto exchange was apparently hacked for at least $22 million. State securities regulators settled with GS partners over pyramid schemes, including a tokenized skyscraper. The Assange Dow has been accused of a rugpole after transferring their treasury to a German foundation. and the friend tech team abandoned their project.
Starting point is 00:23:52 Worth a read. Researchers at the Center for Democracy and Technology performed a study to analyze responses by LLM chatbots like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini, and evaluate their accuracy and bias when it comes to questions about voting with a disability. The results were pretty horrifying, with 61% of results containing at least one kind of insufficiency, and more than one third containing incorrect information. A quarter of responses, they said, quote,
Starting point is 00:24:22 could dissuade, impede, or prevent the user from exercising their right to vote. The study is called generating confusion, stress testing AI chatbot responses on voting with a disability. When I shared an article with an AI generated image header and the title, quote, How to monetize a blog on social media, several people asked if I'd been hacked to post clickbait. I promise you this commentary art piece is worth the click.
Starting point is 00:24:48 Just give it a few scrolls if you don't believe me. It's titled How to Monetize a Blog and it's published by modem.io. In the news, I was interviewed in a great piece titled Crypto is Betting It All on the 2024 elections by Vox, which is about the cryptocurrency industry's election spending, something that is reasonably getting a lot of press coverage because it's pretty baffling to those outside of the crypto bubble. The article also cites follow the crypto data. The FBC complaint about Coinbase got a nod in this article by Liz Lapato
Starting point is 00:25:21 about how Coinbase is having a bad time lately. It's in The Verge and it's titled Coinbase's No Good, Very Bad Summer. 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. 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.
Starting point is 00:25:52 News.

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