Molly White's Citation Needed - Issue 68 – Opportunity agenda
Episode Date: October 17, 2024Harris shouts out crypto in her “Opportunity Agenda for Black Men”, one crypto exec leaves prison as another enters, and Stand With Crypto bets on the favorites. Originally published on October 16..., 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 68. Opportunity Agenda.
Harris shouts out crypto in her Opportunity Agenda for Black Men.
One crypto exec leaves prison as another enters, and stand with crypto bets on the favorites.
This issue was originally published on October 16, 2024.
There is a lot to cover in the crypto world, so I'm going to jump right in.
But not before noting that I have some new items in the store, themed around the anti-crypto-crypted
club, which joins two interests of mine I never thought would overlap.
Also, if you visited the store and found something you wanted was out of stock,
I'm delighted to report that I am now fully restocked and ready to go.
That's at store.mollywhite.net.
In the courts, Binances Changpeng Xiao, or CZ,
is once again a free man.
After serving three months in a minimum security prison in Southern California
and another month in a halfway house in Long Beach,
he was released on September 27.
As he teased prior to his incarceration,
he's been working on the Giggle Academy,
a childhood education initiative where he plans to give kids NFTs
to, quote, make learning addictive,
explore, quote, learn-to-earn models
to incentivize parents to put their kids in school,
and put kids to work training AI models at, quote, say around 13 years old.
He also says he's been working on a book, though he admits it's, quote, a lot more work than he anticipated.
One thing he won't be doing is running Binance again.
Although plea agreements initially made it sound like CZ might only be banned from running the company for three years,
Binance's new leadership has clarified that the DOJ settlement involved a lifetime ban.
That said, CZ is still the majority shareholder, and his life partner, Heyi, remains an executive at the company.
As one crypto executive leaves prison, another enters.
FtX's Ryan Salem reported to prison on October 11, after one last unsuccessful attempt to once again use the dog bite excuse to postpone his sentencing.
It turns out that's an excuse that only works once, particularly when the very same day he filed the request.
Salaam sat for a video interview with Tucker Carlson, in which he showed no evident facial injuries,
scars, or impairments despite the reported attack by a 125-pound German shepherd.
Judge Kaplan noted this, along with Salem's apparent good health and facial function in recent
hearings, when denying the request, writing, quote,
to whatever extent that additional medical treatment is genuinely necessary and cannot await the
defendant's release, it can be provided by or under the auspices of the Bureau of Prisons.
That night, Salem posted an update to his LinkedIn profile, stating, I'm happy to share that I'm
starting a new position as inmate at FCI Cumberland. His profile now also lists cleaning and
whittling as skills he'll be using in his new full-time position at the Federal Correctional Institution
in Cumberland, Maryland.
Lucky for Salem, FCI Cumberland, once described by NBC News as club fed and, quote,
one of the nation's cushiest presence, is a massive upgrade compared to his ex-bosses
at the notoriously unpleasant MCI Brooklyn.
As for Salem's interview circuit, more on that to come soon in a separate issue.
Let's just say Tucker Carlson wasn't the only one to snag an interview.
Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather Rosal Khan Morgan are due to be sentenced in about a month for their participation in laundering the funds stolen in 2016 from the Bitfinex cryptocurrency exchange.
Prosecutors have just submitted sentencing recommendations for the both of them, and somewhat surprisingly, recommended downward departures for both.
Morgan was the most substantial beneficiary of this argument, with prosecutors stating that the calculated guidelines offense level of 20,
which would result in a roughly four to five year sentence is too high. Instead, they argue that
Morgan's role as a mere accomplice to Lichtenstein in laundering the funds, as opposed to being the
primary launderer or a participant in the hack itself, as well as her substantial cooperation
should earn her a sentence closer to 18 months. While there is a rapper who is notably
recently required to pass his lyrics by his probation officer as a condition of his release,
sadly, no such conditions have yet been imposed on Rosal Khan, meaning she might be back to recording
her cringeworthy raps unimpeded relatively soon.
Lichtenstein's guidelines offense level is 32, which would suggest a sentence of 10 to 12
1⁄2 years in prison. Prosecutors, however, have suggested an offense level of 25,
which would result in a recommended 5-year prison term.
Despite emphasizing the gravity of the duo's crimes, they argue that sentencing in
for his role as a leader in the criminal activity and for obstruction of justice are not necessary,
and that Liechtenstein should also be granted a reduction for, quote, incomplete conspiracy,
because he and his wife had failed to launder all of the funds he had stolen.
Prosecutors argue that his eventual choice to plead guilty and cooperate with the investigation
helped them recover funds and warrants such a significantly reduced sentence.
While I expected that, I was a little bit surprised at just how much,
of a reduction they've proposed for someone who still ultimately stole 120,000 Bitcoins,
priced at $72 million at the time and at $8.1 billion at today's prices.
The money laundering case against Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm has unsurprisingly survived a motion to dismiss.
It will go to trial in early December if there are no delays.
Swan Bitcoin has filed a lawsuit against a group of former employees,
that started a competing Bitcoin mining business called Proton Management.
Swan alleges the group stole trade secrets, including, quote, highly proprietary code,
and mining techniques from 2040 Energy, a joint Bitcoin mining venture established by Swan and the Tether
stablecoin giant.
Amusingly, Swan's lawyers made a rookie mistake when filing their lawsuit by simply drawing
black boxes over the text they intended to redact, meaning that people who download
the file could simply move the boxes out of the way to reveal the text that was intended to be
hidden from public view. This revealed details around allegations that Tether conspired with the
former employees to usurp Swans Bitcoin mining business and allegations that they controlled
Proton's board of directors. The Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission
simultaneously charged 18 individuals and entities for cryptocurrency wash trading and market
manipulation. The sweeping investigation, unusually, involved the FBI working with cooperating
witnesses to create their very own cryptocurrency company and token called NextFund AI, which they then
used in a sort of sting operation. The influence of the cooperators was evident because the token
website hit all the right talking points around deflationary economics, air drops, and so-called
utility focus. The charges were directed at a group of individuals. The charges were directed at a group of individuals,
crypto promoters who fraudulently pumped tokens like Robo Inu and Saitama Inu, as well as market
makers ZMQuant, CLS Global, My Trade, and most notably Gottbit.
Gottbit is perhaps the only of the four with much name recognition, and it was widely used by
meme coin creators, including those behind projects like Nero, Beercoin, and, yes, really,
buy my shit coin.
Many of these meme coin projects are now scrambling to disavow Gottbit, while insisting their projects are legitimate.
The defendant companies allegedly provided, quote, on-demand market manipulation,
intended to inflate token prices and mislead prospective buyers that there was high demand for the tokens.
Various defendants promised they could make the trading appear organic and, quote,
pump the price of various tokens.
Quote, the basic goal right now is to create that phomo by law.
looking as organic volume, wrote a promoter in a conversation with Gottbit.
Yeah, replied a Gottbit executive, who then outlined plans to manipulate the token market,
but avoided putting a detailed description of their agreement in writing in a contract
because some countries are, quote, kind of regulated.
Australian police seized around $9.3 million in cryptocurrency as a part of Operation
Cracken, the confusingly named initiative that has nothing to do with the Cracken cryptocurrency
Exchange, but rather focuses on the ghost encrypted messaging application.
This operation has been ongoing for about a month, and at least 46 people have been arrested
in connection to the app, which the Australian federal police claim was, quote, built solely
for the criminal underworld.
Most of the arrests have targeted people who used ghosts to traffic drugs, order hits,
or launder money, although the creator of the application was also charged and arrested in
mid-September.
Horst Gicha, the alleged operator of the $150 million U.S.I. Tech cryptocurrency pyramid scheme,
seems to have skipped town after disabling his ankle monitor.
He was out on house arrest after his partner, children, and several others put up a $5 million bond.
I imagine they will be highly upset with him, although perhaps he has assets scrawled away,
with which he can repay them for their troubles.
Following an unsuccessful noise violation lawsuit against the plant manager of the Marathon Digital Bitcoin mining firm,
some residents of Granbury, Texas are applying for a permanent injunction from the Hood County District Court
to halt the, quote, intolerably loud noise conditions and palpable vibrations produced by the operations
cooling fans and other equipment.
Plaintiffs have described the noise as similar to a vacuum cleaner running, quote,
only inches away from their ears and causing noticeable vibrations in the floors and windows of
their homes.
They complain of ailments, including hearing loss, fatigue, and increased stress, and report
higher electricity bills amid diminished property values.
Several have reported pets, including dogs and horses, exhibiting heightened anxiety and conditions
resulting from anxiety, with one dog and one horse both having to be euthanized.
The noise is worse at night, and a plaintiff has recorded decibel readings on her property
between 3.30 and 5 a.m. of 88 decibels. For context, the American Academy of Audiology
warns that, quote, over 85 decibels for extended periods can cause permanent hearing loss.
Finally, various other people were charged, convicted, or sentenced in connection to cryptocurrency
related crimes. A man and his son stole at least $10 million from more than 20 victims by claiming
to operate a cryptocurrency brokerage and investing business. They solicited investments,
as well as loans from friends and acquaintances who they never repaid. The son pleaded guilty
to a money laundering conspiracy charge in April 2023. The father opted to take his chances in court
and was just convicted on three counts. A man who took out $1.1 million in COVID-19.
relief loans on behalf of his auto parts and scrap company,
then invested almost half into a cryptocurrency business, pleaded guilty to wire fraud.
A crypto entrepreneur who went by it, quote,
The Godfather, was charged on tax evasion and conspiracy charges
and was reportedly paying off members of the LAPD to harass and arrest his various enemies.
The Godfather used the roughly $1.7 million he should have paid in taxes on luxury purchases,
mansion rent, and a cosmetic leg-lengthening procedure.
He also allegedly committed multiple armed robberies to steal cryptocurrency,
including one in which he impersonated an FBI agent.
A man who hacked into an unnamed, quote, investment holdings company located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota,
and stole cryptocurrency priced at more than $37 million from almost 600 victims,
has pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering charges.
The founder of the IcomTech Project has been sentenced to 10 years in prison,
after stealing around $8.4 million by promising, quote, financial freedom to investors who
believed they were investing money in lucrative cryptocurrency operations, but who had instead
been lured into a Ponzi scheme where no crypto trading was actually happening.
The founder of the four-count and later Weltsis cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme was hit with the
maximum sentence of 20 years in prison for his multi-million dollar scheme targeting primarily
Spanish-speaking individuals. He claimed that his crypto trading and mining could guarantee returns
on investment and a doubling of investors' money within six months, when in reality he, much like
the ICOMTech founder, was doing no crypto activities at all. In bankruptcies. The judge in the
FTCS bankruptcy case has approved the company's restructuring plan, after creditors.
overwhelmingly voted in favor of it.
Some former creditors had opposed the plan based on objections to how claims were valued,
the legal immunity that will be extended to those who have overseen the bankruptcy,
and the possibility of high taxes on the cash rather than crypto repayments.
While they may still appeal, the approval paves the way for billions of dollars to be repaid to
creditors, potentially even by the end of the year.
Remember bank with a cue?
A side character in the Prime Trust saga outlined in issues 38 and 39?
Well, the Neobanks' June 2023 application for Chapter 11 bankruptcy was rejected after four attempts at coming up with a plan,
when the bankruptcy court judge ruled that the filing appeared to be simply a, quote, bad faith tactic,
to try to get the upper hand in the ongoing litigation with Scott Purcell,
rather than a genuine attempt to reorganize the company.
In Governments and Regulators, SEC.
Lawsuits are flying in both directions over at the SEC.
On the incoming end, the Coinbase lawsuit against the SEC is still ongoing,
and the parties appeared in front of a panel of Third Circuit judges in late September
to argue over whether the SEC should be forced to write new rules for the cryptocurrency industry.
Some of the judges seemed skeptical of the SEC's position, asking pointed questions about the status
of Bitcoin and Ethereum as securities. Although Axios opined that, quote, it could be that judges are
critical of the side they lean towards supporting in order to help it to submit the best possible
follow-up filings. However, they also showed some hesitance to Coinbase lawyer Eugene Scalia's
argument that the court should force the SEC to write new rules for cryptocurrency businesses.
Quote, that's an extraordinary remedy, one of them commented.
joining Coinbase on the ever-growing list of crypto companies who are suing the SEC,
crypto exchanges Crypto.com and Bitnomule have both separately filed lawsuits against the agency.
Crypto.com is doing the typical post-wells notice, you can't sue me, I'm suing you, move,
we've seen modeled by consensus, and has been publicizing their lawsuit as an attempt to, quote,
protect the future of crypto in the U.S. Bitnomial is suing over the agency's claim that they share
joint jurisdiction with the CFTC over XRP futures contracts, which Bitnomio argues fall solely
under the CFTC's remit. In the outgoing direction, the SEC has earned a few victories. They just
won a motion for summary judgment in an ICO-related case against the Rivets Corp and its CEO Steven
Sprague, who offered unregistered securities in 2017 when they sold around $18 million worth of the
Rivets token to investors in the United States and elsewhere.
Although Sprague tried to argue that the token was merely software, not a security,
the judge opined that, quote, from the first announcement of the ICO through its completion,
Rivets and Sprague made statements to potential purchasers that clearly tied the value of
RVT tokens to Rivet's goal of creating a security ecosystem for mobile devices.
The SEC also reached that settlement I mentioned was in the works.
a few issues ago with mango markets, and if approved, the various entities involved will all
destroy their mango tokens and work to halt token trading on outside platforms. They will also
collectively pay around $700,000 in penalties. Meanwhile, Mango Labs has turned around and sued
two, quote, core Mango Dow personnel, who they allege illegally profited to the tune of around
$10 million when they worked on behalf of the Dow to purchase mango tokens that were being
held by the bankrupt FTX. Elsewhere in SEC business, the SEC has filed a new lawsuit,
this one against Cumberland DRW, the cryptocurrency trading and market-making division of the
prominent trader Don Wilson's DRW trading group. The agency alleges that Cumberland has operated
as an unregistered securities dealer since at least March 2018, listing quote,
crypto assets offered or sold as investment contracts and therefore as securities,
including Polygon, Solana, Cosmos, Algarand, and Filecoin.
Cumberland responded with a statement that they had become, quote,
the latest target of the SEC's enforcement-first approach to stifling innovation
and preventing legitimate companies from engaging in digital assets,
and promised that they were, quote, ready to defend ourselves again.
Again refers to the market manipulation.
complaint filed by the CFTC against the company in 2011, which was dismissed in 2018 after a judge
ruled that the CFTC had not adequately proved its case that Cumberland's activities were
illegal. Finally, the SEC has, unsurprisingly, filed notice of an appeal following the conclusion
of their long-running lawsuit against Ripple. Ripple followed that up with their own notice of a cross-appeal.
The long-running lawsuit becomes longer still.
Everything else.
Non-cry-based prediction market Kalshi has reinstated its betting markets pertaining to U.S. elections
after the D.C. appeals court denied the emergency motion by the CFTC to halt trading in those markets.
As I mentioned recently, the court had granted a temporary stay pending the decision, which forced Kalshi to take the markets offline.
They are already back up again following the denial.
Their market boasts considerably less volume than the market.
polymarkets, only $14.7 million compared to polymarkets $2 billion in U.S. presidential election
bets. A coordinated enforcement action by various U.S. government agencies and Dutch law enforcement
has cracked down on the Russian cryptocurrency exchanges PM2BTC and cryptex, as well as their
operators. The agencies allege the firms have been used to process hundreds of millions of dollars
in transactions for Russian crime organizations.
including ransomware operations.
The State Department is also offering rewards of up to $10 million for information on two Russians,
money launderer Sergei Ivanov and Timor Shakmatov, the operator of a darknet marketplace known for selling stolen credit card information and other personal data.
As a part of the action, the U.S. added PM2BTC, Cryptex, and Ivanov to the sanctions list,
and seized domains and assets belonging to Cryptex.
Not long after the action from U.S. and Dutch authorities, Russia arrested 96 people reportedly
connected to the Cryptex Exchange and related services.
Russian authorities alleged that throughout 2023, the network processed around $1.1 billion
in transactions and generated around $38.7 million in revenue.
Ivanov was reportedly among those arrested by Russian police, who are presumably not eligible
for the reward.
The United Kingdom's Gambling Commission has charged the creators of these so-raer fantasy sports
NFT-based game with providing unlicensed gambling facilities.
In the game, players purchase NFTs representing sports players they want to have on their fantasy
teams and then enter various competitions to earn rewards based on their players' performance.
The Gambling Commission maintains that this constitutes gambling,
while So Rare insists that the Commission simply misunderstood their business.
This is the Gambling Commission's first enforcement action against a blockchain-based platform.
Gemini is joining the ranks of Binance and OkX in choosing to bail out of Canada, which has strong regulations and oversight on cryptocurrency platforms.
Gemini didn't provide any details on their decision, but it's likely related to 2023 rules from the Canadian securities administrators,
dictating that crypto exchanges will need to provide daily financial reports to the regulatory agency,
and obtained special permission to sell stablecoins.
These rules were implemented following the 2022 collapses of companies including FDX, Celsius, and Voyager,
and an announcement by the agency explicitly cited those events as having demonstrated the need for tighter regulations.
In elections and political influence.
Kamala Harris has included as number three in a five-part, quote, opportunity agenda for black men,
that she would, quote, support a regulatory framework for cryptocurrency and other digital assets
so black men who invest in and own these assets are protected.
While three of the promises are focused towards benefiting black Americans or black men specifically,
the cryptocurrency tenant and one regarding legalizing recreational marijuana
are broader initiatives that seem rather clumsily shoehorned in.
The full text of the cryptocurrency-related promise reads,
quote, enabling black men who hold digital assets to benefit from financial innovation.
More than 20% of black Americans own or have owned cryptocurrency assets.
Vice President Harris appreciates the ways in which new technologies can broaden access to banking and financial services.
She will make sure owners of and investors in digital assets benefit from a regulatory framework,
so that black men and others who participate in this market are protected.
The ostensible reason for including cryptocurrency in a platform aimed at enticing black voters,
particularly men, is data that suggests that men are more likely than women,
and black people are more likely than white people to hold crypto.
While Harris's announcement includes no source for its claim that, quote,
more than 20% of black Americans own or have owned cryptocurrency assets,
it wouldn't surprise me if it came from a 2023 Pew Research study that showed 21% of black Americans,
adults had ever invested in, traded, or used cryptocurrency. Comparatively, 14% of white people had,
as had 21% of Hispanics and 24% of Asians. Credit where credit is due, I suppose, for not repeating
some of the more dubious numbers out of crypto industry surveys. For example, Paradigm, who claimed in
24 that 33% of Black Americans have ever held crypto, or Andresen Horowitz, who claimed in 2021 that
30% of Black Americans currently owned crypto. The statement follows in the same mold as those I've
covered from her campaign in the past, which seem perfectly crafted to be interpreted as the listener
desires. I, for example, read a statement about making sure investors are protected by a regulatory
framework, and perhaps over-optimistically, envisioned strong consumer protections, and a rebuke of
cryptocurrency corporations attempts to enshrine favorable loopholes into laws and regulations.
Others, accustomed to crypto industry executive's self-serving definition of, quote,
clear common-sense regulation, interpret her statement to be supportive of the cryptocurrency companies,
and believe it might foretell an administration that would put an end to regulators' aggressive enforcement of
crypto-related matters. Don't get me wrong, I do think that Harris is trying to court the
crypto industry and broader tech industry here, and that's disappointing to see. But as with her
opponent, whether or not campaign statements will translate into a real change in policy approach
remains very much to be seen. As I mentioned in an earlier issue, some in the crypto world
seemed to fear they prematurely went all in for Trump, back when the choices were between him and Biden,
and the outcome seemed all but assured.
Indeed, since endorsing Trump as, quote, the right choice,
alongside co-founder Mark Andreson on the A16Z podcast in July,
only days before Biden would withdraw his candidacy,
Ben Horowitz has since divulged he will be making an as-yet undisclosed,
quote, significant donation to the Harris campaign.
Whether this is a reversal or merely an attempt to play both sides is hard to determine.
But it does show that while many in the crypto world remain full-fledged, MAGA-hatted Trump fans,
others seem to be trying to either endear themselves to Harris,
or at least convince themselves that a potential Harris presidency might not be so bad for crypto after all.
Last issue, I mentioned news outlets' interpretations of her also vague statement that, quote,
we will encourage innovative technologies like AI and digital assets while protecting our consumers and investors.
Perhaps the most stark example of the industry's wishcasting around Harris and that comment came after I published
when Coinbase's stand-with-croping website stamped Harris with a B, quote, supports crypto rating,
based solely on that single comment, which they ranked, quote, somewhat supportive.
This, in contrast to Trump's A, or strongly supports crypto rating, based on now 23, quote, very pro-crypto statements,
so enraged crypto fans that stand with crypto ultimately was forced to retract the rating,
returning her to the NA or not enough information list.
Ripple co-founder Chris Larson also put $1 million behind Harris in August,
though some news outlets have apparently only just noticed.
CNBC just ran a disingenuous headline that, quote,
Harris PAC's $1 million contribution from Ripple's Chris Larson shows crypto industry warming
to VP, failing to note that the donation happened two months ago, and only three weeks after she
took up the candidacy, long before the industry showed any signs of warming to Harris. For his part,
Larson has been one of the few Democratic crypto executives from the get-go, and had already donated
$750,000 to the Biden-Harris F-F PAC the previous year. He's put $4.3 million behind various Democrats and
Democratic committees this cycle thus far.
Despite all of this, the sometimes decent Coin Desk CryptoMedia outlet has come out with a
truly embarrassing endorsement that claims not to be an endorsement of Donald Trump.
Quote, if CoinDesk were in the business of endorsing political candidates and if crypto were the
only issue that mattered, it's pretty clear whom we would back to become the next U.S. president.
They later state, even though we don't endorse candidates, we do endorse Trump's
crypto platforms such as it is. Although they claim to be, quote, troubled by his racism and, quote,
increasingly authoritarian rhetoric, which they describe as, quote, the antithesis of a crypto movement
focused on decentralizing authority and empowering individuals, the opinion piece by CoinDesk's
editor-in-chief, published on behalf of CoinDesk as a whole, is full of neverthelesses, and even those,
and however, as he recommends Trump anyway. The whole thing boils down. The whole thing boils down.
to, sure, Trump is a shameless racist who's been increasingly threatening to do things like
round up immigrants and deploy the military against his political enemies, and his statements on
crypto kind of seem like empty pandering, but on the other hand, Harris has been vague.
Polymarket. Many Trump fans have been delighted to watch the $2 billion in Polymarket betting
on the presidential election winner swing back in favor of Trump, where he currently shows a, quote,
58.7% chance of winning. Many in the crypto world and outside of it as well view prediction markets as
potentially even more reliable than polls, despite rather compelling evidence that polymarket is being
manipulated for various reasons, including to try to score payouts from derivative markets.
A recent article by McKina Kelly in Wired has also pointed out that the markets seem to be being used to sway
public perception and are quite likely going to be used as, quote, evidence in the event of a Trump
loss that the election was stolen. Quote, but maybe being correct isn't even the point.
Already, polymarket odds are being used as evidence that Trump is beating Harris, and Musk and other
Trump acolytes are using the odds to pump up their base. I've seen Democrats celebrating Harris's
odds of winning the popular vote on the site too. All of this has the potential to legitimize these results
as viable evidence for conspiracy theorists questioning the outcome of the election.
Quote, right before the race gets called, Trump and his fans are going to say,
Polymarket knew the truth and they silenced it.
It doesn't matter if it's right.
It doesn't matter if it makes any sense in those few hours after the election is called,
says Mike Rothschild, an author who writes about conspiracy theories.
Quote, people are going to be looking for any sort of evidence that there was a steal,
that there was the blue ballot dump at three in the morning, and if they can't
find it, they're going to make it up. Venture capitalist and regular crypto commentator Adam Cochran
laid out a similar theory on Twitter that polymarket is, quote, being used as ad spend. Also noting
the potential legitimizing effect on stolen election conspiracy theories after the fact, he outlined,
quote, buy Trump yes votes, overtake Harris, tweet about it and political sites and shows pick it up.
repeat any time Harris does well in the news cycle, get dirt cheap eyeballs, plus point to skewed polls
when you lose and claim conspiracy.
In a later tweet, he wrote, I highly suspect that come election night and the days after,
it will be these polymarket polls that Trump starts posting on truth social in the event of a loss,
especially in a swing state.
His followers will cry, quote, how could he lose when the odds were like this?
Outside of election prediction markets, there was some controversy when Polymarket began listing
betting markets pertaining to ongoing military conflicts, allowing betters to take sides on things like
whether Israel will take military action against Iran or whether the U.S. will strike Lebanon.
Quote, quote, it feels wrong that Polymarket has an entire Hezbollah betting section that makes a war
look like a football game to bet on, wrote one crypto trader.
Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin, also one of Pollymarket's backers in a funding round led by Peter Thiel's Founders Fund earlier this year,
jumped in to defend the platform, arguing that it's a, quote, news site that doesn't, quote, rely on governmental or corporate censors.
Polymarket seems to have taken note of the controversy and has added a blurb above all so-called Middle East markets,
claiming they have, quote, discussed with those directly affected by the attacks, and decided, quote,
that prediction markets could give them the answers they needed in ways TV, news, and Twitter could not.
They then emphasized that Polly Market does not yet take any fees on betting markets,
presumably to try to dodge criticism that Pollymarket is profiting from war.
World Liberty Financial
Trump's highly publicized World Liberty Financial token sales.
went live on October 15, and the project's website immediately buckled under the load.
After intermittent outages, the team got the website back up, and it was more or less operational
by the early afternoon of that same day. It's now been online for about a full day.
While they hope to sell 20 billion tokens in the public sale, only around 807 million or 4%
of the target have sold so far, netting around $8 million.
Some hours after the launch, the project Twitter account tried stirring up interest by promoting a, quote,
big announcement from Trump himself, which ended up just being a 14-second long video belatedly announcing
that the token had gone live.
Cryptopacks
With only 20 days remaining until election day, the crypto packs are hard at work spending the
$50 million that remains of the $174 million they've raised this cycle.
The top spending over the last few weeks has all gone to incumbent Republicans who had not previously received any crypto pack money.
$2.8 million was spent to support Michelle Park Steel, a Republican incumbent running for re-election in California's District 45.
Two September polls both show Steele trailing by two percentage points to her Democratic challenger Derek Tran.
Although Tran answered stand with crypto's questionnaire identically to Steele, save for
where he indicated he had experience using crypto himself, where Steele did not,
and where he included a response that, quote,
blockchain technology is essential to economic growth,
where Steele opted not to answer,
he still somehow only earned a B rating to her A.
$1.6 million was spent to support Juan Siscomani,
a Republican incumbent running for re-election in Arizona's District 6,
against the same candidate he narrowly beat in 2022.
Democratic State Senator Kirsten Ingle.
$1.3 million was spent to support David Valadeo,
a Republican incumbent running for re-election in California's District 22,
against Democrat Rudy Salas.
One September poll showed them tied,
while another favored Salas by four points.
And $1 million was spent to support Mike Garcia,
a Republican incumbent running for re-election in California's District 27
against Democrat George Whitesides.
A September poll showed White Sides with a two-point lead.
As with the race between Steele and Tran, Garcia and White Sides both had identically positive responses to the stand with crypto questionnaire, but Garcia has an A rating, while White Sides has a B.
Other recent contributions of less than $1 million by the crypto packs have gone to support Democratic candidates Nikki Banzinski in Illinois's District 13, Jimmy Gomez in California's District 34, Yadira Caraveo in Colorado's District 8, amounting to $2.1 million in total support, and Richie Torres in New York's District 15.
Recent contributions of less than $100,000 have supported Democratic candidates Angie Craig in Minnesota.
2nd District, amounting to $973,500 in total support,
to Eric Sorensen in Illinois' District 17,
amounting to $817,000 in total support,
to Pat Ryan in New York's District 18,
amounting to $2 million in total support,
and to Stephen Horstford in Nevada's District 4,
amounting to $1.8 million in total support.
Meanwhile, Stand with Crypto has published a list of endorsements,
for the upcoming election, with a neatly bipartisan roster of 20 Republicans and 19 Democrats.
They have endorsed seven Senate candidates and 32 House candidates, and have not endorsed any presidential
candidate. After noticing that some of the biggest beneficiaries of the industry's political
spending were conspicuously missing from Stand With Crypto's endorsements list,
I followed a hunch and looked up their chosen candidates in the Hill's prediction model,
which tries to evaluate the likelihood that any given candidate will win their race.
As it turns out, Stand With Crypto is mostly just endorsing candidates who are practically
shoe-ins to win their races. With the Hill assigning 27 of the group's 39 endorsed candidates,
or 69%, a greater than 90% chance of winning their race.
32 of the 39, or 82%, were assigned a 75% chance or more.
Only three endorsed candidates were estimated to have a less than 50% chance of winning,
with John Deaton significantly trailing the pack, with his less than 1% chance of winning
his Massachusetts Senate race against incumbent Elizabeth Warren, despite $2.1 million in crypto industry
backing. In addition, 32 of the 39 endorsed candidates are incumbents, really shaking things up out
there. All of the candidates they're taking a chance on, that is, the nine,
candidates with a 75% or less chance of winning are Republicans. My guess is that stand with
crypto is setting themselves up for a guaranteed post-election victory lap, celebrating that the
majority of their endorsed candidates won their races. I expect a lot of statements along the lines
of, look at all these crypto voters who made their voices heard. In fact, I wonder if they started
drafting them already. I have no doubt that Coinbase is also hoping to see wins by the likes of Bernie
Moreno, Alyssa Slotkin, and Ruben Gallego, who've received millions from the same PAC's
coinbases supported to the tune of around $50 million, and who've all received A ratings from Stand
with Crypto. However, it seems they have probably rightly calculated that any infinitesimal increase
in votes they could muster by having their largely astroturfed lobbying group endorse these riskier
battleground candidates would be less valuable than a later PR campaign trumpeting that
crypto truly is a critical issue to American voters, because look at how many of these endorsed
candidates won their races. Anyway, if those candidates also win, they can always retcon support
for them by pointing to Coinbase's campaign contributions. Elsewhere in crypto,
NFTs have sunk to the lowest they've ever been since their initial boom in early 2021.
Despite this, someone managed to convince the now 85-year-old Christopher Lloyd, who played Doc Brown
in Back to the Future, to partner with Delorean to promote their new, quote, digital collectibles.
As with many of the more contemporary NFT projects, DeLorean seems to be hoping that if they just
don't say the word NFT, people won't cringe at them. If there's one thing crypto fans won't give up on,
it's trying to create their own countries, sovereign communities, sea steds, and other things of that
nature. One such community is the rather uncreatively named libertarian paradise that will be
Liberland, at least if they can convince the Croatian government to stop arresting its supposed
citizens every time they try to visit the roughly 1,700-acre patch of floodlands next to the Danube
that Liberlanders claim is a sovereign state. Croatia apparently disagrees. The project, which has been
almost 10 years in the making, has just announced it is elected none other than Justin's son
as its prime minister via an on-chain election. At least they've since removed the laws section
of the website, which in its very earliest days did no favors to libertarians trying to buck the
stereotype by announcing that the age of consent would be 13. A separate sovereign crypto-nation
project called Praxis has also just announced that it has received another 500,000,000,000
$125 million in funding, despite still having no disclosed physical location.
Much of that funding has come from Gem Digital, a Bahamas-based crypto investment firm.
Personally, I'm hoping that Praxis will announce that it's bringing sea-steading back.
Then we can just cut their mooring line and give them a gentle push out to sea.
Cullen Hoback has published a new documentary on HBO that claims to unmask Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto as early Bitcoin
developer Peter Todd, much to Todd's dismay. Hoback earned some credibility in the unmasking department
with his 2021 HBO documentary series, Q, into the storm, which more convincingly claimed to have
identified Q, the mysterious figure behind the QAnon conspiracy theory. This unmasking is considerably
less convincing, and my suspicion is that it was somewhat shoehorned in to the documentary
later on in the process to try to publicize what is mostly just another Bitcoin documentary.
This is supported somewhat by my own personal experience having been interviewed for this documentary
back in 2022, back when it was being pitched as an inquiry into the origins of crypto compared to
where crypto seemed to be going. As you might expect, given my focuses, the interview didn't really
touch on Bitcoin altogether that much, much less the identity of its creator, and so was not
ultimately included in the final product. I respect Hoback and his work, but this missed the mark,
I think. And I don't just say that because he cut my interview. That happens. The Web 3 is going
just great recap. It's been unusually quiet in the world of hacks and scams with only seven
entries between September 23 and October 16, averaging 0.3 entries per day. 47.29 million
was added to the grift counter. Onyx is hacked a second time with
the same tactics. Onyx, a fork of the popular compound finance project, apparently failed to
patch vulnerabilities that led to a $2 million theft in November 2023. As a fork of compound,
the project did what so many compound forks do, and failed to patch known vulnerabilities
in the underlying source code. Even after suffering that seven-figure loss, the project was just
hacked for a second time, this time for $3.8 million, apparently using
the same technique. Onyx, however, claims the most recent exploit was due to an unrelated vulnerability.
Everything else. A permit fisher stole almost $1.4 million in frog tokens. 3.1 million dollars in
Igen tokens were stolen and sold. A victim lost over $32 million to a wallet drainer. The bedrock
staking platform lost $2 million after a bug allowed users to trade Bitcoin and Ethereum one to one.
Truflation was hacked for around $5 million, and the OpenAI Twitter account was once again
hacked and used to promote a scam token.
Worth a read.
The New Yorker just published an excellent piece on the explosion of money going into politics
from the tech industry, diving heavily into the crypto industry spending against Katie Porter
and in support of various crypto-friendly candidates.
In particular, they give a lot more background on the people working with Fairshake and Stand
crypto, and their attempts to sow the narrative that there is this crypto voter, despite doubts
even from members of Coinbase's own team.
Quote, then we'll make one, responded to political advisor.
It's gratifying to see what I've been yelling about show up in the pages of a major publication.
That article is titled Silicon Valley, The New Lobbying Monster.
While I highly recommend you watch each and every talk from this year's XOXO Festival,
the talk by Cable Sasser was equal parts inspiring and entertaining.
Appreciate everything endlessly.
In the News.
Crypto Outlet D.L. News recently published a profile on me,
focusing in particular on my work around crypto influence on this election cycle.
That article is titled How Molly White Morphed from Neopets Nerd into Crypto's Truth Teller.
I was more than a little surprised to hear from a social media follower that my name cropped up in a
Guardian article about British slang that has entered the American lexicon. Evidently, and this is news
to me, early days is a Britishism. The author points to my January 2022 essay, It's Not Still the Early
Days, when noting that, quote, the phrase is common enough to be viewed as a cliche or an excuse.
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
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