Tech Won't Save Us - FTX Goes to Zero w/ Molly White
Episode Date: December 22, 2022Paris Marx is joined by Molly White to discuss the ongoing collapse of the crypto industry, what to make of the implosion of FTX and Alameda Research, and what happens next with Sam Bankman-Fried.Moll...y White is the creator of Web3 Is Going Just Great and a fellow at the Harvard Library Innovation Lab. You can follow her on Twitter at @molly0xFFF.Tech Won’t Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Follow the podcast (@techwontsaveus) and host Paris Marx (@parismarx) on Twitter, and support the show on Patreon.The podcast is produced by Eric Wickham and part of the Harbinger Media Network.Also mentioned in this episode:Since recording, Sam Bankman-Fried has been extradited from the Bahamas to the United States, and it’s been revealed that Caroline Ellison and FTX co-founder have plead guilty and are cooperating with authorities against Bankman-Fried.Molly has been analyzing the collapse of FTX on her newsletter.Paris wrote about effective altruism and longtermism for the New Statesman.Journalists at Forbes wrote about Caroline Ellison and her history.After Sam Bankman-Fried was arrested, effective altruist Kelsey Piper published a series of direct messages she exchanged with her supposed friend.The Southern District of New York’s attorney’s office, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission have all filed charges against Sam Bankman-Fried.There are rumors that Caroline Ellison is working with authorities against Sam Bankman-Fried.US Justice Department is split on when to charge Binance executives. There are also growing questions about Binance’s books.Support the show
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Discussion (0)
Binance's lawyers basically said that if you do this, it will ruin the crypto industry,
which is kind of hilarious to me.
You know, it's just like, oh, no, don't stop our fraud.
You'll ruin the fraud industry. Hello and welcome to Tech Won't Save Us.
I'm your host, Paris Marks, and this year is clearly winding down. been the ongoing crypto crash as more and more crypto companies and projects have imploded or
exploded, caused, you know, ripple effects across the industry. The prices of some of these tokens
and cryptocurrencies, so to speak, continue to collapse. The NFT market has dried up and all of
the hype of 2021 in that kind of central period of the pandemic has been shown to be absolute bullshit. people at A16Z and these other crypto companies that were just looking to profit by selling people
a false bill of goods based on speculative assets that they could use to pull money from people's
pockets, make profits for themselves, and leave the average person holding the bag at the end of
the day. And no explosion has been more notable, has received more press than the recent scandal involving FTX and its
founder, Sam Bankman-Fried. Now, obviously, this is something that began in November,
and I could have did an episode on it back then. I was on the road, so that didn't work out. But I
think it was also better to let this play out a bit so we could get some more details before really
digging into the meat of it. So this week, my guest is a returning friend of the show,
Molly White, the creator of Web3 is Going Just Great, a website that I'm sure many of you will
be very familiar with as it has chronicled the scams and failures of the crypto industry.
And she's also a fellow at the Harvard Library Innovation Lab. Molly was on earlier this year,
where we already started to discuss the implosion that
was happening in the crypto market as it entered a crypto winter, so to speak. But I thought as
this year is coming to a close and because of all of the fantastic work that Molly has been doing
in digging into the FTX case, in following everything that has been happening, I just had
to have her back on the show to dig into, you know, the broader collapse, but also the specifics of FTX and Sam Bankman
Freed. As you'll see by the runtime of this episode, this is probably the longest episode
that I have ever published. And so for that reason, I am going to keep my introduction short.
I just want to say that I think that this is a really fantastic and in-depth conversation.
We get to many different aspects, not just of the broader crypto collapse and many of these
companies that have imploded over the past year, but we dig specifically into the FTX case in what
happened to cause this company to go into bankruptcy and what we have learned in the
weeks since that has happened as more details
have come out and as Sam Bankman-Fried has seemingly been unable to keep his mouth shut
and has talked to a lot of people to try to frame the narrative around what actually happened here.
Now, before we get started, I just want to note that this interview was recorded on Thursday,
December 15th, so some things may have changed, may have developed in that time period. But I
wanted to chat with Molly after some key hearings in the U.S. Congress discussing the FTX case and
the broader crypto market and potential future regulation. So I hope you enjoy this conversation.
If you do, make sure to leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Make sure to share
it on social media or with any friends or colleagues who you think would learn from the show. And of course, if you want to support the work that goes into
making the show every week so I can have these conversations digging into critical issues
with people like Molly, you can join supporters like Ruth from Ireland, Rodrigo from Chile,
and Mark Schauer in Brooklyn by going to patreon.com slash techwontsaveus and becoming a
supporter. Thanks so much and enjoy this week's conversation.
Molly, welcome back to Tech Won't Save Us.
Thanks for having me.
Of course.
You know, you're the creator of this fantastic website that has chronicled the scams, the
frauds and the decline of the crypto industry over the past couple of years, I guess now.
It's been fantastic to pay attention to that site, to use it as a resource, to see what's going on with the industry. But now, you know, this year, we've obviously been
experiencing kind of a progressive decline of this industry as more and more players have
collapsed, as more and more frauds and scams have been revealed. And of course, you know,
we all turn to your website to get the updates on that. I want to start with a general question
before we get to the obvious FTX
catastrophe that is ongoing. Finally, Sam Bankman-Fried has been shut up, but he said a lot
in the past few weeks before he was arrested. But before we get to that, obviously, we've seen a
number of other companies collapse, a number of other things come to light throughout this year.
What has stood out to you as kind of the main milestones in this collapse of the crypto industry throughout 2022?
That's a great question. I think recently, you know, people have been referring to the FTX
collapse as though it was sort of an isolated incident or, you know, something that has
only just started a big contagion effect. But I think we really need to look back to earlier this year when
Terra Luna collapsed. That was early this spring. And that was a major stablecoin that
completely lost its peg. And the entire ecosystem that it's built upon, Terra, the stablecoin,
and then Luna, which was a different token, plummeted and took down a lot of other projects with it.
That itself kicked off other contagion events earlier this year.
And, you know, there were a handful of bankruptcies that came out of that eventually.
You know, the Celsius and Voyager bankruptcies being the primary ones.
There was the collapse of a huge crypto hedge fund called Three Arrows Capital,
which itself had, you know, been taking loans from basically everybody as far as,
you know, as far as we can tell.
I feel like the boys over at Crypto Critics Corner were really in on the Three Arrows Capital,
paying really close attention to that one.
Yeah, for sure. They did some great reporting on that. Yeah. So with Three Arrows Capital, we saw a bunch of contagion. And, you know, this summer was sort of the lingering
effects of that. And then FTX collapsed. And I don't think you can really separate the FTX
collapse from what happened earlier this year, because it seems like
the bailouts that FTX was doing of companies like BlockFi may have been to sort of boost their own
position. And it looks like Alameda Research, which was a Sam Bankman-freed enterprise,
may have itself been in trouble earlier this year around the time of the three arrows capital blow up. But obviously, we have no, you know, transparency into that. And so we had no idea
until recently when, you know, obviously became clear that FTX had been boosting Alameda research
with the use of customer funds. So I think, you know, you can really trace this back to much
earlier this year. Yeah, it's interesting that you say that as well, right?
Because one of the things that we often hear about the crypto industry from boosters is that,
you know, it's very transparent, much more transparent than the traditional financial
system. So we can see whenever there are, you know, difficulties or problems with any of these
companies. But as you say, you know, if Alameda Research was in trouble earlier this year, we
couldn't really see those sorts of things and many of the other problems with many of these other companies until they really came to light
and kind of blew up. Right. Yeah. I mean, there's this idea that, you know, you can see all these
transactions that are happening on the blockchain, but a lot of what's happening with these large
centralized companies is not really recorded to the chain, or it's in a way that it's really
difficult to actually untangle.
We don't necessarily even know all the wallets that, you know, are connected to FTX, for example.
So you can't just be like, look up all the FTX wallets and see what's coming in and out because
you don't necessarily know whose wallets they are. And then, you know, obviously there are all
these loans that are happening. A lot of this stuff is happening kind of behind the scenes. And so,
you know, it's really difficult to get a sense of how an exchange or any other crypto platform
is actually doing, you know, how many assets it has under control, what its liabilities are.
And that's partly why I think, you know, we really need to be looking for audits for these companies,
because otherwise there's really no way of knowing. Yeah, I guess we'll get some degree of audit on FTX now after everything
has actually collapsed. Yeah, sort of a post-mortem audit, I guess.
Exactly. Yeah, they have that dude who worked on Enron on that bankruptcy who is now like
the CEO of FTX kind of looking into everything that is going on. Yeah, I was shocked that one of
the things he said in his testimony the other day was that, you know, this massive kind of
multi-billion dollar company, it was appraised that I think something like 32 billion, I think
that was the combined of FTX and Alameda, was using QuickBooks like for its accounting practices.
It was like, what? Yeah, but honestly, like QuickBooks is actually maybe better than what
I expected. I just assumed it was a bunch of like post-it notes in the background, but honestly, like QuickBooks is actually maybe better than what I expected.
I just assumed it was a bunch of like post-it notes in the background, you know, with like
random estimates scribbled on them because they had been doing very, very little as far
as accounting and some of the leaked balance sheets that the Financial Times was able to
publish.
It was like napkin math.
I mean, you know, there was just total ballpark estimates happening.
Yeah, and we'll get to some of those balance sheets. But before we move on to FTX and really
dig into all of that, you know, it has been a wild year, right? Like all of last year, basically,
there were all of these narratives that the line was just going to keep going up, Bitcoin was going
to go to a million dollars or whatever. All of these assets were just going to keep growing. It was
like, put your money into it because there's no way that you can lose. And now, you know,
we've seen this general decline in trading volumes, in the values of these crypto assets.
NFTs, of course, have plummeted. You know, you can't even access a lot of NFTs now that were through FTX's platforms because that kind of stuff is like disappeared. You know, and the blockchain was supposed to be how you kind of ensure once you sold something because it was registered on the blockchain and you had the smart contract that then every time it was sold afterward
you could take a piece of that transaction but apparently a lot of the exchanges are kind of
turning off that ability because they need to like get more money because this whole system
has been in collapse so like i guess just what have you made of like, how quickly this all turned this year,
of course, starting November last year really is when the decline began. But also like just some
of the wild things that we saw this year from like the Axie hack to the whole RazzleCon thing to
everything else that is like happened in this space. Yeah, I mean, it's kind of weird that
there was this sort of shared belief that the number would go up forever, because you can look back at the history of Bitcoin and see that that's not true.
Bitcoin advocates, of course, love to pick sort of convenient times on the chart and say, well, if you go back to the very beginning of Bitcoin, when it was worth a dollar, it's obviously only gone up as if people have not bought in to Bitcoin in the last year.
Yeah, I think Ben McKenzie was saying in his testimony yesterday that there was a report
from Genesis, I believe, sometime in 2021 that said 55% of people had bought in last year.
So that means that the vast majority of Bitcoin holders would have lost money or something like
that. Right, exactly. I mean, a lot of the sort of late comers to crypto are in the red because they bought
in at all time highs or, you know, near it.
And then the prices have only come down since then.
So some people are in pretty bad positions at this point.
And they were told that this was a store of value or this was, you know, a way to build
generational wealth. And they're finding that, was a store of value or this was, you know, a way to build generational wealth.
And they're finding that, no, it really wasn't.
And of course, you know, the crypto industry party line is, well, just keep holding.
It'll go back up, you know, as if people don't need access to money at any point.
Yeah.
You know, when you're a Bitcoin whale, it doesn't matter.
You can keep holding like.
Exactly.
You're fine.
If you're Michael Saylor, don't worry.
You could, you know, maybe, maybe he'll be forced to stop holding at some point, but yeah.
Right. So, but I think what we've really seen over the past year is what happens when the number
doesn't keep going up because it wasn't just individual, you know, retail buyers who are
discovering the hard way that the number comes down sometimes.
But a lot of these projects were basically predicated on the idea that the Bitcoin prices or crypto prices in general would sort of always trend upwards.
And that's partly sort of what led to the initial decline in the Terra Luna project,
for example, is we saw hits to crypto prices earlier this year, especially with inflation in the US and
the decline of the US stock market and just sort of a general economic retraction.
That was reflected in the crypto prices, despite the general argument that crypto is supposed to be
a hedge against inflation or it's supposed to be separate from stock market trends.
That is very much not the case, as we've seen over the past year. And so when the crypto prices began to decline,
Terra Luna also found itself in kind of a difficult position. And, you know, the Terra
stable coin eventually lost its peg. Luna came crashing down. And then we sort of saw this
very long protracted domino effect
throughout the rest of the year.
And it's just interesting that, you know, these crypto projects themselves were based
on this idea.
But I think it's also somewhat telling because I think all of the crypto industry really
is predicated on the idea that there will always be new buyers.
There will always be more money flowing into the system.
And as soon as that
begins to change, we see just devastating impacts. Yeah, no, very well put. And, you know, the other
key thing to note about that, whether it's with the Terra Luna collapse or whether it's with the
FTX collapse that we're seeing now, is that there are a whole ton of people who were sold a false
bill of goods around what crypto was and
what it would deliver to them that are now being affected as these projects go under, right? Like
there were stories when Terra Luna collapsed earlier this year, particularly out of South
Korea, about what that meant for the people who are being impacted, who are losing a lot of money,
people going to places that were known as kind of suicide hotspots, searches for
information about suicide kind of skyrocketing. And these are the sorts of things that we're
seeing when these things happen, when people have been told that they should just put their money
into these projects, the money will keep going up, they won't lose their money. It's the way for them
to build wealth, then that all collapses, they lose all their their money and they're left like with nothing especially in
this economy in this society that leaves people that like you know doesn't have very much security
kind of built in for people so when you lose that little bit of a cushion that you've been able to
build up despite all of the kind of difficulties in even doing something like that then really
you're you're left very hopeless, right? And these people who
are at the top of this industry, who are at the top of these companies, really preyed on that
kind of vulnerability that a lot of people had to profit for themselves. And now a lot of those
people, I believe it's over a million in the case of FTX, are really left in a difficult situation.
Right. I think that's something that is really important to notice about the recent failures or the failures over the last year.
People will broadly talk about the crypto industry as volatile, it's risky, and that's very true.
But a lot of the projects that collapsed in the past year were the projects that were promising
people that they were the safe alternatives. So the Terraluna
stablecoin project was a stablecoin. The idea was that you were not going to be exposed to
the volatility in assets like Bitcoin if you put your money into a stablecoin because it's
pegged to the US dollar. And so you sort of retain that stable value. And people were often
putting their assets into that stablecoin and then using sort of yield farming to try to earn
returns that they might not be able to get in the traditional financial system. Of course,
it turned out to be kind of a Ponzi scheme, but, you know, people were very much, you know,
enticed by promises of like 19 or 20% returns for just holding a stable coin. I mean, how could you
not be? And then we saw the collapses of Celsius and Voyager this summer, and those were projects that were describing themselves like banks. Celsius, their CEO, would tell customers
that, you know, you can't trust regular banks, but you can trust us. We're safer than, you know,
traditional banks and registered financial institutions. In the case of Voyager, they
were suggesting that they were FDIC insured as though they were a real, you know, bank with insurance and that would be protected from a collapse.
And then with FTX, they had these big commercials at football games, the Super Bowl, that they were referring to themselves as the safe wanted to get into crypto, didn't want to be speculating on, you know,
Dogecoin and these meme coins and all these moonshots that people sort of think of when they
think of the crypto industry. There was actually sort of a separate group of people who were
looking for the returns, but understood to some extent that crypto was risky. And so they tried
to find sort of this safer way of putting money into the
system. And they ended up getting burned really badly. And I think, you know, something that
really offered a lot of insight into the types of people who were doing this was the letters to the
judge and the Celsius and the Voyager bankruptcies. We saw individual customers writing in and saying
that they had put their money into this project. You know, they believed it was as safe as a bank account. They were, a lot of them were just holding on to,
in some cases, it was stable coins like Tether or USDC. In some cases, they were holding often
like major cryptos like Bitcoin or Ethereum. And they had no idea that maybe they would just lose
access to that. They thought it was like their bank account. And they thought maybe, you know, if they were holding Bitcoin, of course, maybe the
Bitcoin price would go up or down.
But they didn't expect that they might just not be able to access the assets at all.
And some of these people were, you know, retirees or single parents or people who are supporting
family members with medical issues.
It was not, you know, the crypto moon boy stereotype of someone
who was taking extra money, but that they probably weren't relying on and hoping to make a outsized
return with it. It was it was money that they could not afford to lose. Yeah, it's such an
important point, right. And just to be clear, when you're talking about FDIC insurance, you know,
this is the insurance that people have when they set up
a bank account, right? That's what it's called in the US and other countries would be called
something else. But basically, it ensures that if the bank goes under up to a certain amount of
money, the government will give you your money back, right? You're protected in that case,
that does not exist for the crypto industry. But some of these crypto companies were suggesting
that something equivalent did exist if you put your money in there into their company,
right? And as you're talking about with FTX, from what I have read and heard in kind of keeping up
with this, FTX was considered one of those platforms that was trustworthy, right? You know,
there might have been these other ones that were more risky, but FTX was put together well, it was,
you know, somewhere where you could trust to put your money. It wasn't going to collapse like some of these other companies. And then when it actually went under, I think it was a really big shock to some of these people who were really kind of promoting crypto as something you could trust and as FTX as kind of the legitimate place where you could go to kind of make your crypto investments, hold your crypto and stuff like that. Because as we know, even though there's this narrative around decentralization, and you
know, you can have your own wallet and stuff like that, most people who are engaging with this
crypto are going to be using centralized exchanges and things like that in order to make these
transactions and to store their crypto and whatnot. And so FTX was seen as like a reliable, safe place
to do those sorts of things. And then when that collapses, I think that really sucks a lot of what trust or what something, how could it possibly be a fraud? How is that even possible? And so, yeah, people absolutely saw FTX as one of the legit crypto companies.
And they may have realized that a lot of crypto companies are not legit, but they saw FTX
as one that they could trust.
And that clearly did not turn out to be the case.
Absolutely.
Now, let's dig into this larger FTX collapse, right?
Where would you put the beginning moment of this whole saga?
So I usually mark the beginning at the Coindesk publication of an Alameda balance sheet.
So Coindesk got access to a balance sheet from Alameda that showed that a lot of their assets
were actually the FTT token, which is the token that FTX itself issues. And so people started to realize that a lot of the
supposed value that this company was built upon was closely, closely tied to its sister company,
FTX. And it had been no secret that those two companies were very closely tied. They're both
led by Sam Bankman-Fried, who retains ownership in both companies.
He's claimed over the past year or two to have stepped away a little bit from Alameda and given
control over to Caroline Ellison, who is the CEO. But I don't think anyone actually really
believed that. He was always pretty closely involved in Alameda. And so the discovery of this enormous relationship and reliance between
the two companies really started to concern some people. And then shortly after that, there was
a tweet by CZ, who is the CEO of Binance, which is the largest crypto exchange in the world, and obviously a huge competitor to FTX.
And CZ basically said that they were going to be dumping the FTT tokens that they held. And so
Binance had invested in FTX a while ago, and FTX ultimately ended up buying them out
of that investment, largely because they realized that they were not going to be able to get regulatory approval for something that they wanted if they had Binance listed as an investor, because Binance is so shady about, you know, it's really cagey about like, where is it even located?
You know, so they ended up buying them out for that reason. And so when CZ threatened basically to dump a huge number of
FTT tokens on the market, which people realized that that meant that the FTT token would lose
value and that FTX and Alameda might suddenly be on shaky ground, people started getting nervous.
And so they withdrew assets from FTX and people who held the FTT token started
selling it off, realizing that the value might go down. And it started this sort of death spiral for
FTX where there was this huge, I mean, people say run on the bank. It wasn't a bank. So I guess run
on the exchange maybe where people were withdrawing, I mean, it was billions of dollars
in like a day or two days or something like that. And when FTX did not have sufficient assets to
cover those withdrawals, things went south. As you'd expect, right? It's fascinating to see
how, you know, the revelation of these kind of internal documents really revealed the fundamental
flaws in the accounting or in the holdings of this company and allowed it so quickly to be kind of
taken apart and kind of driven down by Binance in particular, by threatening to sell these tokens.
I believe there was a tweet by Carolyn Ellison around that time as well saying like, yeah, sell them like it won't make any difference to us or something like that.
Clearly, that was not the case. It was a bluff, right?
Right. And it's interesting, you see that practically every time something like this
happens, you see executives coming out and being very confident about the state of the world.
Carolyn Ellison said, you know, sure, sell them. We'll buy them from you if you want. Obviously,
they would not have been able to do that. We saw Sam Bankman-Fried himself make a tweet at one
point saying FTX is fine. We've got all these assets. No worries. Deleted that one a little
bit later. But it's really because the whole system is based on belief. And that was what
kept FTX and Alameda afloat for months and months and
months when it was clearly based on a house of cards. But because people didn't realize that
it was all denominated in FTT or it was enormously denominated in FTT, they didn't question the value
of that too much. Things were able to keep going for a very long time. It reminds me a lot of like when
Wile E. Coyote runs off the cliff and he's just like running along in midair and then he looks
down and suddenly he plummets off the cliff. And that's sort of what happened here is like
suddenly people realized that this whole thing was not, there was no ground under it. And so
then everything fell apart. Wild, wild. And so, you know,
these documents come out on November 2nd, you know, when Coindesk publishes them,
then obviously Binance is the one that really kind of precipitates the push to cause these
companies to collapse basically by threatening to sell these tokens and then causing the
quote unquote bank run or exchange run or
whatever you want to call it, where everyone is kind of taking their money out of FTX because
they see how fundamentally flawed it is and how it's probably going to go under. And so then
Binance kind of, for a little while, seems like it's going to buy FTX and then kind of pulls out
of that. Can you talk us through what went on there?
Yeah. So Binance, there was a sudden change where first Sam McPinfrade was saying,
we're fine. Don't worry about it. Suggesting maybe that CZ was trying to sabotage FTX.
And then the next day he says, all right, Binance is going to buy us. Everything's going to be
great. He is a little bit apologetic, obviously, that things were falling apart.
But he's like, thank you, Binance, for all of this.
And withdrawals from FTX are frozen around this time as well, right?
Yes, I think they were frozen before the Binance announcement.
But I don't fully remember that off the top of my head.
And yeah, and CZ put out a tweet to confirming that Binance was planning to acquire FTX. I remember noticing at the time that he was very cagey in the language. You know, he said that
it was a non-binding letter of intent, that it was all contingent on due diligence. And I was like,
that doesn't seem great. And sure enough, like a day later, Suzy announced, sorry, we're not going to do this. We looked into the financials.
It's just not going to work. I was really skeptical that Suzy ever actually intended
to go through with the purchase. You know, I think it was great marketing for Binance to be able to
say that like, oh, we're the big boy in the crypto exchange
world. We can just buy out this huge crypto exchange. No problem. We'll save the world.
We're the good guys. And then, you know, backing out of it had no real downside for them. You know,
they could say that, oh, we did our due diligence. You know, we're responsible enough to determine
that this has too much risk. It was pretty much free marketing for Binance.
So I'm pretty skeptical of that whole thing.
But it felt pretty cruel, I think, to the actual customers who were like, oh, great,
everything's going to be fine.
I can get my money out.
And then a day later, sure enough, they were back where they were.
Yeah, it must be good for Binance, though.
You know, you say Binance is this quite shady company, but is also the largest crypto exchange in the world. FTX, I believe, was the second largest. Is that correct?
It was, yeah, at the time. competitor, you know, have these revelations made about it, be able to kind of help take them down,
to pretend to be helping them out and then be like, oh, you know, actually, sorry, we couldn't
follow through on this because everything was just so bad, we couldn't do it. That must set Binance
up to, again, promoters talk about crypto being this kind of decentralized place where power is
everywhere, you know, it's against centralization. But now Binance takes
this even larger role, it seems, within the crypto industry. Right. I think that is true to some
extent that Binance definitely benefited here. You know, they are seen as the remaining giants
crypto exchange. But I think also it's worth noting that this collapse does hurt Binance as well. So there were some people,
there definitely still are people who believe that CZ sort of was Machiavelli here masterminding
this whole scheme to bring down FTX. And who knows, maybe he is. It definitely seems like
there would have been a lot of damage to Binance. And I don't know if CZ would have chosen to make that play.
If he is Machiavelli and he is five steps ahead of everyone, then presumably he would
have also been able to predict the damage to Binance by basically crashing crypto prices,
reducing overall trust in the crypto industry.
Binance now has been experiencing enormous withdrawals, partly, I think, just due to
the concern about centralized exchanges in general, partly also due to some concerns about
Binance. So I think I have some skepticism around the idea that CZ was sort of pulling all the
strings here. And Sam Bankman-Fried has absolutely been trying to pin a lot of this on
CZ, I think, although he has come short of explicitly saying it, but he has strongly
implied it, that CZ basically was the demise of FTX. And I think that's very convenient for Sam
Bankman-Fried. It helps him offload a lot of the responsibility that he clearly has for the
clear fraud that was happening by saying
that, oh, it was a competitor, it was sabotage, it wasn't me. It had nothing to do with all these
customer funds that I was siphoning off to my hedge fund. And we can't really know what would
happen in an alternate universe where the Coindesk report was published, but CZ never made the tweet
about selling off all his FTT tokens. My suspicion
is that things may not have just continued to be hunky dory, like Sam Bankman-Fried seems to think.
Yeah, no, of course. And so, you know, the Coindesk leak is November 2nd. The Binance
offer to buy FTX or the letter saying that they were going to is November 8th.
That all falls apart within a day. And I believe it's November 10th that FTX finally enters kind of bankruptcy or liquidation, right? So this
is, you know, a series of events that happens really quickly. What have we learned in the time
since then, or, you know, even as that was happening, what have we learned about what FTX
was actually doing that caused this whole collapse to effectively happen? So ultimately, a lot of customer funds that were deposited into FTX were being
transferred to Alameda for them to be using in their trading activities.
And that is like the cardinal sin of an exchange.
You know, when you're in a crypto exchange, especially if your customers are just holding
balances on the exchange and they're not doing margin trading, they're not involved in those
sort of risky bets, but they're just swapping assets around or holding balances, the crypto
exchange is supposed to have those assets stored somewhere so that if you have a Bitcoin represented
in your FTX wallet, that at any point
you can just go and say, I want my Bitcoin back and they can hand it to you. And I believe in
FTX's own terms of service, it said that they would hold people's assets. They are not transfer
them anywhere, right? Absolutely. They said that your assets are not going to be used for trading.
We're not going to lend them out, nothing like that. We're just going to hang on to them. And
people were like, awesome, sounds great. But sure enough, behind the scenes, there was this basically unlimited line of credit open to Al, it looks like at this point. And in addition to
that, there were billions of dollars in personal loans being made to executives at the group of
companies, including Sam Bankman Freed himself, but also a couple of other top names there.
And they're still sort of unwinding what happened with the money that was loaned.
Some of it was used for real estate in the Bahamas, like $100 million plus worth of real estate in the Bahamas was purchased with this
money. But now it's also looking like these loans were sort of a way for the money to be laundered,
to be used in various investments where there was very little diligence done. These were
investments with very little or no valuation estimates being made.
There was no pro forma.
And so a lot of these investments were hugely overvalued.
And then also, some of these loans were being used to make political donations and to obfuscate
the source of those donations to make it appear as though they were coming from specific individuals rather
than one individual or the company in violation of campaign finance regulations.
Right. And, you know, there's been a big focus since this has all gone down, you know, by people
like Elon Musk, for example, about how Sam Bankman Free was donating to Democrats. And so, you know,
the Democrats won't be investigating him. Of course, he's now been arrested and he's clearly being investigated. But what has also
come out is that Sam Bankman-Fried said, yeah, he was also giving a ton of money to Republicans.
He was just doing it through dark money channels so that it was kind of hidden away because you
get a better kind of public reputation if you're giving money to Democrats and you kind of hide the
Republican funds and kind of where that is going. To you, you know, as you're giving money to Democrats and you kind of hide the Republican funds and kind of where
that is going. To you, you know, as you're watching this, one of the stories that I read as well
was that Alameda Research, obviously, we have had all this reporting over the past couple years about
how crypto was going to keep inflating, how the line was going to keep going up, how you could
make all this money. The story that I read suggested that Alameda Research was actually losing money on a lot of its trades. Like it seemed like it wasn't
doing a very good job of choosing where to kind of put this money from what you have been learning
as you've been looking into this company and what has been being revealed about it. Does it seem
like there was kind of maliciousness with these people? Does it seem like they were just like
quite inept in running these major companies? Like what's your kind of takeness with these people? Does it seem like they were just like quite inept in
running these major companies? Like what's your kind of take on the people who are at the top here?
Yeah, it's a great question because Alameda, you know, from what we're beginning to see,
it was looking like Alameda Research was losing money at a time where it was really hard to lose
money. You know, like it was during the crypto bull run where prices were going through
the roof. These various hedge funds that were making these same sort of risky leverage trades
were just making out like bandits. And Alameda Research was sort of inexplicably losing money.
And so the question really now is like, OK, so were they just really bad at trading? Or was there some benefit that was happening? They were
basically taking the bad side of a trade for somebody else's benefit. I don't think we know
at this point what was happening there and why that was all happening. But it's definitely a
good question because that should not have been happening pretty much. Losing money earlier this spring,
everyone was losing money, and especially the trading firms that were involved in these really leveraged trades, they all blew up. We saw it earlier with Three Arrows Capital, and there
were a handful of others. So the fact that Alameda didn't blow up at that time was also a little bit
strange. Like, well, they're doing the same kinds of trades as these other hedge funds that just totally went under. Why are they still fine? And why are they,
in fact, lending money out and trying to, you know, keep afloat other crypto lending platforms
and things like that? I think we've we got our answer to that question now with the FTX bailout
coming to light. But yeah, I mean, I think the question really is, you know,
what was happening there? Why were they losing money? Why were they evidently making these
really questionable trades, especially when these were, you know, people who were supposed to be
fairly qualified traders, both Sam Bankman Freed and Caroline Ellison have backgrounds on
Jane Street, they were sort of traditional traders before they went into crypto. And
they were young, obviously, and they didn't have a ton of crypto experience before they
jumped into crypto.
But I don't think they were dumb, you know, even though Sam Bankman Freed seems to sort
of be trying to go with that story these days.
Yeah, I want to talk a bit about Sam Bankman Freed and Carolyn Ellison.
But before we do that, is there anything else in this kind of early period of this collapse before Sam Bankman-Fried
gets arrested that we haven't touched on that you think is important for listeners to know about
this whole case, I guess? I think the biggest thing to point out, and this might be something
that we would touch upon, is Sam Bankman-Fried's claims around being uninvolved with Alameda.
That's something he's been really heavily relying upon recently,
is that he had no idea what was going on at Alameda.
All of those loans that were happening to individuals,
he was like, oh, boy, that's weird.
I didn't know about that.
This chat group we had called Wire Fraud, I knew nothing about that.
Right. Yeah, exactly.
He didn't think that existed.
He's like, I certainly wasn't a part of it.
You know, now it's coming out that the loans had his name on them. So probably, you know,
you had some idea what was happening there. Initially, he was claiming that the funds that were being transferred to Alameda were sort of this legacy system. And it was just a bad accounting
problem. They had lost track of a bank account that had $8 billion in it
as though it was just like change that you've lost in your couch cushions.
So I think, you know, it's really important to sort of notice
that he's been trying to sort of claim that he had no idea what was going on
and, you know, just something to keep in mind
when we sort of talk about what he was directly involved in.
It'd be all right to, you know, root around in the in the couch cushions and pull out a few
billion dollars. Yeah, who among us has not found a billion dollars in the pocket of the winter coat
that you pull out after it's been in storage for the summer? Yeah, all the time, all the time.
So I want to talk about these people. Maybe we should have talked about them
earlier. But I feel like people have been kind of fascinated as more information has come out
about these folks over the past month or so, you know, as things have been revealed about them,
some of them kind of sensational. And like, you know, those are the things that people just love
to grab onto. But also, like, I don't know, they seem like very weird people. So who is Sam Bankman-Fried
and who is Carolyn Ellison? And what are some of the key details that we know about these people
that are important to know? Sam Bankman-Fried is, he's about 30 years old, so he's pretty young
as far as all these things go. He graduated from MIT and people sort of view him as this boy genius, pretty smart guy,
definitely portrayed the disheveled nerd persona pretty strongly. You know, he always had sort of
untidy hair. He wore shorts all the time. There were all these stories about how he slept in
beanbag chairs in the office and didn't really have an apartment that he stayed in.
Yeah, let's just forget about the massive compound he had in. Yeah, as though he didn't have this huge luxury penthouse in the Bahamas
that people definitely knew about, but they were just, I guess, ignoring because of the beanbag
chair next to his desk. Makes me think about the stories like Elon Musk lives in this like really
cheap, shitty house. And it's like, but he's staying in his friend's big mansion as well. Like, what are you talking about? Right. I know. Yeah. You know, after graduating from MIT,
Sam Bankman Freed went to Jane Street and spent a couple years trading there and then ultimately
decided to leave to start Alameda Research. And he brought along with him Caroline Ellison,
who was also at Jane Street. She also came from sort of a prestigious
university background. I think she went to Stanford.
Ah, those Stanford alums.
Yes, I know.
Apologies to the listeners who went to Stanford.
You must know the reputation your university has.
Yeah, I mean, you can't really avoid the fact that some not so great people went to Stanford.
Although I guess some not so great people went to Stanford. Although I guess some not so great
people went to all kinds of universities. Totally, totally. But we're talking about tech here.
Yes, exactly. Storied history there. So they joined forces, they started Alameda Research,
and then a couple years later, they started FTX. They were both effective altruists. So they had adopted this idea that is kind of popular among some circles, I guess, in Silicon Valley, where the idea was that you should try to make
as much money as possible, basically by any means possible, because then you can take that money
eventually and donate it to the most effective charities and various initiatives to make
everyone's lives better. The idea being that you are somehow more qualified to
choose those charities than the people who otherwise might have held on to the money that
you have now acquired for yourself. Yeah, this is called earn to give, of course.
Right. Yes. And so that was definitely a major part of their backstory, I think. And it's
something that is important to hold on to. And it became a major part of their backstory, I think. And it's something that is important to
hold on to. And it became a major part of Sam Bankman Freed's sort of personal branding as well.
So he would, you know, there were all these sort of glowing profiles on him as he began to become
more prominent as a figure. The media was very interested in him as someone who was, you know,
a young billionaire, obviously. But also because he began to make large political contributions.
He was donating to various causes involving pandemic prevention and things like that.
And, you know, it was a very interesting story of this guy who is making billions and then giving it all away.
And, you know, it was sort of this fun profile to write,
I think. Now, you know, with the benefit of hindsight and with some statements of his own,
it definitely seems like that was an intentional play on his part to really talk up the personal
altruism and benevolence to try to earn a reputation that was quite positive.
It's fascinating.
Obviously, I spoke to Emil Torres about effective altruism recently as well.
So if listeners wanna learn a bit more about that,
they can go back to that episode.
But one piece of that kind of history
that Sam Bankman Freed has is that apparently early on,
he was kind of motivated by these ideas
of effective altruism and was really focused on animal abuse and wanting to
help animals. Of course, he's known to be a vegan. His family is now trying to get vegan meals into
the prison in the Bahamas for him. And we'll see if that'll happen. But anyway, so early on when
he was trying to figure out what he was going to do, he had a meeting with William McCaskill.
William McCaskill is one of these people who really is a big promoter of effective altruism, long-termism in particular. He wrote a book called What We Owe the Future
recently, which Emile and I talked about on that podcast episode that we did. And apparently in
this meeting that he had with Sam Bankman-Fried, where they kind of had these discussions,
he steered Sam Bankman-Fried away from working on animal activism toward Earn to Give, saying,
you know, if you just work on this stuff around animals, you're not going to make the type of
impact that you could make if you went into finance or some other kind of high paying industry,
sure, did some shitty stuff, but made a lot of money so that then you can direct kind of the
flow of that money to address these causes that you care about, right?
Because this was a moment when earn to give was really kind of popular, really was the thing that
they were really pushing, right? They would, of course, argue that right now, they have learned
that earn to give is not as good of a thing to do. They don't promote it as much. This is the type of
thing that they say. It's fascinating to me that in McCaskill's book, when he's actually recommending,
you know, the types of things that people can do to make a difference in the world,
everything is kind of oriented around how you can further promote the idea of long-termism
or effective altruism or whatever. You know, Sam Bankman-Fried was really motivated by these ideas.
There was this particular figure who pushed him in this direction, which led him to work at Jane
Street, later found Alameda Research, FTX, move in
this whole direction, where he's basically building Ponzi's to make a lot of money off of regular
people, so that then he can direct them to these causes that he says he cares about. And just a
final point on this is to say that the effective altruists right now are kind of working overtime,
you know, to kind of clean up the image of effective altruism, because it's been so tarnished
by everything that's happening with Sam Bankman Freed right now. And they really want you to
believe that Sam Bankman Freed was not really an effective altruist, right? Was really not buying
into these sorts of things to say, you know, effective altruism is still good. It was just
Sam Bankman Freed. That was bad. But actually, I think that we should be looking really deeply at
effective altruism as well and how it really promotes this idea that,
you know, billionaires and really rich people are okay, as long as they donate their money in a way
that is effective and doing good things in the world, right? So it's really about kind of
maintaining this existing power structure. No, I think I mean, I think that's a really
important point. And there are actually a lot of these people in crypto specifically,
who have basically decided that it's fine for them to become just like disgustingly
wealthy because they're going to probably at some point maybe donate all of their money or a
substantial amount of their money to charitable causes. Many of them have done very few donations
to date, you know, and you just sort of have to take them at their word that they will eventually
at some point make these donations. But I think it's really worth pointing out that this is not like just Sam Bankman Freed, the weird guy who is big into
charity. Like this is a very common talking point in crypto, although not all of them go into,
you know, as deeply into effective altruism. It's just sort of their way of explaining why
they have billions of dollars just kicking around, or at least on paper. The other thing I would say is that the point
about effective altruists trying to sort of distance themselves from Sam Bankman Freed,
say that he wasn't really an effective altruist is definitely a key point to notice. And it's
something that we're seeing in the crypto industry also, where it's sort of the no true Scotsman
thing. It's like, oh, well, he's not really an effective altruist. He's not really a crypto guy. You know, FTX wasn't crypto. It's very convenient
for them to be able to say this isn't our problem. This is just one guy. We're seeing a lot of these
like, oh, he's just a bad apple, you know, type of claims being made as though this isn't like
the millionth crypto explosion that we've seen
this year. So it's just something to notice is just that like the idea that he was just one
particularly fraudulent dude is maybe worth questioning. Yeah, no, of course. And Kelsey
Piper at Vox, of course, has been has been pushing this narrative a lot. Did an interview where she
went right into Sam Bankman Freed's DMs and was like, she posted screenshots of this conversation. And like,
it did appear kind of very much like two friends talking where she was even responding with emojis
to his like, responses. And then she published this as a story. And he kind of came out and said,
I didn't know that this was going to be a story. I thought I was just like kind of talking to someone that I knew felt a little like, yes, okay, you know, no kind of empathy
for Sam Bankman Freed here, but it did feel a little kind of not cool.
Yeah, I mean, I do sort of question Sam's judgment there, because he was talking to
someone he knew was a journalist, and he had given interviews to her in the past.
But yeah, I mean, he definitely was talking.
He was clearly talking in a very unguarded way.
And I think, I mean, Kelsey Piper, I think, is an effective altruist herself, right?
And so, you know, it definitely came off as a little bit self-serving to be able to
publish these DMs where, you know, he was claiming that, oh, it was all just an act.
I'm not really as into effective altruism as,
you know, I claimed to be. It was just for press. Because then, you know, the effective altruist
could say, look at these, you know, he was just using our good name. And look what he's done.
And of course, Kelsey Piper is an effective altruist who has been involved in effective
altruism for a long time, who kind of runs this effective
altruist vertical at Vox, explicitly effective altruist, and that was even going to get a grant
from Sam Bankman Freed's foundation starting next year, that of course is not going to happen
anymore because he doesn't have the money to provide. You know, Carolyn Ellison, I feel like
we don't need to talk so much about her. There was this story that was published in Forbes, I believe, that really kind of went into some of her history, basically saying that, you know, she really liked Harry Potter. She was into polyamory and, you know, kind of dabbled in race science as well. Like, you know, just to give...
Just a little light race science. there, right? But, you know, since this all happened, Sam Bankman Freed hasn't been able to shut up, as we were saying, until very recently when he was finally arrested. You know, you even
got to ask him some questions on a Twitter space recently. What did you make of the narrative that
he was trying to spin about all of this in all of the interviews that he was doing?
He was very much trying to portray that he was just so torn apart by all that happened. He wanted nothing
more in the world than to make right by his customers. And he was going to do that by any
means possible. He was trying to claim that he had been shut out from FTX's systems. And
not only that, but they had some, you know, he couldn't even get access to some of his own bank accounts or his own like online accounts.
And that was just so mean of them.
And if only he had access to all this data, then he could tell you exactly what happened at FTX and he could explain it all.
You know, this is very much the story he was telling.
And he was saying, oh, I fucked up. You know, I clearly wasn't as on top of what was happening at FTX as I should have been and at Alameda as I should have been. He kept saying that I became less grounded. And he started talking about how he would, you know, go to Washington and speak to policymakers. He was looking at the long-term future of FTX rather than the day-to-day operations. And so he just lost track of
what was happening at the company. All of this, I think, is hard to believe. You know, there
was clear involvement from FTX or from SBF directly in a lot of the things that were happening.
You know, he was very involved in the day-to-day operations
of FTX and of Alameda. You know, he was the CEO. He clearly should have had knowledge of what was
happening and did. You know, he set up these companies and was the one who implemented some
of the systems that led to the frauds that were happening. But, you know, it was very much in his
interest to try to spin this narrative that it was just a big oops and, you know, it was very much in his interest to try to spin this narrative
that it was just a big oops. And, you know, he is so very sorry. And if you would just let him try
again, it might go better. Despite the fact that he was at a glance talking to anyone and everyone
that would listen, he was actually sort of carefully dodging some people. So he started out,
you know, he talked to Kelsey Piper in those DMs.
Then he was doing Twitter spaces and talking to various crypto personalities in these sort of
online spaces. He did some interviews with some pretty big interviews. He went on like
Good Morning America. He did New York Times deal book. And so he was speaking to people,
but he was sort of carefully choosing, I think, interviewers who could ask questions and who appeared to be, you know, fairly competent. It's not like he was only
going to the most friendly people he could find, although he was going to some friendly people.
But he was sort of dodging industry experts, people who could really understand some of,
you know, really trace some of the very circuitous answers
that he gives on things and say, wait a second, that's not quite right. Who really understood
things like derivatives exchanges. And so he was able to sort of give these really long,
rambling, complicated responses to what should have been very simple questions and make it sound
like, A, he's a very smart guy who can speak in all this jargon.
And, you know, he's just league smarter than you are, of course.
But also be, you know, that he had no idea what's going on.
And so, you know, when it came to interviews with Coindesk, for example, I think he was dodging in some of these Twitter spaces.
He would get sort of ambushed by various experts.
There's a researcher named Coffeezilla.
That's his pseudonym, of course.
And Coffeezilla ambushed him three times on different Twitter spaces.
That way.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like three different Twitter spaces.
Coffeezilla was like, it's me again, and would ask great questions.
So Sam Bankman freed and did get him to admit some things that he probably should not have admitted in recorded conversations.
And by the end of it, by the third one, Sam Bankman Freed actually got pretty angry at Coffee Zilla and was like, you're grandstanding, you're taking up too much time, as though he had not just spent hours talking to individuals other than him. But so it was a very careful play, I think,
on his part to sort of avoid talking to people who might actually be able to really pick out
the details and also identify when he was going into bullshit territory. He was also dodging
anyone in sort of an official capacity. So he was asked to testify in front of the House
at a hearing that happened earlier this week. He was also asked to testify in front of the House at a hearing that happened
earlier this week. He was also asked to testify in front of the Senate at a different hearing this
week. And he initially dodged the House hearing. He throughout declined to go to the Senate hearing.
Ultimately, he did eventually agree to testify in front of the House. That never actually came
to be because he was arrested the night before he was supposed to testify. front of the House. That never actually came to be because he was arrested the
night before he was supposed to testify. And so he was in a Bahamian jail at the time of the House
hearing. I'm sure they could have brought in a little, you know, laptop and some internet to let
him. Yeah, that's what I thought. And actually, some of those rooms, you know. Yeah. Some of the
Congress people were actually quite annoyed that he had been arrested because, you know? Yeah. Some of the Congress people were actually quite annoyed that he had been
arrested because, you know, having him testify for hours under oath in front of Congress is kind of
like a dream. And you would think that prosecutors might be very interested in that. But anyway,
all that to say, Sam Eggman Freed was clearly on sort of a media tour to try to burnish his
reputation a little bit, at least in the public eye. And so, you know,
I think a lot of these interviews really need to be taken with a grain of salt because he was
saying things throughout that were very self-serving and may have been just complete lies.
Yeah. There was a headline in Vice's motherboard that I thought really captured it for me.
And they wrote, Sam Bankman Freed is trying to find the guy who did this,
you know, as though he is not the guy who did this. I don't know who writes the headlines over
at Vice Motherboard, but they are some of the funniest headlines. They're so good.
They're fantastic. Yeah. So as you said, you know, Sam Bankman Freed has obviously been
arrested now. He is in a Bahamanian jail. At least as we record this when it goes live,
maybe something else will have happened. You know, the U.S. Court in New York Southern District
has filed charges against him. I believe that the SEC is also planning to file charges against him.
The SEC and the CFTC both filed charges yesterday, actually. Yes.
Oh, OK, cool. Thanks for the update. I'll include a link in the show notes where people can learn more about that. What do you make of the charges that have been filed? And where do you think this goes next? You know, Sam Banker Freed is being held in the Bahamas. Obviously, the US will seek to extradite him. They were sort of the standard slate of crypto crime charges
in the sense that there was wire fraud, there was money laundering. Those typically are what you see
when people do big crypto crimes. But there was also charges around campaign finance that you
would not necessarily see. And I think those will be interesting to follow. I'll be very curious to
see what happens there. And then we saw charges
come out of the SEC and the CFTC. So the SEC was mostly looking at how he had lied to institutional
investors around the operations at FTX and Alameda. The CFTC went a little more into the harm to
consumers and what he was doing with consumer funds. They published, I think their complaint is like 40 pages long and it is very detailed.
Yeah, so anyway, you know, so there's criminal charges from the U.S. attorney
and then there's civil charges from the SEC and the CFTC.
Both the Southern District of New York and the SEC have heavily implied
that these are not the only charges that they plan to bring
and not necessarily the only person
they intend to charge. So I think that will be really interesting to follow. As far as the
extradition question, so Sam Bing McBread is currently, as of recording at least, in a
Bahamian jail. He and his lawyers requested that he be released on bail. They were like, yeah,
just $250,000 cash bail and an ankle monitor,
and he will absolutely not go anywhere. They basically argued that because he had not yet
run from the authorities, then he would not run, which I think maybe is a little bit hard to
believe given that just before he was arrested, he said he didn't think he was going to be arrested.
So like, why would he even bother running at that point? Although you have to take him at his word that he truly didn't think about that possibility. Didn't he say that
to you directly? Yes, he did. Yeah, in one of the Twitter spaces, I was trying to get from him why
he was refusing to go to the Senate hearing and why he would not appear in person in front of the
House. He was planning to appear virtually. And he, of course, gave this long
answer about how they need me here in the Bahamas, even though he's not active at FTX. He has no
access to the systems there. And the current executives at FTX are not even speaking to him.
Like he is not involved at all. So I don't know what he is so desperately needed for in the
Bahamas. He also said he was overbooked. And so he might not be
able to appear at the Senate, even though his bookings are, you know, Twitter space interviews
and playing his video games. So I also read last night that his team is likely going to try to fight
the extradition request when it does come. Yeah. So that's that's another thing. So anyway,
bail was denied, obviously. I think no one was super
surprised when that happened. But yes, he has also said that he plans to fight extradition,
which should be extremely interesting. It could drag on for a really long time. I mean,
we've seen people try to fight extradition from the Bahamas before, and it's taken a year,
you know. But Bloomberg did also just report on the conditions at the jail that he's in right
now. So he's at this Bahamian jail called Fox Hill, which sounds like some sort of nice retirement
home or something, you know, the name sort of sounds a little bit pleasant. But apparently,
it is not a great place to be not that any jail is a great place to be, but it is overcrowded and
dirty and you know, things like that. And so, you know, the Bloomberg piece was sort of suggesting that he might feel a little bit differently about,
you know, the possibility of extradition after spending some time there.
What do you make of the stories that have been reported in recent days that Carolyn Ellison
was spotted in Manhattan? And I've also saw a story now, it was the New York Post,
so it might be full of shit, that she might have been cooperating with people against Sam Bankman Freed and might
have turned on him.
Yeah, so I've seen the same speculation on crypto Twitter, which is the New York Post
may actually be more reliable than crypto Twitter, which is really saying something.
Someone was able to get, you know, sort of a paparazzi photo of Caroline Ellison at a
coffee shop in New York.
And there was a dog at her feet who looked kind of like this dog that was in the office at FTX a lot. And so maybe that was
her. And it does, in fact, look a lot like her. And she is fairly distinctive looking. And so,
you know, the speculation, you know, someone sort of pulled up Google Maps and was like,
oh, this coffee shop is a 20 minute walk from the attorney's office in the Southern District
of New York or something like that. I honestly think it is fairly likely that she would be cooperating. I mean,
Sam Bigman Freed has been trying to throw her under the bus, not explicitly. He's not saying
it's her fault. And he has sort of hand-waved it like, oh, I don't think she was doing anything
malicious. She had a very hard job. But he does keep saying basically that
all of this malfeasance was happening at Alameda and he had no involvement with Alameda.
And so the obvious next step in that line of thinking is that, well, then it would be
Caroline Ellison who was running the show at Alameda. So she might be trying to get out in
front of that. I will say in her various
online posts that have been discovered, some of which are not 100% her, but they definitely seem
a lot like her. She had sort of a Tumblr blog that was active and various other, you know,
online accounts. She does come off as very individualist. You know, she seems to have her own interests at heart and maybe at the expense of others.
That is sort of the impression that I have gotten of her.
And so the idea that she might be willing to basically give them Sam in exchange for
a lesser sentence or, you know, some sort of preferential treatment does not seem entirely
farfetched to me.
The entire polycule will have knives at each other's throats by the time this is all over.
In one of her alleged Tumblr posts, she made some long argument for how romantic relationships
should be operated like Chinese harems, where all members of the polycule are ruthlessly fighting for top placement,
like top priority, and that the polycule should be like ranked in order of, you know,
preference or whatever. So like the idea that she might just be cutthroat and throw the rest
of the polycule under the bus, it's like, well, there is some reason to believe she might.
That fits. Yeah, yeah. She's fighting to be at the top. Fair enough.
Yeah, she's gonna oust Sam Bankman Freed for like the polycule primary.
Oh, my God. So I guess before we close it off in talking about what it looks like for the
broader crypto industry, any final thoughts on the whole FTX thing that we haven't gotten to that, you know,
I haven't thought to ask you about? Yes, I think the one really important thing also to note,
and Sam Bankman Freed was really pushing on this, is he has been claiming that FTX US is solvent
and that 100% of withdrawals could be processed today if they just flip the switch,
basically. He's been saying that ever since the bankruptcy was filed. And I mean, it's not a
believable claim to make. You know, he has been arguing that, oh, they were, you know, funds were
completely segregated. Everything was above board at FTX U.S., which is like, how could you believe
that given that funds were not even close to segregated
at other portions of the business? And sure enough, during the congressional testimony
with John J. Wray, the new CEO, FTX US is not solvent. The customer funds were commingled.
They are still trying to untangle how many connections there were between FTX US and Alameda.
You know, so US customers at this point should be very concerned, I think, about their holdings.
But it was a very convenient thing to be arguing because he was able to escape sort of the ire, I think, of some US-based customers who now should be wondering if they will ever see their money again, or if they do,
how much of it and when. And so, you know, I think that's really something to note is that
he was trying to claim that anyone in the US would be fine. I think sort of at the expense
of other people outside of the US, it's like, well, if I don't, you know, make the Americans
too angry, maybe they'll ignore the fact that I totally fleeced a bunch of people outside of the U.S.
But anyway, I think the fact that that has now been exposed to be false is important
to note.
Meanwhile, it seemed like he was also cutting deals to make sure that clients in the Bahamas
were kind of protected, right?
Yeah, there's a lot of questions about what's happening over with the Bahamian regulators.
During the congressional testimony, John J. Ray was saying that, you know, during these bankruptcies, they regularly have to collaborate with outside jurisdictions.
And usually it's a pretty smooth process.
People tend to be pretty cooperative.
You know, everyone just wants the best for their specific citizens. citizens, and that in this case, he is having a lot of trouble with Bahamian regulators who seem
to be uncooperative and maybe shady. And he is, I think, very concerned that Sam Bankman-Fried
may have been operating in concert with Bahamian regulators to get preferential treatment for
Bahamian citizens or for others who were withdrawing money briefly during a period where he re-enabled
withdrawals. And so I think, you know, the fact that he is currently in custody in the Bahamas
is probably concerning to a lot of U.S. authorities because, you know, they would really rather have
him here in the U.S. where, you know, they are not having to worry about what is or is not happening
in the Bahamas.
So I think that will be very interesting to follow, too. There's clearly a lot of political games happening where people are trying not to directly accuse Bahamas authorities of
wrongdoing, but you can definitely see them implying it pretty heavily.
Yeah, no, absolutely. And so, you know, we started by talking about the broader crypto collapse that has been going on for the past year, basically, you know, that really, you know, I feel like November 2021 is kind of the marker for when this all kind of takes off and starts to go south. effects, right? They affected other companies as well. So what do you see happening with this
crypto collapse going forward? But also does FTX's particular kind of implosion also have
consequences for other companies that are operating within the industry?
So FTX is, I would call it an explosion rather than an implosion because it has absolutely generated a lot of shrapnel.
It has been pretty devastating on the crypto industry.
A lot of companies either had exposure to FTX or had holdings that they were sort of
keeping on FTX for various reasons.
There were lending firm, you know, there was specifically Genesis is a large crypto platform that had exposure to FTX. And
there were a lot of crypto lenders who use Genesis as a counterparty in their lending programs. And
so they are all facing major issues right now. There's questions around whether Genesis may have
to declare bankruptcy, things like that. The contagion has been pretty extreme in the FTX case.
And one thing that I think is important to note is if we look back at contagion from
three years capital and the earlier sort of catastrophes of this year, there is a very
long tail on that where, you know, usually the company blows up. There's a couple of companies
that were like on pretty thin ice and they sort of immediately
have to declare bankruptcy, pause withdrawals, whatever it might be.
But then there's sort of this trickle for a long time of companies that are able to
keep things going for a little while, a couple of weeks, a couple of months, maybe.
Meanwhile, in the background, you know, just trying to cut deals.
They're trying to get loans.
They're just sort of desperately trying to keep things going and eventually, you know, just trying to cut deals, they're trying to get loans, they're just sort of desperately trying to keep things going, and eventually, you know, find themselves unable
to do so. And I think we're going to see that same long tail here where companies are currently,
you know, trying to sort out deals, they're trying to get those loans, and it's not going to happen.
And they too have to shut down, go bankrupt,
whatever it might be, run away with all the money. And so, you know, I think that's something to
notice is that there are definitely people who are like, okay, FTX collapsed, a couple other
things went under and now we're fine. This is the bottom, you know, everything is good now.
We've weeded out all the fraud in the industry and we can rebuild. And it's like, oof, I would
not be calling the bottom quite yet. Not that I try to, you know, predict the market, but I think this could keep
going for a pretty long time. Yeah. And on that point, you know, I saw a story the other day
that said that if regulators or authorities go after Binance, then that could have consequences
for the entire crypto industry. I believe it was someone from Binance saying that.
So, you know, they're probably trying to stop action from happening. But do you think that's
accurate? And do you think that seeing FTX explode, as you say, that there might be an attempt to go
after Binance now as well? Yeah. So a couple of things on that. So FTX was a huge player in the
crypto industry. And you really can't overstate the impact
that a company like that exploding has on the industry.
But FTX was an order of magnitude smaller than Binance.
And so Binance going under would be, I mean, unprecedented.
It would be enormously detrimental to the crypto industry.
There are sort of few companies that could
explode and have more of an impact on the crypto industry than Binance, but the ones that could
also probably have pretty strong exposure to Binance. And so a Binance explosion would be,
I mean, it would be a sight to see. But, you know, we're starting to see in recent days and weeks,
some sort of signs of uncertainty at Binance, I guess. So there's, like I mentioned earlier,
there's been a pretty substantial number of withdrawals happening from Binance in the
billions. They recently, yesterday, I think, had to pause withdrawals of USDC because they were
like, our bank didn't, you know, isn't open. So they're clearly having to
drum up some liquidity there to process those withdrawals. It's important to remember that
the bank run, quote unquote, is what has precipitated a number of insolvencies in
crypto. That can really cause a lot of things to come to the surface. But then there's the question of actual like
investigations into Binance. So you're referring, I think, to the Reuters report about potential
criminal charges against Binance executives, including CZ. There was a report that basically
we've known for a little while that there's been an investigation into Binance and its executives
around both money laundering and sanctions evasion.
And the report said basically that there's a split at the DOJ and that some prosecutors think
we should prosecute right now, we should file charges right now, and others think that they
should keep going through the evidence for longer. It is noticeable that it's not like some people
think they should prosecute and some
people think they shouldn't. It was like a question of when, uh, but you're right.
Yeah, exactly. Like it didn't sound like there was much question there,
but you're right. That Binance's lawyers basically said that if you do this, it will
ruin the crypto industry, which is kind of hilarious to me.
You know, it's just like, oh, no, don't stop our fraud because you'll ruin the fraud industry.
But that was the argument that they're making.
And they're not totally off base in the fact that some major action like criminal charges
from the U.S. against finance executives could really kick off a major downturn in crypto
as we've not already been in a major downturn in crypto as though we've not already been in a major downturn in crypto. Finance also came up a couple times at the recent hearings. So at the Senate hearing
yesterday, there were questions around Binance, their involvement in the FTX collapse. And some
senators are very concerned about Binance's potential ties to the CCP. That's something that CZ is very
sensitive about. He is adamant that he is Canadian and not Chinese, even though he spent a substantial
amount of his youth in China and his adult life in China. Binance was founded in China and then
ultimately left the country for regulatory reasons. But he does not like it when anyone refers to Binance as a Chinese company or questions about, you know, an employee who is listed on a lot of Binance's company documents who is just some random low-level employee who is also Chinese.
And he has basically come out and accused a journalist of xenophobia for asking questions about an employee who is Chinese.
So anyway,
he very much denies that Binance is a Chinese company. It has any ties to the CCP, but there
are some senators who are obviously very concerned about that. And I think some Congress people as
well. So who knows what might come of those types of inquiries, but clearly Binance is under the
magnifying glass at this point. Obviously, I would love to see these Binance executives charged as soon as possible,
and especially if that has broader consequences for the crypto industry.
I think it was interesting in the House hearing, I believe it was yesterday as we're talking,
where Hillary Allen was, you know, one of the people who was who was on the panel,
I believe it was Kyrsten Sinema, you know, known corporate shill,
was kind of going after her and saying, I heard that you want to ban cryptocurrencies. This would
mean a lot more people would lose money. A lot more people who are investing in cryptocurrencies
would lose money. And her response was kind of like, yes, unfortunately, but I also need to
think about the non-investors and trying to stop more people from getting into this space and
losing even more money, right? So, you know, obviously you were saying that these hearings have been
ongoing for the past couple of days, that lawmakers seem to be taking a more active
interest in cryptocurrency as all of these collapses have been happening over the past year.
Do you think that the United States moves toward regulation in the near future? And if so,
what do you think that looks like? Will they ban cryptocurrency as Hillary Allen would tell them to?
Yeah. So, I mean, I think even Hillary Allen, who would love to see crypto banned,
acknowledges that it's not likely that that would ever happen. That would be extremely politically
controversial and also extremely difficult, I think, to actually implement. But, you know,
that is sort of her general feeling. But she acknowledges that there are other steps that we
could take as a country as far as keeping crypto really out of the traditional financial system,
which is her major concern. She's very, her area of expertise is basically financial stability.
And so when she sees crypto,
she sees a threat to the stability of the traditional financial system.
Obviously, with FTX, FTX exploded in a pretty incredible fashion. But people who are not
involved in crypto, who don't have any exposure to crypto, are not noticing any difference. It's
not like the stock market crashed because crypto went under.
There's not going to be some sort of government bailout like we saw in 2008.
Average people are kind of just going about their lives with no real impact.
They might see a headline or two, but that's kind of it.
And she really credits banking regulations for that because banks are pretty limited
in how they can gain exposure to crypto.
And so her big push is
that we should actually strengthen banking regulations to enforce that firewall. You know,
she's seeing banks beginning to dip their toes into crypto in various ways. You know, we've seen
large financial institutions like Fidelity and others come out sort of saying that they're
experimenting with crypto in various different products.
And so she's really worried about that.
And then she's also argued that all cryptocurrencies should be classed as securities and should be carefully regulated by the SEC, who she thinks needs to be given more resources.
So, you know, that's kind of her argument for maybe a more feasible and achievable regulatory approach.
I'll be curious to see how things play out over the next year or two in terms of that. It's been very difficult for crypto regulation, I mean,
any regulation, but for crypto regulation to pass any sort of stage of legislation at this point.
The ones that have been put forward have been pretty poorly implemented or poorly written,
I think, and not likely to gain that much support.
Perhaps the most promising piece of regulation in the U.S. that was put forward was the DCCPA,
which was kind of Sam Pinkman Freed's pet piece of regulation.
And so I think that maybe the popularity of that specific bill has probably tanked a little bit in recent months. And so there's not much out there as far as promising regulation that I think might be passed in the near term. It's, I think, just a matter of what we'll see people draft in the not too distant future. But I think, you know, a big change would really just be to
allow regulators or to encourage regulators to enforce existing regulations. And that's
kind of what Hillary Allen suggested. And I largely agree with that.
Yeah, I believe one of the things that she was saying at the hearing was like,
you know, you'll hear a lot from crypto executives talking about regulation these days,
but usually what they're looking for is bespoke regulation that is, you know, kind of geared toward carving and kind of letting them
do what they do with, you know, kind of legal protections effectively. Yeah, there's kind of
this refrain from the crypto industry that's like, we want regulatory clarity. Just give us clarity.
If we just knew which regulations we needed to comply with and all would be fine. But as soon
as anyone suggests that maybe they should be regulated under the SEC's umbrella,
it's like, no, no, no, no, no.
That would kill the crypto industry.
It would quash innovation.
And that's because I think most crypto companies could not comply with the SEC requirements.
And so that's exactly right.
They want this very carefully tailored regulation that would require very little
of them. Whether or not that's something they get, I think will really depend on how many
crypto-friendly politicians they can acquire, which has definitely been a major push by the
crypto industry in recent years. Absolutely. I wonder if the charges against Sam Bankman-Fried
on campaign finance might put any kind of chill on that? Probably not. But we'll see. Yeah.
We'll see. Yeah. So this has been a fantastic conversation. Sorry, I kept you so long. I did
want to close with one final question. You know, you talked about CZ saying that he's a Canadian,
Vitalik Buterin, of course, Ethereum, also Russian Canadian, a lot of Canadians involved in this industry and
kind of pushing these ideas, unfortunately. And another one is Kevin O'Leary, who was also at
that hearing the other day. You know, it's been kind of shocking for me to see how much Kevin
O'Leary has really blown up in the United States. Because of course, before he was a media sensation
down in the US, before he was a crypto shill and a paid spokesperson for FTX, he'Leary Exchange, where there was a business
journalist and him commenting on business stories. And he was always giving the perspective of
capital, why you need to crack down on workers, all these sorts of things. And every episode would
end with a disclosure saying that his views did not represent the views of the public broadcaster,
just to show how extreme they were. But for some reason, they felt they needed to be connected
with this guy. And then when he got on Shark Tank, he really started to blow up in the United States
and get all this attention down there. And so, you know, it's always kind of terrible to see
your own local ghoul kind of go international and really blow up in this way. But he was at
this hearing, you know, he's obviously been pushing a lot of kind of bullshit crypto narratives.
What do you make of Kevin O'Leary? What do you make of his participation in this whole kind of crypto industry, the ideas that
he's pushing, and in particular, his participation in this hearing where he was sitting next to
Hillary Allen, a Cato executive person, and Ben McKenzie? I think Kevin O'Leary can be pretty
cheaply bought. That's kind of my impression of him just in general.
You know, he used to say that crypto was a big scam and he wanted nothing to do with it.
And he changed his tune when $15 million was dangled in front of him by FTX. And suddenly,
he was very bullish on crypto and crypto is the next big thing and everyone should be putting money into it. Even yesterday at the Senate hearing, he was shilling his other
investments in various crypto exchanges like WonderFi, which is a Canadian crypto exchange.
He was advertising for them at a Senate hearing, which is really gross. But honestly, I think that
his appearance at the Senate hearing did not go very well. I assume he was invited by someone who is
friendly to crypto, but he might as well have been invited by, you know, the various crypto
critical senators because he did a pretty great job of exposing some of the really
unpleasant sides of crypto. You know, he was shilling the whole time. He tried to argue with Senator Warren on some point about how
you shouldn't be angry at crypto because the U.S. dollar is used for crime too,
which she very reasonably refuted by saying, shouldn't that mean that crypto should be
regulated like the U.S. dollar and all these financial industries? And he was like, no,
no, no, no. It just made him look silly. So my opinion really
is that he got $15 million and that was enough to really change his tune. I also think that he
likes to be in headlines as much as possible. And so the FTX collapse has been wonderful for him in
that sense, even though he did presumably lose, you know, a couple million dollars.
But I don't know, the whole time it felt like he was trying to sort of paint himself as the victim of the FTX collapse, which is just not a very attractive narrative for like anyone normal who lost money in FTX because like when a company like FTX explodes, most people are not feeling sympathy towards
people like Kevin O'Leary who have millions of dollars and can very much afford to lose a couple
of those million. Yeah, it's been a wonderful moment for Mr. Wonderful because he's got so much
media attention and headlines, which is exactly what he craves and which is the kind of thing
that allows him to keep building his wealth and his reputation to make him seem like the great businessman in a similar way
to, you know, Trump using media to craft that image of himself as well, right? Yeah, I hate the
dude. I hate that he has had the success he's had in Canada and then kind of turned that into success
in the States. Molly, it's been fantastic to chat. Again Sorry, I kept you so long. But you know, this was
just such a wild topic so much to get into. Great to discuss it with you. Thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
Molly White is the creator of Web3 is going just great and a fellow at the Harvard Library
Innovation Lab. You can follow Molly on Twitter at at Molly zero x f f f. You can follow me at
at Paris marks and you can follow the show at
at TechWon'tSaveUs. TechWon'tSaveUs is produced by Eric Wickham and is part of the Harbinger Media
Network. And if you want to support the work that goes into making the show every week,
you can go to patreon.com slash TechWon'tSaveUs and become a supporter. Thanks for listening. Thank you.