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Blockchain startup Blockdaemon raises $155 million in Series B funding

Blockdaemon, a New York-based startup that builds blockchain nodes and other tech, has raised $155 million at a valuation of $1.26 billion. 

According to a release announcing the Series B funding round, SoftBank’s Vision Fund 2 led the round. New investors Matrix Capital Management, Sapphire Ventures and Morgan Creek Digital participated in the round, as well as existing investors Boldstart Ventures, Goldman Sachs, Greenspring Associates, CoinFund, Kenetic, Kraken Ventures, Borderless Capital, and Lerer Hippeau.

“Goldman Sachs is very pleased to continue our relationship with and investment in Blockdaemon as they continue to innovate for the financial services industry. We believe Blockdaemon has a key role to play in the future of blockchain and crypto adoption,” said Oli Harris, North America head of digital assets at Goldman Sachs, in the statement. 

Blockdaemon closed its Series A funding round in June, raising $28 million, The Block previously reported. That round was led by the venture capital firm Greenspring Associates and drew support from Goldman Sachs, BlockFi, Voyager Digital, Uphold, CoinShares, Borderless Capital, and Blockchain.com Ventures. 

Blockdaemon supports over 40 blockchains such as Ethereum 2.0, Bitcoin, Solana, Terra, Cardano, Polkadot, and more.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: MK Manoylov

Chainalysis used an IP-scraping block explorer to aid law enforcement, leaked docs say

Documents leaked on the dark web and first reported by CoinDesk’s Danny Nelson show Chainalysis advertising its use of an affiliated wallet explorer as a means of gathering IP information to aid in police investigations.

The deck — allegedly from a presentation to Italian law enforcement — noted that the firm had used WalletExplorer.com to gather useful IP information on cryptocurrency users who had gone on the site:

“Using this dataset we were able to provide law enforcement with meaningful leads related to IP data associated with a relevant cryptocurrency address. It is also possible to conduct a reverse lookup on any known IP address to identify other BTC addresses. It can also collect data from a data form address that has yet to transit the Blockchain — that is, the BTC address provided as part of a kidnapping or life-threatening investigation — if the suspect checks their address.”

Neither the date for the presentation or the time of the creation of the materials is currently available. The original leak involved a cache of documents allegedly obtained from the Italian Guardia Di Finanza’s Nucleo Speciale Frodi Tecnologiche’s dark web team. 

The leaked materials identify the presentation as a component of an investigation into Berlusconi Market. Berlusconi Market was a darknet market that Italian authorities took down in 2019.

Chainalysis declined to comment or confirm the authenticity of the deck.

Though unadvertised by Chainalysis, the site itself draws a connection between its developer, Aleš Janda, and the analytics company, which has long stoked controversy among some quarters of the crypto community. Janda joined Chainalysis as a developer and researcher in 2015, according to LinkedIn, and a note posted at the bottom of WalletExplorer.com advertises the blockchain analytics service: 

Source: WalletExplorer.com

A snapshot archived by The Wayback Machine indicates that the text referring to Chainalysis has been live since as early as January 2016. 

Janda’s work at the firm is also discussed on the explorer’s info page:

“Name database is NOT updated (except some very rare cases) since 2016, so it’s been a pretty long time now. The reason is that I created WalletExplorer and its database in my free time. Then I joined Chainalysis.com, which basically does the same product (but far more advanced) and I’m paid for discovering names. While I’m paid for it, I can’t disclose names publicly. Ask Chainalysis if you want data with newer names.”

However, the site’s contents make no reference to its use as part of Chainalysis’s service offering, let alone its alleged contributions to law enforcement investigations.  

Chainalysis is the largest of the major blockchain analytics firms. Just this morning, the U.S. Treasury announced sanctions against a Russia-based crypto exchange, blacklisting wallet addresses that Chainalysis had helped identify.

The full leaked deck can be found below:

Chainalysis Dek for Italian… by Mike McSweeney

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kollen Post

SEC chair Gary Gensler says he wants to clean up crypto before a ‘spill’

Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair Gary Gensler said Tuesday that he wants to bring crypto “into the public policy framework.”

During a live interview with the Washington Post today, Gensler said he’s looking to make sure crypto comes under regulatory purview and meets policy goals so the fast-growing sector doesn’t “undermine the stability of the system.” 

Gensler referenced his own blockchain background when teaching and studying crypto with the help of computer scientists at MIT. 

“I taught this and studied it for several years at MIT and really wouldn’t have dedicated my time to it if I didn’t think it was interesting and innovative,” he said. “But at the same time, I don’t think technology is long last outside of a social and public policy framework.”

That means instituting investor and consumer protections is paramount at this stage in the space, according to Gensler. The SEC’s purview includes investor protection in securities markets, but Gensler said to cover crypto, the agency will need to take a broad stance on its mission. 

Gensler reiterated his commitment to taking a close look at crypto platforms, since many of the tokens these venues support could have attributes of investment contracts or securities. If they’re found to support securities, that makes them subject to securities laws and the SEC’s mandate, according to Gensler.

If they fail to register, enforcement is coming, he said:

“It’s highly likely that they have on these platforms securities investment contracts or notes or others that fit the definition of security. Those platforms should come in. They should figure out how to register, be it an investment investor protection remit. Now, not many have. And so I do really fear that we’ll keep bringing these enforcement cases. But there’s going to be a problem. There’s going to be a problem on lending platforms or trading platforms. And frankly, when that happens, I think a lot of people are going to get hurt.”

In this scenario, the SEC will likely have to coordinate closely with its sister agency, the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which Gensler once helmed. Because some tokens look more like commodities, and others mix attributes of securities with commodities, the agencies will likely need to work together, Gensler said.

Gensler also teased that in the arena of stablecoins, the agencies might have to further collaborate with banking regulators, since “stablecoins may have attributes of investment contracts, have some attributes like banking products.” 

Agencies might already be looking at the stablecoin question from a similar vantage point. Just last week, Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu said he was looking to the wildcat banking days as he parses out his views on stablecoins. Gensler also referenced the wildcat banks in relation to the U.S.’s history with private money. Without investor protection, too many versions of private money create more headaches than freedoms, according to Gensler.

Elsewhere, Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen’s team is still preparing a report on the tokens and how they should be regulated, but in the meantime, other agency heads are raising the alarm. Hsu likened them to follies of 1800’s privatized money, and today Gensler said they’re the so-called casino money of the Wild West:

“Stablecoins are acting almost like poker chips at the casino right now, so add to the Wild West analogy — we’ve got a lot of casinos here in the Wild West and the poker chips, these stablecoins, at the casino gaming tables. So I think there’s just a lot of warning signs and flashing lights that we might have a spill on aisle three, and I’d rather get ahead of it.” 

Gensler hinted that Congress might need to act to help this inter-agency collaboration along in order to get crypto under control ahead of any “spills.”

“The banking authorities right now don’t have the full gamut of what they need and how we work with Congress to sort through that,” he said.

The same might go for the SEC. Though Gensler said the mission is sufficiently broad to bring crypto under its purview and the agency has “robust authorities,” he said “there are gaps as I’ve identified them,” which Congressional certainty could alleviate.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Aislinn Keely

Ethereum challengers are dangling token rewards to attract big-name DeFi projects — and it’s working

Quick Take

  • Seven different challenger blockchains have rolled out rewards programs for DeFi developers.
  • The incentive schemes have packed an immediate punch, but can the momentum be sustained?

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subscribers of The Block Daily.
You can continue reading
this Daily feature on The Block.

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Author: Ryan Weeks

Crypto fund One River Digital secures Series A investment

One River Digital Asset Management, a crypto-focused asset manager targeting institutional clients, has secured a Series A investment.

The company announced the raise in a press release on September 21. Bloomberg reported on the same day that the firm had raised $41 million at a valuation of $186 million from new investors including Goldman Sachs Group and Coinbase.

“Collaboration and perspective are keys to success in any transformative pursuit,” said Eric Peters, CEO and CIO of One River Digital, in a statement. “We are fortunate to bring together a focused group of committed strategic investors who are clear leaders in their respective fields and who share our vision that the transition of financial transactions to a digital world will present vast opportunities.”

One River Digital broke cover late last year when it emerged that the company was eyeing a $1 billion allocation to bitcoin with the backing of billionaire hedge fund manager Alan Howard. In the press release announcing its Series A raise, the company said its clients had made gains of over $1.2 billion since it began investing in digital assets in November 2020.

The firm offers a range of crypto-linked products, including ERISA-compliant digital asset commingled funds, 365-day liquidity funds, and carbon-neutral investment funds.

One River is advised by former Securities and Exchange Commission chair Jay Clayton, who is part of its Academic and Regulatory Advisory Council alongside several other prominent former officials.

The digital assets fund is a subsidiary of One River Asset Management, which manages over $2 billion in assets and focuses on absolute-return strategies. Founded in 2013, the company is headquartered in Greenwich, Connecticut.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Ryan Weeks

$30M in ETH on the move after authorities confirm arrest of WEX exchange founder

Earlier this week, reports emerged that Polish authorities had arrested Dmitri Vasiliev, the founder of crypto exchange WEX, in Warsaw.

Yesterday, as authorities officially confirmed that Vasiliev was in custody, $30 million in ether (ETH) started moving out of a wallet associated with WEX. 

However, it appears that the actual handling of the funds could be problematic for those in control. On a 9,916 ether transaction, valued at $29.7 million as of the time of wriitng, whoever initiated the transaction ordered a max cost of 0.00042 ETH and a gas price of 20 Gwei. 

Gas — or the cost of transacting — has not been that low in months, with the result that the transaction has been pending for about 24 hours, as of publication time, and doesn’t seem likely to move forward soon. 

WEX is the successor exchange to BTC-e, which authorities found laundered over $4 billion in crypto during its period of operation. BTC-e’s founder, Alexander Vinnik, is currently serving five years in a French prison. BTC-e’s collapse and authorities’ seizure of its data subsequently served as the basis for a number of linked investigations. 

Polish police reportedly detained Vasiliev at the request of Kazakh authorities, but they are still making a determination as to whether to extradite him. 

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kollen Post

Crypto asset manager Osprey Funds launches Polygon trust product

Crypto asset management firm Osprey Funds has launched a Polygon trust product for private placement.

The product will offer exposure to MATIC, the native token used on Polygon, an Ethereum Layer-2 blockchain network. Osprey said it is the first investment product in the U.S. to invest exclusively in MATIC. Osprey rival Grayscale recently said it is exploring to launch a trust product tied to MATIC but has yet to launch one.

The Osprey Polygon fund is currently available to accredited investors for subscription with a $10,000 minimum investment. The asset manager said it intends to pursue listing the fund on the OTCQX over-the-counter market “as soon as possible” and has also waived the 2.5% management fee for all investors until January 2023.

The Polygon fund is Osprey’s fifth trust product. The firm recently launched a Solana (SOL) trust and also offers products tied to bitcoin (BTC), Polkadot’s DOT, and Algorand’s ALGO tokens.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Yogita Khatri

US Treasury sanctions Russia-based crypto OTC desk for laundering over $160 million in bitcoin

The U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Asset Control has announced a new round of sanctions targeting over-the-counter crypto trading desk Suex.

Formally registered in Prague, but with physical offices in Moscow and St. Petersburg, government officials said on September 21 that Suex has facilitated cashouts from ransomware gangs, scam operators, and defunct crypto exchange BTC-e, which the U.S. Department of Justice shut down years ago. 

The OFAC release includes a series of BTC, ETH and Tether addresses. Twenty-five addresses in total are named.

Suex's illicit funding

Source: Chainalysis

Crypto analytics firm Chainalysis aided OFAC in its investigation of Suex. Chainalysis found that Suex had received over $160 million in bitcoin in the past three years. Those funds also included deposits from darknet markets, in particular Russia-based Hydra, which is likely the largest of its kind in the world. 

Gurvais Grigg of Chainalysis told The Block:

“The way to disrupt ransomware is by going after the ransomware supply chain.”

“We’ve been looking at Suex for a while,” Grigg continued. “But it takes time for entities like Treasury and OFAC to make their business case.”

A representative for OFAC did not respond to The Block’s request for comment as of publication. 

Following high-profile attacks on U.S. infrastructure earlier this year, ransomware has become an increasingly high-profile political issue. Ransomware played a prominent role in a June summit between Presidents Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin. The Biden administration subsequently ordered a major investigation into ransomware attacks on JBS, a major meat supplier.

The Block has previously reported that the surge in public interest in ransomware has been lucrative for the blockchain analytics firms like Chainalysis that track crypto transactions.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kollen Post

Blockchain monitoring startup Metrika raises $14 million from Coinbase Ventures and others

Metrika, a U.S.-based startup that provides operational monitoring tools for blockchain networks, has raised $14 million in a Series A funding round.

The round was led by Neotribe Ventures, with participation from Coinbase Ventures, Samsung NEXT, Nyca Partners, and SCB 10X, among others. As part of the deal, Swaroop “Kittu” Kolluri from Neotribe Ventures has joined Metrika’s board, CEO Nikos Andrikogiannopoulos told The Block.

With fresh capital at hand, Metrika plans to expand its platform’s capacity and broaden its customer base across industries. “We are allocating the funding for continued development of our first-of-its-kind operational intelligence platform for blockchain, and to integrate our solutions into a wider range of blockchain-based applications,” said Andrikogiannopoulos. “We’re also planning to increase marketing efforts to encourage platform adoption, and extend our reach further into the crypto ecosystem.”

Metrika’s current clients include Algorand, Solana, ConsenSys, Dapper Labs (creator of NBA Top Shot), Hedera Hashgraph, and Blockdaemon. The firm essentially helps these clients’ blockchain networks keep up and running via dashboards, reports, and “real-time” alerts.

The funding news comes one week after Solana experienced a major outage that lasted for over 17 hours. When asked why Metrika didn’t help prevent the outage, Andrikogiannopoulos said Solana is one of the firm’s newest clients. “Over the past month, we’ve been setting up our platform on the Solana network which, when fully operational, will strengthen enormously the level of operational insights on the Solana network and help prevent future outages.”

There are currently 16 people working for Metrika and the firm is hiring across several functions, including software development, analytics, product management, sales, and marketing, said Andrikogiannopoulos.

The Series A round brings Metrika’s total funding to date to $17.7 million. The firm has previously raised $3.7 million in a seed round.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Yogita Khatri

[SPONSORED] “The Bitcoin Trading Ecosystem and the Emerging Institutional Infrastructure” Report

The new report examines the evolution of the Bitcoin trading ecosystem and includes findings from the latest institutional survey conducted by LMAX Digital:

  • Over 200 institutional market participants surveyed about their crypto trading requirements
  • Institutions select execution venues based on reliability of technology, speed of execution & liquidity depth
  • Access to banking & credit, plus lack of consistent global regulation were considered the main infrastructure gaps
  • Asset Managers/Funds & Banks are expected to account for the majority of crypto trading in the next 3 years

LMAX Digital: secure, liquid, trusted crypto trading & custodial services. Regulated by the GFSC.

The Bitcoin Trading Ecosystem Report – FREE download.

© 2021 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Sponsored


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