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Sen. Bennet takes potshot at crypto, says it’s less stable than marijuana industry

U.S. Senator Michael Bennet has a bone to pick with banks that forge ties with crypto while the marijuana industry remains mostly shut out of the financial system.

The Colorado Democrat raised those concerns at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on Thursday, where Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen fielded questions from lawmakers on topics such as taxes, interest rates and bank failures. 

Signature Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Silvergate Bank have all collapsed over the past week. Crypto companies made up about 20 percent of deposits at Signature Bank, according to Barron’s.  

“Last weekend, Signature Bank failed and almost a fifth of its deposits came from crypto — like they’re not allowed to do anything with marijuana, but apparently they can lay 20 percent of this on crypto — a notoriously unstable, you know, a thing that nobody here even understands,” Bennet said.  

Federal law

Marijuana is legal in 37 U.S. states, according to the American Bankers Association, though the possession, distribution, or sale of it is still illegal on the federal level. Lawmakers have been working on legislation that would allow American banks to offer banking services, adding that banks are often reluctant due to legal and regulatory risks.  

Bennet asked for Yellen’s thoughts on whether Signature was doing right by depositors by investing in crypto, which “isn’t even as stable as the marijuana industry.”  

“As you pointed out, in the case of marijuana, it is against federal law and that’s a barrier unfortunately to appropriate banking services for the industry and it’s something the regulators have been looking for solutions to,” Yellen said.

© 2023 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: Sarah Wynn

And the golf course goes to decentralized country club Links

LinksDAO, the global community of golf enthusiasts which says it’s reimagining the “country club,” today confirmed it won the bid to purchase the Spey Bay Golf Club in Scotland.
 
LinksDAO members could now be heading down the fairway on the stunning country’s stunning Moray coastline, securing the listing it described as “too special to ignore” at a guide price of around $900,000. The course first opened in 1907.
 
“We won the bid. We’re buying a golf course!!!,” LinksDAO said on Twitter. The final purchase price is not known. In its first attempt at acquiring a golf course, LinksDAO pulled off the hole-in-one after participants overwhelmingly backed a proposal put to the community in February.
 
After selling more than 9,000 NFTs in just over 24 hours at the beginning of the year, the LinksDAO raised around $11 million worth of ether. Although search efforts initially focused on U.S. courses, LinksDAO has been on a mission to buy a golf course somewhere in the world.
 
The purchase serves as one of the most substantial examples of a DAO selling NFTs with real-world utility that community members can then use to participate in the purchase and managing of a valuable physical asset.
 

Digital membership cards

 
Membership NFTs have sold for as high as roughly $9,600, according to CryptoSlam! data. Additionally, sales volumes for the LinksDAO NFTs rose nearly 100% during the last week while overall the digital membership cards have generated more than $29 million in trading since their issuing, also according to the site’s data.
 
“LinksDAO is creating the modern golf & leisure club,” the company has said. “A global community of thousands of enthusiasts has come together to create one of the world’s greatest golf clubs — and reimagine the country club.”
 
Links has more than 5,400 members, according to Golf Digest. Jim Daily, Adam Besvinick and 6th Man Ventures’ Mike Dudas founded LinksDAO in 2021.
 
Disclaimer: Mike Dudas, co-founder of LinksDAO, is the co-founder and former CEO of The Block. He no longer has a financial interest in the company.

© 2023 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: James Hunt and RT Watson

Instagram NFT initiative’s swift death mints mourners, mehs

Meta’s decision to test an initiative that allowed artists to sell NFTs on Instagram was widely considered a positive development for the struggling industry. Now that the tech giant has pulled the plug on the project, web3 enthusiasts’ reaction to the sudden move is all over the place.

“I was completely baffled,” said Dave Krugman, one of the first creators able to sell his art to people on Instagram through non-fungible tokens. “It’s so shortsighted.”

Krugman’s frustration may resonate with many independent artists. The photographer said he has been making money online with his work for more than a decade. And all the while he has been slowly building an audience on Instagram where he has nearly 320,000 followers.

Meta’s new NFT feature allowed him to interact directly with his audience and he could seamlessly sell NFTs on the platform rather than having to redirect potential buyers to third-party marketplaces like OpenSea. Krugman did only one drop on Instagram of 100 NFTs at $50 a piece, which he said sold in under a minute.

But Meta is moving off of NFTs a little less than five months after launching the initiative that allowed a select few “creators” to showcase and sell “digital collectibles” — NFTs — using Instagram. Stephane Kasriel, Meta’s head of commerce & financial technologies, took to Twitter earlier this week to announce the pilot program was coming to an end. Then the following day CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a post to Meta’s website the company planned to lay off 10,000 employees on top of the 11,000 people it showed the door in November.

We’re winding down digital collectibles (NFTs) for now to focus on other ways to support creators, people, and businesses,” Kasriel said on Twitter, adding that Meta is “going to focus on areas where we can make impact at scale, such as messaging and monetization [opportunities] for Reels.”

 

 

Artist Dave Krugman replying to Stephane Kasriel of Meta, who posted to Twitter the announcement the Instagram NFT program would end.

 

Meta’s decision means that, at least for the time being, one of the biggest social media apps in the world — Instagram had 2 billion users last year — is putting off formally embracing digital assets, a key component of the next era of the internet known as web3.

Overall working with Meta and testing this new feature was pretty exciting,” said Olive Allen, another artist who participated in the test program and said she did well selling her digital art. “For the first time NFTs were available for sale on a truly mainstream platform with billions of users.”

Allen, who according to her Twitter profile has been active in crypto since 2018, said she was surprised to see the program come to an end, but not shocked. “It was convenient to mint on the app and put a digital collectible up for sale,” she said.

Year of efficiency

Meta’s decision may be tied to its cost-cutting efforts during a transformative period at the company that Zuckerberg is calling the “year of efficiency.” The CEO has been under pressure ever since he began pouring billions of dollars into a nascent metaverse amid intense criticism while simultaneously eroding economic conditions caused the company’s share price to plummet.

As I’ve talked about efficiency this year, I’ve said that part of our work will involve removing jobs,” he wrote this week. Meta didn’t immediately respond for comment when asked if layoffs factored into the decision to sunset the NFT program.

Someone with direct knowledge of Instagram’s NFT push doesn’t believe Meta’s canceling of the program is financially motivated.

“At such an early stage there’s no way somebody looked at this and said: ‘Wow if we shut down this program we can save millions in cost.’” they said. “There are still a lot of headwinds within this new, emerging web3, NFT market and maybe it’s not quite ready for primetime.”

Ramifications

Some prominent voices in the NFT community and “Crypto Twitter” were quick to offer their own assessment of Meta’s decision and what the impact might be, if any.

“It is proof that NFTs on Instagram and Facebook have failed for the time being,” wrote @Waleswoosh, a self-proclaimed web3 advocate with nearly 32,000 followers on Twitter who often posts about NFTs. “If the tool had been really successful and popular, it would hardly have been discontinued.”

@Waleswoosh’s reaction to Meta announcement.

@NFT_GOD assured their roughly 106,000 Twitter followers Meta’s folding up of the “digital collectibles” scheme was inconsequential. “You’re missing the big picture if you think Meta sunsetting NFTs matters,” they said. “An outdated social media site that is a decade behind TikTok has [zero] impact.”

Long-term, no one knows if Meta will become a major player in web3 or participate somehow in the buying and selling of digital assets. But other established web2 companies like Reddit, and next potentially Amazon, could possibly end up playing a major role introducing millions of mainstream consumers to the owning of digital assets.

At least for now, the winding down of Instagram’s NFT program could have an impact on Polygon, the blockchain company Meta chose to help it run Instagram’s NFT play. Like Krugman, Polygon was disappointed by Meta’s sudden move to end the initiative, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Although unclear what the drivers were, during Meta’s pilot program both the transaction volume and number of people buying and selling Polygon-powered NFTs hit all-time highs, according to CryptoSlam! data.

Polygon sales volumes and number of buyers and sellers. SOURCE: CryptoSlam!.

For Krugman, the potential loss of revenue from selling NFTs won’t shatter his future prospects. But he had hoped to use Instagram’s NFT feature, which he said was excellent, to engage in a unique way with his large audience on the platform.

“I was going to keep a steady stream of work coming out,” he said, adding he already uses non-fungible tokens as a way of offering special perks to particularly avid fans.

“What I can do with those tokens is so powerful … NFTs give creators the ability to build community and not just audience.”

Yogita Khatri contributed to this story.

© 2023 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: RT Watson

New lawsuit accuses social media, YouTube influencers of hyping FTX without proper disclosure

A lawsuit filed Wednesday named a group of social media influencers and claimed they “actively promoted FTX” to their millions of followers” without disclosing the nature of any payments or compensation.

Among the influencers are Erika Kullberg, Ben Armstrong — also known as BitBoy in crypto circles — and Kevin Paffrath,  or “Meet Kevin” on YouTube.

The lawsuit alleges that some of the creators, namely Paffrath as well as Graham Stephan and Tom Nash, “have now scrubbed their YouTube channels of all video clips endorsing FTX and praising Sam Bankman-Fried.”

In place of that, the lawsuit says creators posted apologetic messages about their representation of the crypto exchange, which is facing investigations from regulators in the U.S. and abroad and could owe as much as $3.1 billion to its top 50 creditors.

“Yes, I used to be sponsored by FTX. I think that is a disgrace. And it’s a scar. And it sucks. If I could go back I would change it, because people got hurt because of that. I feel so terribly about that. People got hurt because of FTX and it’s a disgrace,” Paffrath said in a Youtube video dated Nov. 22, according to the lawsuit.

Class-action status

The lawsuit is seeking class-action status and includes both U.S. and non-U.S.-based plaintiffs.

Representing the plaintiffs is Adam Moskowitz of the Moskowitz Law Firm, who was also involved in a separate FTX-related lawsuit blaming Tom Brady, Gisele Bündchen and other celebrities for promoting FTX.

“Though FTX paid Defendants handsomely to push its brand and encourage their followers to invest, Defendants did not disclose the nature and scope of their sponsorships and/or endorsement deals, payments and compensation,” the lawsuit claims. “This action may be one of the only avenues for any of the victims to recover any of their damages.”

(With additional reporting assistance from Benjamin Robertson.)

Disclaimer: The former CEO and majority shareholder of The Block has disclosed a series of loans from former FTX and Alameda founder Sam Bankman-Fried.

© 2023 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: Catarina Moura

Blockchain Association seeks documents on crypto ‘de-banking’ from FDIC, Fed

The Blockchain Association, one of the largest crypto lobbying groups, is investigating what it says is the potential “de-banking of crypto firms” following the failure of three banks over the past month.

The group sent Freedom of Information Act requests to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, asking for documents and communications regarding the issue.

“We see smoke that indicates a fire – the FOIA requests are intended to uncover the truth behind the potential de-banking of crypto firms in the U.S., including learning more about possible account closures of law-abiding crypto businesses,” Kristin Smith, the group’s CEO, said in an emailed statement. 

The group is “investigating allegations of de-banking – including account closures and refusal to open new accounts,” which it says may have contributed to the collapses of Signature Bank, Silicon Valley Bank and Silvergate. 

The association has big name members including Kraken and Ripple Labs.  

The FDIC and the OCC did not immediately respond to requests for comment.  The Federal Reserve declined to comment. 

Toxic message 

The New York Department of Financial Services seized crypto-friendly Signature Bank on Sunday to “protect depositors.” Former congressman Barney Frank, one of the bank’s board members, criticized the state regulator’s decision and claimed it “wanted to send the message that crypto is toxic.” 

NYDFS pushed back against the criticism and said the decision to take over Signature Bank was not related to the bank’s crypto business. Silicon Valley Bank and Silvergate Bank collapsed days earlier. 

There are also reports of crypto companies having their bank accounts closed without a notice or explanation, said Jake Chervinsky, chief policy officer at the Blockchain Association.  

“This disturbing trend suggests that regulators are trying to cut crypto entirely out of the banking system,” Chervinsky tweeted. He also accused regulators of breaking the law.  “If regulators are de-banking crypto companies, they’re breaking the law.”  

Risk management

Regulators have been vocal about their concerns surrounding the crypto industry. The Federal Reserve in January issued a statement in which it cited volatility as a key risk faced by banks with crypto exposure.

The FDIC, OCC and the Federal Reserve also issued a statement in February highlighting liquidity risks to banks and reminding them to “apply existing risk management principles.”

“Banking organizations are neither prohibited nor discouraged from providing banking services to customers of any specific class or type, as permitted by law or regulation,” the regulators said.  

Chervinsky tweeted that the association wants to know if that statement is true. 

 

 

© 2023 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: Sarah Wynn

Bitcoin inches higher as it flirts with $25,000

Crypto prices traded higher in line with equities today, as bitcoin flirted with the key level of $25,000.

Bitcoin was trading up 2.5% over the past few hours to just below $25,000 by 10:50 a.m. EDT, according to TradingView data. 

Jonah Van Bourg, Cumberland’s Head of Trading, noted that bitcoin dominance, which refers to the market capitalization of bitcoin relative to the total market capitalization of all crypto assets, has increased 5% year-to-date. “Bitcoin dominance usually increases when crypto is under pressure or selling off,” he wrote on Twitter.

Ether added around 0.3% as it continued to trade at about $1,660. Binance’s BNB was up 4.9%, Polygon’s MATIC added 0.7%, and Cardano’s ADA gained 0.9%.

Crypto-related stocks also traded higher. Coinbase shares added about 1% by 10:50 a.m. EDT, according to TradingView data. MicroStrategy and Block were both higher by 2.1 and 1.2%, respectively.

Cathie Wood’s Ark Invest is keen on Block, purchasing almost $30 million worth for its various ETFs since Monday.

© 2023 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

Ethereum’s next big upgrade Shapella expected to hit mainnet on April 12

Ethereum developers are targeting April 12 to release the highly-anticipated Shanghai-Capella upgrade, or Shapella, on the mainnet.

The main feature of the upgrade is Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) 4895, which aims to enable validator staking withdrawals on the main network. This critical function was not introduced during Ethereum’s switch to a proof-of-stake consensus in September to ensure a safe transition.

Besides the withdrawals, developers have also planned three additional improvements aimed at optimizing gas costs for certain activities with the Shapella upgrade.

The updrade is due to take place at at 10:27 a.m. UTC, with epoch number 620,9536, developers said at a meeting Thursday. 

Since February, developers have carried out multiple phases of public testing on three test networks, or testnets, including Sepolia, Zhejiang, and Goerli. On Tuesday, Shapella was released on the Goerli testnet as the final dress rehearsal before the mainnet launch. All three testnets have successfully processed ETH withdrawals from their own validator sets.

© 2023 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: Vishal Chawla

‘We work with regulators, we don’t sue them,’ says Hashdex CEO about bitcoin ETF

Six months after listing a Bitcoin futures exchange-traded fund on the New York Stock Exchange, crypto asset manager Hashdex is set on an “incremental” path toward a spot product.

“A spot Bitcoin ETF is inevitable, we just don’t know when, in what context,” the firm’s CEO and co-founder Marcelo Sampaio said in an interview at the exchange.

While difficult to nail down a timeframe, he believes it will happen under the mandate of Gary Gensler, the chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC was sued by Hashdex competitor Grayscale after the agency rejected a bid to convert the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust into a spot ETF. The two faced off in court last week, with Grayscale’s CEO optimistic about a positive outcome. A decision is expected later this year.

“We work with regulators. We don’t sue them,” Sampaio said.

Bitcoin rally 

Because Hashdex’s ETF was first approved under the Securities Act of 1933, which deals with commodities funds, many saw its approval as a shift coming from regulators. Hashdex said it’s betting on incremental changes, even if it takes a while to get there.

“We’re losing money on having this ETF, a lot of money. But we’re doing it because we know it’s the future,” said Michael Venuto, CIO and co-founder of Tidal Financial Group, which works as an infrastructure partner for Rio de Janeiro-based Hashdex.

The way crypto markets reacted to the recent collapses of Silvergate, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank showed the “fragility” of the current financial system, Venuto said, adding that bitcoin had been resilient throughout the crisis. 

“Bitcoin has had a massive rally in the face of it because it is a better alternative,” he said. “It’s just not a perfect alternative yet. It’s got to go through development stages.”

© 2023 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: Sam Venis and Catarina Moura

From a napkin to the patent office, CoinRoutes algorithmic trading platform gets approval

CoinRoutes, a crypto trading software provider, has been granted a U.S. patent for its latest enterprise trading solution. 

The trading software provider, headed up by Wall Street veteran Dave Weisberger, successfully received a patent for its “Distributed Crypto-Currency Smart Order Router with Cost Calculator” this week. The firm’s latest product is designed to help traders navigate crypto markets, which can be challenging with a plethora of data and venues, Weisberger told The Block.

The multitude of different exchanges listing cryptocurrencies at different prices and exchange-specific requirements creates issues for traders, making it difficult to execute trades when needed, the firm says.

CoinRoutes’ latest product has humble beginnings, with its initial design being drawn up on a napkin in 2017 by CTO Ian Weisberger, Dave’s son, according to the CEO. 

The design allows CoinRoutes to offer a secure enterprise solution to each client, said Dave Weisberger. The firm does so “at a much lower cost than our competition, without cutting corners on the terabytes of crypto market data that inform the decision-making of our algorithms,” he added. 

“The award of our patent is recognition that CoinRoutes is providing our clients with a secure and cost-effective tool that wasn’t previously available to digital asset traders,” he concluded.

The software will allow traders to execute trades across centralized and decentralized exchanges, including dYdX and Uniswap. CoinRoutes will have no access to users’ keys, Ian Weisberger noted. 

© 2023 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

Polygon spins off project Avail and co-founder departs

Anurag Arjun, a co-founder of Polygon, departed as the company spun off its modular blockchain project, Avail.

“Avail will be spun off completely from Polygon Labs,” Polygon said in a blog post shared with The Block. Arjun “is moving out of Polygon Labs and will become Avail’s sole steward and will continue to lead the project in a separate, standalone and self-funded entity.”

Polygon initiated the Avail project in late 2020 and introduced it publicly in mid-2021. Arjun co-created the project and, as part of the spin-off, it is now acquired by a corporate entity wholly owned by Arjun, an Avail spokesperson told The Block.

“In due course, the structure will evolve into a decentralized organization,” the spokesperson added. “The timing of that evolution has not yet been determined, with the immediate focus being ensuring a smooth transition away from Polygon ownership.”

What is Avail?

Avail is a modular blockchain that allows developers to build customizable and scalable applications. Unlike monolithic blockchains — such as Ethereum and Solana — modular blockchains break down the essential functions of consensus, security, data availability and execution, and handle them separately.

“Avail decouples the data availability layer, making it easier for chain developers to focus on execution and settlement,” Arjun said in a separate blog post shared with The Block. “By using Avail, it allows builders to make their applications fast, efficient, and scalable.”

Avail is currently live on a testnet, with the mainnet to follow in the near future. As part of the spin-off, Avail will create a new not-for-profit foundation, the Avail Foundation, and eventually hand over governance to a community.

‘Win-win’

“The spin-off is a win-win,” Polygon said in its blog post. “Avail will benefit from being developed autonomously in an innovative and independent manner. Polygon Labs can increase Ethereum-alignment and focus on developing scaling products, a portfolio that already includes the Polygon PoS [proof of stake] chain, three zero-knowledge solutions (Polygon zkEVM, Polygon Zero and Polygon Miden), Polygon Supernets and a number of smaller efforts.”

As part of the deal, the entire Avail team at Polygon will move to Arjun’s new entity, the Avail spokesperson said — declining to comment on the size of the team.

“I have a great relationship with Anurag, on a personal level,” Sandeep Nailwal, co-founder of Polygon, told The Block. “I might also invest in his new endeavor.”

When asked if Avail has started raising funds, the Avail spokesperson declined to comment. They also declined to comment when asked if Avail has its own native token, but said: “Avail’s plan is to eventually become a community-owned protocol.”

The spin-off comes shortly after Polygon cut around 100 jobs, or 20% of its workforce, late last month.

The native token of Polygon, MATIC, is down around 4% on the day at about $1.15, according to CoinGecko.

© 2023 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


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