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Category Archive : Crypto News

Crypto Capital exec Reginald Fowler pleads guilty in fraud case

After filing for a plea change last week, Reginald Fowler pled guilty today to bank fraud, bank fraud conspiracy, operation of an unlicensed money transmitting business, conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business and wire fraud.

Fowler stood accused of engaging in “shadow banking” for cryptocurrency exchanges through his business Crypto Capital. The government alleges Crypto Capital operated as an unlicensed money transmitting business that misrepresented its crypto dealings to its banking clients. Fowler allegedly opened accounts with banks under false pretenses to store funds and process transactions for exchanges like Binance, Kraken and BitMEX.

Fowler allegedly ran the business with partners Ravid Yosef and Oz Yosef, who both remain at large.

At first, Fowler pled not guilty to the charges, but by 2020, it appeared he was attempting to change his plea to guilty. In 2021, he retained new counsel and then refiled for the plea change with a letter last week.

That letter indicated Fowler would enter an open plea, which foregoes his right to trial and asks the court for sentencing. At today’s remote hearing, Fowler pled guilty to the charges, which carry a maximum sentence of 90 years in prison. His sentence will be decided by U.S. District Judge Andrew Carter at 2:00 pm on August 30, 2022.

© 2022 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

Two Europeans tied to North Korea’s crypto conference charged by US prosecutors

Two European individuals allegedly conspired with a United States citizen to provide officials in the North Korean government information to bypass U.S. sanctions using cryptocurrency, according to a release from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) released Monday.

Alejandro Cao de Benos of Spain and Christopher Emms of the United Kingdom allegedly co-founded a pro-North Korea conference called the “Pyongyang Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Conference,” recruiting U.S citizen Virgil Griffith as a crypto expert. At the 2019 conference, in which members of the North Koreans government were present, Griffith allegedly educated attendees on how cryptocurrency and blockchain could launder money and evade sanctions.

Entities tied to North Korea have been revealed to steal cryptocurrency through hacks and malware to avoid sanctions, particularly to fund illegal weapon and nuclear missile projects, The Block previously reported. 

In 2021, Griffith pled guilty to conspiring to assist North Korea in violating International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) sanctions. The IEEPA bans a U.S person — or an international individual helping a U.S. person — from exporting goods, services or technology to North Korea without a special license from the U.S. federal government. 

“The sanctions imposed against North Korea are critical in protecting the security interests of Americans, and we continue to aggressively enforce them with our law enforcement partners both here and abroad,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams in the DOJ statement. 

Griffith was sentenced to more than five years in prison and must pay a 100,000 fine. Cao de Benos and Emms remain at large, according to the DOJ report.

© 2022 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

Fort Worth, Texas to vote on whether to become a bitcoin miner

Fort Worth, Texas might soon become a small-scale bitcoin miner.

On Tuesday, the city council will vote on a resolution to accept a donation of three mining machines from a pro-industry group and put them to use as part of a pilot mining project.

“City Council desires for the City to be a local government sector leader and jurisdiction of choice in the Industry by welcoming and encouraging the growth of blockchain and cryptocurrency technology companies in Fort Worth,” reads the resolution, which would also declare the city to be “crypto-friendly.”

Valued at a total of $2,100, the machines are a gift from the nonprofit Texas Blockchain Council. The donation is contingent on the machines’ continued use. The resolution stipulates that “if the city permanently terminates its use of the machines for mining Bitcoin” then they would have to be returned. 

If adopted, the pilot program will be revisited after the first six months, according to the resolution.

Following the city council meeting on Tuesday morning, the mayor of Fort Worth, Mattie Parker, is scheduled to join a Twitter Spaces session titled “Fort Worth Mayor and Bitcoin Mining” at 3:45 PM ET.

© 2022 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

Twitter accepts Elon Musk’s $44 billion takeover offer

Twitter has accepted billionaire Elon Musk’s offer to buy the social media company for approximately $44 billion. 

The Tesla CEO will pay $54.20 per share, according to a statement on Monday, confirming reports over the weekend that a deal was imminent.

The transaction, which will make Twitter a privately held company, is expected to close some time this year, pending approval of Twitter stockholders and regulators.

Twitter’s independent board chair Bret Taylor said the board conducted a “thoughtful and comprehensive process to assess Elon’s proposal with deliberate focus on value, certainty and financing.”

The announcement comes four days after the billionaire unveiled a financing package to back the acquisition, which, Reuters reported, led Twitter’s board to take the offer more seriously.

Musk made the purchase with $25.5 billion of fully committed debt and margin loan financing and an additional $21 billion equity commitment.

Musk has previously said his $54.20 “best and final” offer is a 54% premium over the day before he began investing in Twitter and a 38% premium over the day before his investment was publicly announced.

Musk put forward the offer earlier this month, a move that came days after he acquired a 9.2% stake in the social media site. A day later, Twitter’s board put in place a so-called poison pill as a way to stymie a potential deal. 

The Tesla CEO has said that, should his takeover succeed, he would open source Twitter’s algorithm and try to make it an inclusive arena for free speech. He also said he would try to tackle spam and bot accounts. 

Musk also pointed to the importance of Twitter as a free speech platform in the announcement of the transaction.

“Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated,” said Musk. “I also want to make Twitter better than ever by enhancing the product with new features, making the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeating the spam bots, and authenticating all humans. Twitter has tremendous potential – I look forward to working with the company and the community of users to unlock it.”

Ahead of the announcement, he tweeted that he hoped even his worst critics would remain on the platform, “because that is what free speech means.”

Twitter is set to report first-quarter earnings on Thursday. It is not planning to hold a corresponding conference call due to the transaction. 

© 2022 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: Lucy Harley-McKeown and Aislinn Keely

New 21Shares VP of Product is the latest defector from big tech

Crypto exchange-traded product (ETP) provider 21Shares has snatched former Uber executive Karan Chawla from the ride-hailing and delivery app and named him its new vice president of product.

Chawla, who was head of payments for the US, Canada and APAC at Uber for the last seven years, will “lead development of 21Shares’ product organization and roadmap to provide investors with access to the world’s most innovative DeFi protocols,” the company said in a statement on Monday. 

Speaking with The Block, Chawla said that, having joined Uber when it was still a “big startup,” he was looking forward to returning to a company with that “early-stage feel.”

“I think it’s still early days [for crypto] and it’s such a big opportunity. The key for us is going to be velocity. We need to be able to move quickly if there’s an opportunity,” he said. 

Chawla is not alone. The shift in longtime big tech employees moving to join crypto startups has been picking up momentum. Speaking with The New York Times in December, former Google executive-turned-startup-founder Sridhar Ramaswamy likened it to “a giant sucking sound coming from crypto.”

Among the defections are ride-hailing app Lyft’s CFO Brian Roberts move to OpenSea, and Jack Dorsey, who stepped down from Twitter to focus on his crypto and web3 company Block (formerly Square).

More and more talent is also moving from traditional finance to crypto. 21Share’s own head of trading Gurjeet Kundi, who joined the company in March, was formerly head of cross-asset ETF trading at Mizuho and spent close to two decades in ETF-related positions at Bank of America, Deutsche Bank and UniCredit.

The Block has also reported no fewer than 15 Citibank employees have moved to a range of crypto companies in the last months.

© 2022 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: Callan Quinn

Gem lead developer: OpenSea acquisition hasn’t killed possibility of token

Following today’s news that NFT marketplace OpenSea has acquired NFT aggregator Gem, some of Gem’s loyal users were dismayed that this may kill the chances of a token.

Yet Gem’s lead developer Vasa poured cold water on that idea, suggesting it’s still a possibility for the project to launch one. 

“Rewards/Tokens are not out of [the] question,” Vasa said in the project’s Discord server, after stating that Gem will still operate as a separate brand and product to OpenSea.

“We will not change the way we work with all the marketplaces we support and we’ll make sure that we remain unbiased and transparent in the way we operate,” he added.

Gems pools liquidity from various NFT marketplaces such as OpenSea and LooksRare, which allows users to “sweep the floor” of a collection (buying a range of its lower end).

In the crypto ecosystem, it’s common for projects to “decentralize” themselves as project founders hand over control to their communities. Typically when this happens, they establish a governance system and hand out tokens to their early adopters to help their most loyal users take charge. Votes using these tokens can then be used to determine how the platform develops over time. 

Yet since these tokens tend to have a monetary value, such airdrops can be very lucrative. Big airdrops in the past have included Uniswap, dYdX and the Ethereum Name Service. Some of Gem’s users have hoped that it will do the same — and may have spent significant sums of crypto to use the service multiple times with many wallets, in the hope that they get rewarded someday (a process known as airdrop farming).

Since OpenSea has not yet launched a token — despite rival NFT platforms such as LooksRare doing so — it seemed plausible that a project under its wing would also not do so. But Vasa’s message suggests that’s not necessarily true.

© 2022 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: Callan Quinn, Tim Copeland and Vishal Chawla

Meta is opening a metaverse-inspired brick-and-mortar store

Meta, formerly known as Facebook, is opening its first real-life store to sell VR and AR devices.

The store, which opens on May 9, will be located on Meta Burlingame campus. It’s also where Reality Labs, a division of the company focusing on the metaverse, is located.

“In the Meta Store, you’ll be able to get hands-on experience with all our hardware products,” said a statement from the company. “We want you to interact with everything. We want you to pick stuff up. We want you to feel it.”

The store will include devices like Ray-Ban Stories smart sunglasses, and customers will be able to call retail associates using Meta’s Portal device, which allows video calling. There will also be a demo of the virtual reality headset Quest 2.

The goal of the store, according to the company, is to give the public a glimpse of what “the future as the metaverse comes to life.”

“We’re not selling the metaverse in our store, but hopefully people will come in and walk out knowing a little bit more about how our products will help connect them to it,” said Martin Gilliard, Head of Meta Store, in a statement.

Tech companies opening their own physical stores isn’t new, as seen with Apple, Google, and Microsoft. But this is a first for Meta, which had previously tried selling VR headsets in physical stores like Best Buy and Oculus products in pop-ups around New York City.

The company has created a lot of hype around the so-called ‘metaverse’ since rebranding to Meta back in 2021. Despite the hype, Meta’s Reality Labs lost more than $10 billion in 2021.

The plan for a physical store had apparently been in place since 2020, according to one 2021 report from the New York Times.

© 2022 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: Anushree Dave

Bored Ape Instagram account hacked: NFTs worth $2.8 million stolen

A hacker has stolen 91 NFTs worth at least $2.8 million through a phishing attack targeting Bored Ape Yacht Club owners today. It was carried out through the official Bored Ape Instagram account.

There is no mint going on today. It looks like BAYC Instagram was hacked. Do not mint anything, click links, or link your wallet to anything,tweeted Bored Ape Yacht Club.

When the Instagram account was accessed, it was used to post a fake update claiming there was a LAND airdrop and users had to connect their wallets to claim the airdrop. This was taking advantage of the Bored Ape roadmap, which includes a metaverse game that will contain virtual land. When users connected to their wallets — and likely approved a transaction — the website stole their NFTs.

According to blockchain data, the hacker’s wallet — which has been identified with this phishing attack — holds 91 NFTs. According to data from Zerion, the NFTs are worth at least $2.8 million based on the floor prices of the respective collections.

This was the fake announcement on the Bored Ape Yacht Club Instagram account. Image: Instagram.

Among the stolen items are four Bored Apes, six Mutant Apes and three Bored Ape Kennel Club NFTs (the latter two being official derivative projects). The hacker also stole one CloneX and items from other up-and-coming collections like EightBit, Alien Fren, and Toxic Skull Club among others.

We will be in contact with the users affected and will post a full post mortem on the attack when we can. For now I would like to stress that 2FA was enabled on the account,” tweeted Bored Ape co-founder Garga.

Despite reports and tweets that there were more than 50 Bored Apes and Mutant Apes stolen, Garga said that it was just 10.

Today’s incident is the latest high-profile NFT theft to occur following the hacking of a BAYC-related platform. Earlier in April, Bored Ape’s Discord server was hacked and a similar phishing attempt was made but the hacker only succeeded in stealing one Mutant Ape. Although many Bored Ape holders have lost their NFTs due to a variety of other phishing attacks and NFT marketplace issues.

© 2022 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: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Galaxy Digital Company Intelligence

Quick Take

  • Galaxy Digital provides a wide range of digital asset financial services for institutions and direct clients; the company currently has five business lines: asset management, principal investments, trading, investment banking and mining
  • Raising $500 million in convertible debt last December, Galaxy Digital has been using this new capital to fuel growth, especially on the engineering side
  • Galaxy Digital announced its $1.2 billion acquisition of BitGo last May – integration with BitGo will allow Galaxy Digital to become the first global full-service financial platform for institutional investors, but the acquisition has been postponed until the completion of Galaxy Digital’s domestication process

This research piece is available exclusively to
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this Research content on The Block Research.

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Author: Wendy Hirata

ECB board member calls for tougher, coordinated global regulation for crypto

A board member of the European Central Bank is advocating crypto regulation be aligned across the world to mitigate a potentially massive collapse.  

Executive Board Member Fabio Panetta addressed Columbia University today about “the Wild West of crypto finance.” In his remarks, he said crypto requires a heavier regulatory burden since it has yet to deliver on its promised philosophy of truly decentralized, trustworthy money.

“Crypto-assets are bringing about instability and insecurity – the exact opposite of what they promised,” he said. “They are creating a new Wild West.”

That means unifying standards between crypto and the traditional finance sector, and in some cases, setting the bar even higher for crypto.

Concerns aired

At $1.3 trillion, the crypto market is now larger than the sub-prime mortgage market was at the time of its collapse, and according to Panetta, they share “strikingly similar dynamics.”

For that reason, regulators must respond now, he said, especially considering the growth of a number of “unbacked” sectors of crypto, like some decentralized finance assets.

“This strong appeal of crypto-assets, especially unbacked ones, is a cause for concern given the lack of fundamentals, the number of recent scandals, their use in illegal activities and the high volatility of their prices,” he said. “All this points to unsound underlying market dynamics.”

Panetta also cited energy and environmental concerns over proof-of-work mining as well as crypto’s potential use as a tax evasion and sanctions evasion tool.

“So crypto-assets are speculative assets that can cause major damage to society,” he said. “At present they derive their value mainly from greed, they rely on the greed of others and the hope that the scheme continues unhindered. Until this house of cards collapses, leaving people buried under their losses.”

Coordinated regulation

For the most part, this means holding crypto-assets to traditional financial system standards. That includes implementing Financial Action Task Force (FATF) standards, aligning tax reporting for crypto with the wider financial system and perhaps implementing higher taxes for crypto activities seen as potentially harmful for the environment, like proof of work.

Panetta also advocated for additional mandatory disclosure and transparency requirements for crypto firms and the strengthening of public authorities to detect illicit trades and emerging threats.

He pointed out that the growth of the crypto sector shows a wider hunger for better financial infrastructure, and central banks must respond with faster retail payment systems and the issuance of central bank digital currencies.

Panetta touted the work of the EU on its digital euro and the European Commission’s Regulation of Markets in Crypto-Assets, which recently passed through its parliamentary committee. The crypto framework would unify standards for crypto firms in the EU. But Panetta hopes to go further:

“We need to focus more on unbacked crypto-asset activities that are undertaken without service providers. In addition, we cannot afford to leave on-chain peer-to-peer payments unregulated, as they can be used to circumvent any regulation. Finally, if we really want to harmonise supervision significantly across all EU Member States, the new European AML Authority should supervise the riskiest crypto-asset providers.”

But those standards will only be effective if they are “matched by ambitious measures implemented by our international peers,” said Panetta.

© 2022 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


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