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6 Questions for Yat Siu of Animoca Brands

We ask the buidlers in the blockchain and cryptocurrency sector for their thoughts on the industry… and we throw in a few random zingers to keep them on their toes!


 

This week, our 6 Questions go to Yat Siu, the co-founder, group executive chairman and managing director of Animoca Brands, who leads various NFT projects.

A veteran technology entrepreneur and investor, Yat is the co-founder, group executive chairman and managing director of Animoca Brands a global leader in blockchain and gaming with the mission to deliver digital property rights to the worlds gamers and internet users. Animoca seeks to create a new asset class, play-to-earn economies and a more equitable digital framework contributing to the building of the open Metaverse.

Yat began his career at Atari Germany in 1990. In 1995, he moved to Hong Kong to establish Hong Kong Cybercity/Freenation, the first free webpage and email provider in Asia. In 1998, he set up Outblaze, an award-winning pioneer of multilingual white label web services. In 2009, he sold Outblazes messaging unit to IBM and pivoted Outblaze to become an incubator of projects and companies to develop digital entertainment services and products. One of those incubator projects is Animoca Brands.

 


1 From smart contracts to DApps, NFTs and DeFi, we have seen so many of cryptos next killer apps, but none have really taken off yet. What will stick?

The killer apps for crypto are already here, theyre just in need of further growth and penetration. Gaming is the killer app more specifically, GameFi. Games like Axie Infinity and The Sandbox have captured the imagination of thousands and have grown accordingly by enabling their users to own their own game content and benefit materially from that content. The top DApps tend to be games (DappRadar currently lists six games in the top 10 DApps), and I do not expect that to change.

 

2 If you were investing in startup companies right now, what kind of blockchain-based business opportunities would catch your eye?

As it happens, we are, in fact, actively investing in blockchain companies (startups and non-startups) all over the world. We are particularly interested in projects that can drive mass adoption, and in this we consider Metaverse-related companies to be critical to future growth. By that, I dont just mean Metaverse world builders but also the companies that provide open assets that will be used in the Metaverse for example, virtual car builders as opposed to an entire racing game.

Another important quality that we look for is openness. We invest in projects that grow the open Metaverse and facilitate the delivery of true digital property rights based on assets that derive their utility from being open, interoperable and composable. This includes platforms and protocols (Flow, Polygon, etc.) and marketplaces (OpenSea, Bitski, BNV, etc.), as well as consumer products like games and worlds. In essence, the companies that we invest in must be open to openness.

My concern is that the large Web 1.0 and 2.0 companies, which already enjoy a massive user advantage, will try to shape the Metaverse into a series of closed systems operated on their terms and under their total control. These proprietary metaverses are not likely to be very democratic and will lack the openness and digital property rights that should rightfully characterize the next iteration of our online experience.

I think that tech giants like Facebook are unlikely to offer their metaverse users any meaningful degree of ownership or they might do so at face value, but then implement strict content and usage licenses as we see in social media services today. Without digital property rights, it will not be possible to create a democratic, responsible, equitable Metaverse.

 

3 Which countries are doing the most to support blockchain and which ones will be left behind?

The winners in this arena will be countries with a history of serving alternative and/or fast-growing financial products and that are highly supportive of blockchain such as Liechtenstein, Singapore and Switzerland. Other winners will include highly developed economies that have contributed to and promoted the blockchain industry Germany, for example, where spezialfonds allow pension funds and insurers to hold up to 20% of investments as cryptocurrencies, and where the stock exchange (Deutsche Boerse) and a major bank (Commerzbank) have already invested to support the trading of NFTs.

Countries that experiment and invest in the blockchain space will attract growth and the best and brightest talent, and those that dont will miss out not only on the benefits of the technology but also on the talent. One example of this is how Australian crypto companies are moving to places like Singapore and drastically lowering Australias competitive capacity in this important, growing segment of technology and finance.

This alert about Australias missed opportunity is being sounded not only by crypto pundits and similarly interested parties but also by respected industry sources such as the CEO of National Australia Bank, one of the major financial institutions in the country.

Countries with a well-established culture of disruptive innovation, such as the United States, continue to forge ahead in blockchain despite the risks involved and the lack of clarity from regulators. I think that the U.S., despite having more regulation, will remain a key environment for blockchain-related companies and associated venture capital (global crypto growth is fuelled in significant part by U.S. venture and other capital). Regulation is important, and I hope it can be achieved without stifling growth and innovation.

The biggest losers will be countries that reject applications of blockchain (including crypto) and, particularly, countries that reject the entire digital asset space. The use of fungible and nonfungible tokens provides an open, transparent value system where growth is being driven by the network effect. The more people join this new open system, the stronger it becomes, while the old closed networks become more isolated and less attractive.

For a nation, rejecting blockchain and crypto is like refusing to join the World Trade Organization and saying no to global free trade.

 

4 What talent do you lack and wish you had? How would you use it if you had it?

Im a terrible singer, which is ironic because my mother is a former opera singer and director and I actually studied music. I had to sing as part of my entrance exam to the music conservatory, and it was tough. If I could sing well, I would probably be more active musically, as singing is such an easily accessible expression of culture (it can be done anywhere, anytime, with no equipment, alone or in company).

I would definitely appreciate being able to perform as a singer instead of just being a listener, especially because so much of my work entails the translation and delivery of culture of various forms. However, a lack of talent for singing means that I leave this activity to the rest of my family, especially my mother.

 

5 If you didnt need sleep, what would you do with the extra time?

Right now, I would probably use most of the extra time to work more there are so many important things to do, and I really enjoy my work! But if I really didnt need to sleep, I would attempt to distribute the extra time equally to more work, more family and more personal time. Family time does sometimes involve me buying NFTs and playing games with my kids (my oldest son is an active blockchain gamer and NFT collector), so some of the family time might also count as work time, which works for me!

 

6 What was the most embarrassing moment of your life?

I love to hike. Several years ago, I went hiking with a friend on Lantau Island in Hong Kong. We ended up struggling through a densely vegetated headland where it was uncomfortably hot and humid. We were scratched by sharp branches, assaulted by swarms of insects and gagging on air that smelled foul one of those situations when hiking is just not fun. A stones throw away, through the shrubs and the haze, we glimpsed the sea. We agreed that it would be much nicer to walk along the water while enjoying the fresh sea breeze, so we headed that way.

We exited the tangled vegetation and came to the top of what I must now admit was a sheer cliff. Below the cliff, a strip of rocks met the sea. My friend pointed out that there was no way for us to get down the cliff, but at that point, all I wanted to do was leave the insect-infested shrubs behind us, and the only other way was down the cliff.

It was a brutally hot day, and I may have had a touch of heatstroke. Ill let Ibrahim El-Mouelhy, my hiking companion on that day and our chief communications officer today, describe the event:

Yat has always been a risk-taker and an optimist, and this was particularly evident on that day. He strode purposefully to the cliffs edge and asserted, with great confidence, that we would be able to climb down to the beach. To me, the cliff looked dangerously high and steep, and the beach resembled a jumble of jagged rocks. Yat took off his backpack and hurled it over the cliff. Then he casually turned around and hopped backward over the edge.

I stood paralyzed in shock and horror, convinced that this was the end of Yat Siu, future captain of industry but now a tragic victim of sunstroke. Almost immediately, however, I heard his loud calls for help. I rushed to the edge of the precipice and looked down, where I saw Yat struggling to hang on to spiky grasses and fraying earth at an unquestionably vertical incline. He had evidently had a change of mind regarding the negotiability of his route and was now simply endeavoring to avoid plummeting to his likely demise. Far below him, the rocks looked particularly jagged and sharp.

Bracing myself, I reached down and grabbed Yats hand. Im a big guy and used to lifting weights, so I thought pulling him up would be easy. Wrong. When I tried to hoist him, our combined mass caused my foot to break right through the cliff edge, which turned out to consist of matted vegetation and dirt instead of the bedrock that would have been so much more appropriate for these Hollywood-style antics.

I very nearly went over the cliff myself as its edge disintegrated beneath our weight. The situation had quickly deteriorated from an ordinary one-armed pull into a harrowing attempt to defy death. Every time that I took a step back from the cliffs edge, the ground would collapse under me and Id have to throw myself backward while still hauling on Yats arm. In this manner, we scrambled back to safety. It probably only took a few moments to pull Yat off that cliff, but they were some extremely tense moments. Fortunately, we made it out alive and in one piece.

After all that, we had to go back into the hellish shrubs and hike for over an hour to find a (conventional) way down to retrieve Yats backpack.

 

A wish to the blockchain community:

The blockchain community has, in aggregate, the incredibly important task of building the open Metaverse, where users will be able to own their assets and data. To own your data is to own your future and to be free. This future requires our young people to build (and build in) the open Metaverse and create sufficient mass and relevance so that even closed systems will need to embrace openness very much how open source changed closed source (the world would be very different today without the open-source movement of the past decades.)

I wish for all young, ambitious entrepreneurs to prioritize openness, fairness, collaboration and interoperability in their work, and to strive to provide the best possible products not only for crypto enthusiasts but also (and especially) for the billions of users who have yet to enter the world of crypto.

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Slow and steady is path to crypto riches says YouTube star

When Nicholas Merten saw a video explaining Bitcoin in November 2011, he brushed it off, later lamenting that I unfortunately did not do the right thing. Its hard to blame him, after all, he was only 13.

Now 23, he runs DataDash, a YouTube channel with over 470,000 subscribers, making it among the largest focused on the cryptocurrency industry. There, he shares tips about trading and makes thoughtful, balanced, and interesting commentary on various relevant topics along with occasional speculation. What is notable about his channel is that it is almost entirely absent of hype, preferring calculated and tempered analysis.

Merten is also the CEO of Digifox, a DeFi startup that aims to act as a one-stop shop for new cryptocurrency investors, soon allowing them to automatically deposit portions of their paychecks into crypto by way of dollar-cost averaging.

Drop-out entrepreneur

Merten got started with investing at 13, though even before that I was doing research, he adds, leaving one to wonder whether his first words were stock tickers. He was quickly bitten by the entrepreneurial bug, and by 17 he was experimenting with a clothing company of his own making, and separately tried to make relaxation beverages by formulating recipes with a partner company.

It was a nice head start to understand a lot of the emotional nature of markets and market cycles.

It was due to this intimate interest in entrepreneurship that Merten, who grew up in Virginia, chose to study business administration and finance at Virginia Commonwealth University. He quickly dropped out, however, opting instead for alternative education through Praxis, which matches accepted students with six-month internships for on-the-job learning after a three-month training period. Often, these internships convert into full-time positions, and Merten was really hungry to get my first job.

That first job as a sales data management intern came at age 18, located six blocks down from where Steve Jobs used to live in San Francisco, Merten recalls. This was followed by six months as a content manager at ClickUp, a project management software company that is like a billion dollar unicorn now, he says, emphasizing the learning opportunities that come with working at such a high-growth firm.

 

 

 

 

While working at ClickUp, Merten created his YouTube channel called DataDash, which he originally envisioned as dealing with data science and data analytics. Soon, DataDash became a cryptocurrency channel after Merten made a few videos on the subject. I got a couple hundred views, and I was like you know what, I’ll keep going’, he recalled.

With the 2017 bull market in full swing, Merten decided to leave his job at ClickUp in order to devote his full-time efforts towards his crypto craft.

Dont trade, DCA

In 2019, he expanded by founding Digifox, which I originally started building back in 2013. The startup consists of a smartphone wallet app that allows users to trade and earn interest on their cryptocurrency deposits via a plug-in to Celsius.

In the weeks ahead, Digifox will come out with a get paid in crypto feature, which will help people to receive a portion of their salary in cryptocurrency, received right in the app. Initially available in the USA and later the EU and UK, workers earning a salary will be able to simply request their human resources departments to direct a portion of their paychecks to a bank account owned by Digifox. Your employer doesn’t even have to know your earning crypto, Merten clarifies, adding that the app charges a 1% flat fee.

 

 

 

Source: Digifox

 

 

Buying crypto but in the US, I know that a lot of banks, they’ll freeze transactions on debit cards or bank accounts we think of this as the ultimate crypto on-ramp.

This method of regularly buying into a cryptocurrency is called dollar-cost averaging, or DCA, and is a common concept from the old world of traditional investing. Merten says that many new investors ask him if it is a good time to buy, price-wise, to which he recommends DCA as a way to spread out risk.

 

 

 

 

This is because the average buyer may have no way of knowing whether they are buying into a temporary peak. If we were to imagine a continuously rising asset, an investor who does not previously have a large amount of investment capital for immediate allocation would be better off to invest $1,000 per month for 12 months, rather than to save up for a year in order to invest $12,000 at the end. Thats why I get paid in Ethereum an arrangement that has treated me well.

 

 

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It’s a great strategy. In this case, for someone to passively invest and not have to stress about the market, Merten confirms. Another useful factor in the dollar-cost-averaging method is that its systematic nature tends to mitigate against the oft-dreaded panic selling which many new investors succumb to after seeing their investment drop in value.

Unlike many other channels, Mertens DataDash does not encourage its followers to over-trade or enter leveraged positions despite the potential rewards. The first principle I say is do not day trade, he emphasizes, saying that passive investors are 95% more likely to end up in profit. But there’s something potentially even more dangerous than day trading doing it on leverage.

 

 

 

 

According to Merten, leveraged trading is the biggest danger faced by crypto investors today. It is enticing, with a single correct call easily netting huge returns in a short timeframe but at great risk. Despite his warnings, leverage is seen as an intrinsic part of crypto-investing by many, with a large number of influencers referring to leveraged trades as positions to differentiate them from mere spot holdings which are 1:1.

It’s really bad that a lot of people are getting into leverage trading you know they’re getting into trading on derivatives platforms, and it’s generally a losing game for most people.

Time to DeFi

With margin trading off the table, Merten encourages users to put their cryptocurrency to work using decentralized finance, or DeFi solutions. Merten believes that the apps DeFi-like functionality is important, because high gas costs on Ethereum make on-chain transactions expensive for retail investors even if they know exactly what they are doing. A small investor, like a $1,000 investor, they’re going to have a difficult time because there’s an immediate 5-10 percent fee on their trade, he says, his example very likely an understatement.

 

 

 

 

Gas fees rack up quickly when trading tokens or adding liquidity pairs to decentralized exchanges like Uniswap or SushiSwap. As great as it is for someone who might be trading thousands, hundreds of hundreds of thousands of dollars, it doesn’t make sense for our everyday users, Merten claims. Recently, NFT minting has been blamed as a cause for spikes in gas prices.

 

 

Source: Digifox

 

 

Once the crypto hits the Digifox wallet, users can choose to deposit it into a yield account, where it can earn up to 5% in interest denominated in the same currency. This is done through a direct plug-in to the external Celsius platform. Similar to traditional banking, earnings of depositors ultimately come from other users who elect to borrow from Celsius using cryptocurrency as collateral. We try to say it’s like a kind of savings account, Merten explains.

I think that this is one of the few major opportunities we have in our lives in the 21st century where you can invest in something and really make a sizable return

Though, Celsius doesn’t have a major insurance policy for the users cryptocurrency they hold in custody while paying interest, Merten says he chose the platform after researching the security protocols of its competitors including BlockFi and NEXO. In the future, he expects that the company will allow users to earn a lower amount of interest, also known as yield, in an insured pool where some of the yields that they’re giving up goes into an insurance fund to compensate for potential losses.

He admits that it provides some peace of mind that Celsius has $20 billion under management, which makes Digifox a very minor player at around $10 million.

Expert outlook

Merten believes that we are now halfway through the cryptocurrency market cycle not in a period of fear or doubt, but neither yet at peak optimism, which he sets at Bitcoin approaching $200,000 and Ethereum trading between $15,000 and $20,000. He says this would bring the crypto market to a total value of $10 trillion, a far cry from the current $2 trillion market valuation.

Different from most people, I don’t think the cycle is going to end this year, and I don’t think it’s going to end in early 2022 I think it will be late 2022 or early 2023, he says, referring to the many industry pundits who are calling for a peak around the upcoming new year.

 

 

 

 

Instead of relying on times of the year, Merten believes in expanding cycles, where the market cycles expand by 11 to 13 months from previous cycles. He explains that in his view, the first Bitcoin market cycle was 11 months, followed by the second which lasted 24. As the cycle ending in 2018 took 35 months, he anticipates the 2022 bull market to last about 47 months.

“If history repeats, it would be December 2018 for the start and November 2022 for the cycle end, he says referring to Bitcoin, adding that altcoins are likely to top soon after.

 

 

A 2018 chart by Dave The Wave demonstrating the thesis of expanding cycles. Source: Twitter @davethewave

 

 

Despite his tendency to make predictions, he admits that he was entirely blindsided by this years NFT boom I thought CryptoKitties was kind of the end of it in 2017, and I did not see it coming back with such a vengeance, he recounts with a sense of bewilderment, referring to the cat-breeding NFT project which clogged up the Ethereum network in 2017. Merten says he is keeping an open mind despite fraud and over-hype in the sector.

With 10 years of investing experience, Merten considers a long-term outlook as a key virtue for those looking to make long-term profits.

I like to make a few simple coordinated investments for trades over a one to two year timeframe. I like to get into the maximum point of fear and doubt in the market when prices are at historic discounts, and I like to ride the wave.

 

 

 

 

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Shanghai Man: Fiat on-ramps dry up in China, crypto topics censored on social media

This weekly roundup of news from Mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong attempts to curate the industrys most important news, including influential projects, changes in the regulatory landscape, and enterprise blockchain integrations.

This week China is back to work after its week-long national day celebrations, an event that is always filled with flag-waving, military parades and enthusiastic nationalism. This years version was intensified by the recent homecoming of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou after three years of detention in Canada, as well as heightened tensions in the Taiwan Strait. Government regulators have spent the better part of the last half-year wiping out the cryptocurrency industry in the mainland, a topic that has given the Shanghai Man plenty of topics to discuss in this weekly column.

Limited access to markets

On Wednesday, Binance took a step towards compliance by announcing it would be closing P2P for RMB markets. According to the announcement on Binances website, the change will happen on December 31, 2021. Meanwhile, it will check for users from the mainland of China and switch their accounts to a withdraw-only mode. At the same time, users will only be able to withdraw, close positions, and other essential functions. Binance will notify corresponding users by email 7 days before the account switch.

 

 

The closure of RMB P2P markets makes holding crypto a bit more risky in China

 

 

The news was not well-received by the remaining retail holders, who feel that fewer and fewer reliable off-ramps are available without resorting to more drastic measures such as offshore accounts. Binance had been one of the most popular P2P markets, due largely to the reputation of the exchange, its liquidity, and Binances geographic distance from Beijing. Binance has always maintained that its website was blocked in China and it doesnt have an exchange business presence here, therefore it was exempt from mainland regulatory policy.

Theres no denying that a lack of P2P fiat options will make investing in crypto a lot less comfortable for Chinese citizens living in mainland China. With the eCNY central bank digital currency right around the corner, tighter fiat regulations might make it hard to move large amounts of fiat in and out of the crypto markets. On the other hand, many people are less concerned, knowing that OTC markets will spring up whenever there is an opportunity to provide an in-demand service. Technology always has a way of developing where it is needed the most.

Reading between the lines

The move seems quite severe on paper, but there are still a few grey areas that need to be examined. Its no secret that going into this year, millions of Chinese users were registered on top exchanges and many of them were active traders and large holders. Some of them will likely be deterred by recent government policies and exchange rules, and reduce their exposure to the asset class. Others are actively being funneled into DeFi, as evident by the rising on-chain trading volumes coming from China.

Other users will simply elect to wait, especially considering the rapidly-changing nature of national policies. One common belief is that exchanges that elect to self-regulate may not actually enforce this policy very strictly at first. This is supported by the lack of clarity on how overseas Chinese users should be handled. Users may be able to circumvent rules altogether by supplying proof of international residency or alternative forms of ID. The silver lining here is that any sell pressure caused by uncertainty or fear from Chinese investors will be dampened by a long transition period of compliance.

For a company that operates completely outside of China, its very difficult for regulators to enforce policies, especially if the exchange is claiming to self-regulate, by banning IPs, and not accepting new Chinese registrations. This is the strategy that exchanges such as OKEx and Gate.io seem to be following, as both of these large platforms with Chinese roots announced that they were already fully compliant, didnt accept Chinese users, and as a result wouldnt be making any drastic changes.

 

 

A prominent social media Influencer on Weibo wrote:

“The content of this announcement is a bit strange. I think the exchange will conduct a self-check and try to discover the remaining Chinese users on the platform, but in the case after the self-check the exchange announces there are no Chinese users, the exchange will just leave them there.”

This post was later deleted on Weibo. Currently, all topics related to Binance and other exchanges are censored by social media apps like WeChat.

Waning impact

Perhaps the most surprising takeaway from all this was the market indifference to the news. Previous announcements of this magnitude have had very pronounced effects on the market price. On Wednesday, following the announcement by Binance, the BTC price dipped briefly before bouncing back to over $58,000 the following day.

What this shows it that the market is putting less weight on the impact of news coming out of China, instead focusing on narratives like the hoped-for upcoming ETF approvals in the US and Vladimir Putins surprise admission about cryptocurrencies. Investors can take solace in the fact that with more growth and decentralization, the market risk is more diversified.

The right to enforce

On October 11, the financial magazine Caijing put out a story discussing the enforcement of the recent crackdown on cryptocurrencies. The main points were that the recent announcements from the Central Bank were merely guidance and that actual judicial interpretation and enforcement needed to come from the public prosecution authorities in the court system. The article implied that judicial bodies were now conducting research into the legality of mining and cryptocurrency businesses, and that this could spell trouble for rule breakers. Those who had currently succeeded in skirting the rules might not be out of hot water, yet.

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

6 Questions for Olga Kupchevskaya of MyEtherWallet

We ask the buidlers in the blockchain and cryptocurrency sector for their thoughts on the industry… and we throw in a few random zingers to keep them on their toes!


 

This week, our 6 Questions go to Olga Kupchevskaya, vice president of research and development for MyEtherWallet.

Olga is vice president of research and development for MyEtherWallet. She has a strong passion for learning, which brought her to blockchain technology and led her to complete a masters in computer science, with research emphasis on blockchain scalability solutions. In her role with MyEtherWallet, she oversees the research, development and production of software products ranging from the Ethereum Blockchain data tools (EthVM) to wallet management.

 


1 What kind of consolidation do you expect to see in the crypto industry in 2021?

As far as price is concerned, Ether (ETH) will go to the moon, of course. We already saw that staking increased interest in the chain and brought the price higher than it was in 2017. If the Ethereum Foundation executes its promise of merging to the Mainnet and Beacon chains by the end of 2021, the value of ETH will be even further secured.

In addition, we will see more consolidation in decentralized finance cross-chain functionality and bridging. Following the previous DeFi boom years, more and more users are interested in participating in different DeFi projects. Its the next step for the projects to create maximum value for their users and gain an even higher market share.

 

2 What are the top five Crypto Twitter feeds you cant do without, and why?

I do have a Twitter handle. However, I do not have a friendly relationship with Crypto Twitter. I will usually dedicate several minutes a week just to see if there is anything worthwhile. Most of the time, I am just checking our companys partners or other big DeFi projects for interesting news or some educational content. Often, I get overwhelmed by the amount of speculation and misinformation out there in other channels and how much manipulation goes on in the feeds.

We all have seen recent examples of Twitter activity where a big-time investor tweets some speculations or threats regarding their investments. Then, right after, we see people start vigorously buying or selling. As a result, we get significant price changes. Besides the fact that market manipulation is illegal in other industries and that it is absurd one tweet can significantly influence the crypto market and cause chaos in the community it does put a perspective on ethics standards in the Crypto Twitter community.

Instead, I get most of my news from some dedicated crypto media platforms like Cointelegraph, CoinDesk, etc. and random crypto podcasts, where content is higher quality and I dont have to absorb the information in micro blocks without context.

 

3 Which is sillier: $500,000 Bitcoin or $0 Bitcoin? Why?

I feel that a Bitcoin (BTC) price at $0 is much sillier than $500,000. At the end of the day, the primary Bitcoin purpose is value transfer; even though its decentralized, it still has some common ground with centralized digital systems. Traditionally in financial systems, you have a middle man who will help store, manage and secure your assets, like a bank. And as with any business, the middle man has expenses, so you eventually pay some fees to it when you want to use your assets.

With blockchain technology, you can do all of that yourself; however, there are still physical costs. Like any blockchain, Bitcoin is operated by nodes connected via a network. Bitcoin nodes perform computational work to verify transactions and make chain history accessible to other node peers. Each peer still has to be incentivized to perform the proof-of-work to cover equipment costs, electricity costs and so on. Even if Bitcoin started to implement proof-of-stake like Ethereum, there are still costs that one needs to cover, like ongoing node maintenance.

 

4 Which two superpowers would you most want to have, and how would you combine them for good… or evil?

My first ability would definitely be to clone myself while keeping the clones memory once we are joined back together. I feel that there are not enough hours during the day to do everything I want or even need to. For instance, there is so much innovation happening all around us in the industry, and I just dont have enough time to educate myself deeply on all of the new concepts. Instead, I have to pick only certain things.

The second would be flying being able to get somewhere without any constraints is very attractive. By combining these powers, I would have the unique ability to offer free multi-route air taxi services to those in need as an alternative to regional airlines and their outrageous luggage fees. Id have to work out the details to be able to show in-flight movies, but hey, the idea is there!

 

5 What talent do you lack and wish you had? How would you use it if you had it?

I definitely lack good public speaking skills. English is not my native language, and like most people, I tend to get very nervous. When I had to do frequent presentations in college, sometimes I would lose my train of thought in the middle of the sentence, and I forgot some words halfway while saying them out loud. Even though it has been a while since I experienced extreme nervousness, I still feel that I lack the qualities to give a speech to a large crowd I just met.

I am lucky, as I now work with great team members who respect and motivate each other. However, I did experience my share of sexism and discrimination, and I know other people in the crypto and STEM industries are experiencing that now. If I were a great public speaker, I would want to influence and motivate people to talk about what they are going through, call out gender biases and take action. Adding to the existing dialog will help create more awareness and empower more women and monitory cultures to enter and stay in the industry.

 

6 List your favorite sports teams, and choose the single most memorable moment from watching them.

I grew up in Russia, and of course, we always watched hockey over there. My friends were big-time SKA Saint Petersburg fans, and we would frequently go to games as hockey tickets are a magnitude cheaper over there. One of the most memorable moments was watching them get into the KHL Conference Finals for the first time and play their last game against HC Dynamo Moscow. I remember the last 30 seconds and how intense it was.

SKA was losing and had to score twice to win. They pulled the goalie off the ice to gain an additional skater, concentrating the rest of the game around the Dynamo net. SKA skaters kept attacking the net over and over again with all the skills they had to offer. Still, the Dynamo goalie kept producing amazing saves, and in between, you could feel the tension between the players and the stadium. SKA lost the Dynamo goalie proved to be unbeatable but it was a great hockey game all around.

 

A wish to the blockchain community:

Definitely dont be afraid to be a little crazy. Even though your idea might seem too out there, there is still a good chance that its not; you can be the first to bring it to life! Educate yourself, reach out to the people in the industry, and you can find someone who will share your passion and help you with execution.

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

6 Questions for Lisa N. Edwards of Getting Started In Crypto

We ask the buidlers in the blockchain and cryptocurrency sector for their thoughts on the industry… and we throw in a few random zingers to keep them on their toes!


 

This week, our 6 Questions go to Lisa N. Edwards, a cryptocurrency trading specialist who runs and co-owns Getting Started In Crypto.

Lisa is an Elliott Wave specialist trader with 20-plus years of experience in traditional stocks and commodities, now exclusively trading cryptocurrency. She runs and co-owns Getting Started In Crypto, Thousand To Millions and The Moon Mag with Josh Taylor. Lisa is widely experienced, with previous business ventures including Satoshi Sisters, Trading Places VIP, D4.Partners and CoinRunners. Outside of trading, Lisa has a flourishing career in the media and film industries, with a cryptocurrency-themed screenplay titled CoinRunners, which she anticipates will be filmed in late 2021.

 


1 When you tell people youre in the blockchain industry, how do they react?

Does anyone say they are in the blockchain industry? Crypto, baby, all the way! I have been telling everyone for years to buy Bitcoin (BTC) and various cryptocurrencies, and now that Bitcoin is around $45,000, all of a sudden it is interesting more interesting at $45,000 than it was at $200. That was the price when I started actually telling people to trade Bitcoin. I shake my head and laugh when those people ask me. The reactions, though, are polar opposites mostly, people respond with interest or they look at me blankly. There is no in between.

 

2 What will happen to Bitcoin and Ether over the next 10 years?

Let me get my crystal ball it has been getting a workout during the bull runs. I dont ever like to look that far into the future, as a lot can happen in crypto in just two months. So, 10 years is like an eternity. Both may become dinosaurs, and we know what happened to them.

 

3 Does it matter if we ever figure out who Satoshi really is or was? Why, or why not?

Depends on who youre asking. Different things matter to different people.

Satoshi is defined by people in many ways, and thoughts and ideas about who or what something is bring about new ideas, changes and conversations. I have family ties with the name Satoshi and have yet to get through an interview without it being mentioned (yawn). But honestly, Im just interested in living my life, sharing my experiences in the world of crypto and letting others make up their own mind.

 

4 Which is sillier: $500,000 Bitcoin or $0 Bitcoin? Why?

Neither is silly, and there are arguments for both.

$500,000 Bitcoin is an easy argument from a trading perspective, with global adoption and an extremely outdated, archaic financial system. With only 21 million BTC mined and a projected 2021 global population of over 7.8 billion people, as of writing this there is currently 18,821,768.75 BTC in circulation. Then think that 30% to 50% of the total supply could be lost due to early paper wallets being destroyed or hard drives no longer being in existence, or just simply forgetting the password to access them. This is a closed market model that makes it scarcer by the day, so demand could definitely outweigh supply, making $500,000 Bitcoin a strong reality. Money is essentially a technology that reinvented the barter system, and Bitcoin is a technology that can reinvent how we transact globally.

As for the $0 Bitcoin, you guys are trying to get me to expose family ties and the BSV camps argument that when Craig Wright moves the genesis block, BSV is Bitcoin and BTC is obsolete. I personally dont think that BTC would go to zero even if he did that. My analogy is that if we look at blockchain as the roads we drive on and each cryptocurrency as the car we drive, I might like a Porsche 911 because it is faster, sleeker and looks better to me, but Bob down the road likes his Prius because it is reliable and saves energy. They can both successfully drive on the same road like crypto, with bridges and interoperability but more people like Porsches over Prius. So, dont be Bob be like Lisa!

 

5 From smart contracts to DApps, NFTs and DeFi, we have seen so many of cryptos next killer apps, but none have really taken off quite yet. What will stick?

The app that anyone can use without needing to understand the terminology or what it is, just what it does to change their life. Its the same with apps in the non-crypto world. A successful app needs to be simple, it needs to offer a solution to a real-world problem and it needs to do it efficiently, as attention spans are getting shorter and shorter.

The truth is that most people just want solutions, regardless of how things work, although I like to think that those in the crypto world take a stronger interest in the understanding of how something works. Its actually fascinating when you get into it! Think mainstream output with an underground build. Most apps would get away with not mentioning anything to do with crypto despite being built around the technology! It doesnt have to be the defining feature that grips the audience.

 

6 Have you ever bought a nonfungible token? What was it? And if not, what do you think will be your first?

I buy and sell NFTs all the time when trading. Do I own nonfungible art? Not currently. My issue with this right now is that art is meant to be displayed. I have issues with having to display art on an LCD screen. I suppose its no different to having a photo library on my iPhone, to pull out memories when feeling nostalgic, but having a big, ugly LCD screen on my wall to display a $69-million Beeple kind of defeats the purpose of art. I believe NFTs can transform the music and media industries, allowing artists to be automatically distributed royalties, and I would love to see my CoinRunners movie funded in this way as a way to showcase the cryptocurrency industry to the masses. So, to answer this, I would love CoinRunners to be my first NFT.

 

A wish to the blockchain community:

If you can dream it, you can achieve it, so dont stop trying until you find a way!

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Shanghai Man: Looking deeper into China’s biggest ban yet

This weekly roundup of news from Mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong attempts to curate the industrys most important news, including influential projects, changes in the regulatory landscape, and enterprise blockchain integrations.

Well, it finally happened. The regulation-driven crypto-apocalypse in China. They started by clamping down on miners earlier this summer before finally tightening the screws on exchanges. This week, the final nail in the coffin came with even more rules from the PBoC that resulted in many platforms announcing they could no longer accept Chinese users.

Banned yet again

The new rules handed down by the Peoples Bank of China made things incredibly clear for businesses from a legal standpoint. One of the main points was that cryptocurrency-related business activities are illegal, a ruling that cast doubt over the long list of projects, exchanges, and financial service providers in the country.

Many projects responded instantly by eliminating WeChat communities and even internal messaging groups on domestic networks, preferring to operate through VPNs and more privacy-focused chat apps. Leading exchange Huobi, which sits third on the global leaderboard for volume, announced they would be permanently closing down Chinese user accounts at the end of the year.

 

 

Huobi outlines plan for Chinese investors after halting crypto trading
Chinese users on Huobi must make a decision before accounts close on December 31.

 

If true, this would be a massive blow to the exchange that has long-serviced the Chinese community with a high standard of service that includes deep liquidity, a wide range of assets, and few security blemishes to speak of. Experienced Chinese investors might still be skeptical that Huobi would make such a drastic change, as announcements and policies can change very quickly in the Chinese world of crackdowns and political posturing.

Trouble for overseas players

Perhaps the most alarming point of the PBoC announcement was that overseas cryptocurrency exchanges providing services to Chinese residents are also deemed to be illegal financial activities. Additionally, it stated that there are legal risks to participating in cryptocurrency investment transactions. This sparked some fear among employees of crypto companies who suddenly worried they might be the next target of crackdowns by law enforcement.

Binance was quick to point out that the domain Binance.com has been blocked in China since 2017, excluding it from the regulatory discussion. It also announced it would no longer accept new registrations from Chinese users, but said nothing about existing accounts. BitMart, another exchange with ties to China, also announced that on November 30, it would be closing accounts from users in the Chinese mainland. Biki, an even smaller exchange, announced it would be winding up exchange operations altogether.

 

 

 

For smaller exchanges, the risks of operating are quite high, especially as many have diversified business models that include investment, mining, or other financial services. Smaller CeFi exchanges in this space may also be feeling increasingly crowded out by the rapid growth of top CeFi platforms, as well as the widespread adoption of decentralized exchanges. Closing doors on the exchanges may not mean exiting the industry altogether, but simply abandoning a high-risk and underperforming business line.

So what is left for Chinese traders?

Individual users are still in a gray area as the announcement didnt strictly say that the possession of cryptocurrencies was illegal. This seems unlikely as the general trend is to try to protect the citizens by targeting the businesses, a move weve seen in a number of different industry verticals this year, including education and entertainment.

Another area that isnt clear is Chinese users who live abroad. In addition to the large population of overseas Chinese citizens, many are still able to fake their location using VPNs. Assuming that these users are still able to get past IP bans, it could leave a possible route for more technically savvy holders to continue trading on CeFi platforms.

Exchanges without any operations in China might see this as an opportunity, as regulators would have very little recourse against them. At this stage, it seems like China’s regulators might be successful in discouraging much of the smaller retail cryptocurrency activity. However, the large players are already overseas or finding ways to get around these new barriers. If they’ve been in the space awhile, they are more than familiar with the ebbs and flows of regulations.

No answer for decentralization

The biggest benefactor in the short term may be DeFi protocols. The one-two punch of China cracking down and liquidity rewards on DYDX caused a massive spike in adoption for the StarkWare-based derivatives platform. According to data on Similarweb, China was the top region to access the site, with over 10% of the market share. Users with VPNs from China likely accounted for even more. It’s still not clear if this will be a long-term solution, or if the massive increase is more speculative in search of earning the DYDX token as a reward.

 

China and Hong Kong lead the way for DYDX website visitors. Source: Similarweb

Toeing the party line

Seeing an opportunity to display their best behavior, eCommerce platform Alibaba announced the platform could no longer be used for the sale of cryptocurrency mining machines. This stance is not surprising, considering the scrutiny the company is already under by financial regulators. The organization is being restructured after their p2p lending models sparked a high-profile row between founder Jack Ma and financial oversight bodies.

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Cool green mayor giving a grand in Bitcoin to each resident

Cool Valley, Missouri, a small town of about 1,500 in the St. Louis County area, found itself the subject of international attention recently after its mayor, Jayson Stewart, announced that he planned to give each resident up to $1,000 in Bitcoin.

Stewart, a passionate environmentalist who spent years cleaning up the worlds oceans and ran on a platform of correcting old mistakes, believes Bitcoin education holds keys to growing the prosperity, well-being and sustainability of his town. Just as he dreams of a world without the environmental damage caused by irresponsible litterers, he imagines a future where Bitcoin cleans up many of the ills of the financial system.

Hoping to soon see a Bitcoin-friendly bank in town, Stewart sees Bitcoin as an avenue that can lift the town’s fortunes by way of increased wealth and business opportunities like mining facilities, and even Bitcoin events.

A lot of it is about fixing the wrongs of the past financial system. In the past, we didn’t have access to this amazing technology that we have today when it comes to our financial system and storing our value.

Bitcoin

Stewarts plan to dole out Bitcoin to the people of Cool Valley is already fully funded. He explains the plan is being paid for by private donors, with the aim of spreading adoption and educating users. As of right now, the project is fully funded for $1,000 per household, he confirmed, adding that the town has received further donations because the story got so popular in a way that I never anticipated.

 

 

 

 

Though Stewart believes it would be very wise for a town to hold parts of its treasury in cryptocurrencies,” he explains that there are legal obstacles to doing that, many of which are laid out in the state constitution in regards to towns and cities investing in assets. He makes it clear that he is first and foremost interested in seeing regular people, rather than government entities, benefit from Bitcoin. The more people that hold a stake in the Bitcoin network, the more powerful it can become.

What really excites me, and what I’m working on, is getting regular people to hold Bitcoin, and for them to really benefit from the appreciation of holding an asset like that.

Stewart has encountered a mixed set of reactions from the towns residents, from excitement and curiosity to confusion, with the latter being common among older members of the community. They have a lot of questions about what is it?,’ how do I store it?,’ how do I get access to it? he lists.

The distribution procedure is not yet finalized, but education is among the projects key goals because, in order to get their BTC, residents need to understand what it is they are receiving. For this, there are plans to organize workshops or similar learning opportunities. We’re going to get people storing their own Bitcoin as quickly as possible, the mayor declares.

 

 

 

 

Cool Valley is home to people from a variety of economic circumstances, so $1,000 looks like different things to different people. The desire is, however, for residents to hold their coins for some time instead of selling immediately, in part due to Stewarts transparent belief that they will rise in value over time. Patience is a virtue, after all. In order to encourage this patience, there are plans to offer residents an option of a larger payout if they agree to hold their coins for a set amount of time, with a smaller amount given to those who want to sell.

We really just want them to be able to understand the asset and become self sovereign with their storage understanding how to hold their own keys

In addition to learning about Bitcoin, Stewarts initiative is likely to inspire other indirect benefits to the community. For one, it is likely to introduce many residents to investing in general, which may bring many benefits in the future. Computer literacy is another area that is likely to see improvement on account of the Bitcoin incentive, and the new users are likely to begin learning about other cryptocurrencies and blockchain applications as well. As such, it is likely that the move will ultimately inspire some residents to seek careers in the blockchain industry.

Cleaning others messes

In his early 30s, Stewart first interacted with Bitcoin in 2015 while working as an assistant for Magic, a San Francisco based company that often saw very, very wealthy clients send Bitcoin to the companys wallets, which Stewart would then convert into fiat in order to purchase various goods. Though he did not have much in-depth understanding of the cryptocurrency, I thought it was cool internet money, he recalls.

 

 

 

 

When he was a child, Stewart dreamed of being a nature photographer and owning a wildlife sanctuary. That’s why later in 2015, he left his job at Magic to pursue a lifelong passion for environmental restoration and wildlife rehabilitation through his new company, PL28, which he operated from Cool Valley. PL28s mission was to clean up the oceans, a calling that was the focus of my life for the next several years until Stewart ran for mayor in 2019.

Right up until I decided to run, I was just pulling plastic from oceans, rivers and different waterways to try to make the wildlife habitat for marine life a little bit better.

Through PL28, Stewart has helped with ocean cleanup in places including the Philippines, Haiti, the Bahamas, Los Angeles and Singapore. He explains that the cleanup process is different according to the type of ecosystem at hand. Out at sea, youre usually going to get mostly abandoned fishing nets which continuously trap and kill wildlife, whereas in a river environment like that of St. Louis, you collect a lot of plastic bottles like milk jugs, he says.

 

 

A map showing water clean-up efforts he organized around the world. source: LinkedIn

 

 

Though he loves to spend time with marine wildlife, he regrets that the work of ocean cleanup was a lot more logistics such as coordinating volunteers, as opposed to direct work in the field on his part. All told, Stewart worked with people in 47 different countries to pick plastic from the ocean, with that plastic usually processed into usable plastic and made into premium goods made of the reclaimed material.

Today, Stewart has moved on from active ocean cleanup, but his adventurous spirit of cleaning up the messes and mistakes of the past continues to drive him.

Small town mayor

After high school, Stewart studied psychology at the University of Miami from 2008 to 2012. During his studies in 2011, he founded a record production company Pink Fader with his freshman-year roommate. The duo saw some apparent success because an act under their label ended up getting Grammy-nominated, which is cool, and we had a couple of songs go into the top 50 on the charts, Stewart recalls with a hint of pride.

 

 

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For Stewart, who moved around a lot first with his family and later due to his entrepreneurship activities, Cool Valley has been the most consistent place through various parts of his life. Young and armed with fresh ideas, he decided to run for mayor in hopes of improving the services and revitalizing a suffering business district.

I was going to create more of a haven where humans and wildlife could live and interact together, safely, for both parties.

Being mayor is a great honor, because this little town that I grew up in wants me to be their representative and to be their leader. He describes the job as having a particularly broad scope of responsibility far beyond his previous work, feeling a strong sense of responsibility for the well-being of the townspeople. He even has the ability to grant pardons for certain offenses, which he announced for every person convicted of nonviolent offenses involving cannabis and/or psilocybin mushrooms last year in a move that earned him commendations for groundbreaking work to fix the harms of the War on Drugs.

 

 

 

 

On the other end of the spectrum from big picture ideals, there are always little things that we would talk about as well, like a pothole on the street or whatever, he says of the things that keep him busy.

Bitcoin valley

Though there is not yet a petition to rename the town, it is quite conceivable that the Bitcoin effect will touch Cool Valley in concrete ways. While the town already has a Bitcoin ATM, there are many more opportunities to consider. We’ve had some people reach out about opening a mining facility, Stewart beams, adding that I’m trying to get a Bitcoin-friendly bank over here.

As luck would have it, Stewart has just joined the Advisory Board for the Midwest BankCenter, which is a locally owned bank with nearly $2 billion in assets. They’ve been meeting for 100 years, but I just had my first board meeting with them like three days ago, he laughs. Asked if they knew him as the Bitcoin guy, Stewart proudly stated that they do now!

From his perspective, Stewart senses a cautious sort of optimism in the local banking sector. While it’s clear that they want to avoid risks, they also enjoy the potential opportunity for big upsides in their investments.

Considering the number of donors, it looks like there will be money left over after the distributions to residents. With these funds, one idea Stewart is exploring is solar lighting and other energy efficiency initiatives in Cool Valley. There’s a lot of fear, uncertainty and doubt when it comes to the environmental effects of Bitcoin, he admits, adding that he wants to set a positive example of the good that Bitcoin can bring.

With the University of Missouri-St. Louis campus bordering Cool Valley to the South, the town might be a great place to host a Bitcoin conference, or even a technology hub of sorts one day. Mayor Stewart agrees, saying I think that could be a pretty nice outcome that’d be super cool.

 

 

 

 

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Shanghai Man: China’s version of McJob meme, eCNY airdrops, Canaan’s record revenue

This weekly roundup of news from Mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong attempts to curate the industrys most important news, including influential projects, changes in the regulatory landscape, and enterprise blockchain integrations.

 

Regulatory noise

In this weeks column, the Man in Shanghai is determined to squeeze all of the regulatory noise into one section, so as not to waste too much of your time. Lets begin.

It wasnt much, just a warning from the Hebei Provincial government to announce it would put an end to cryptocurrency mining in the region. This is largely a non-story, since its essentially just restating a national level policy that went into effect months ago. Hebei was never much of a mining stronghold anyway, so the announcement is more procedural than anything else. Mining operations will continue to move overseas while China goes through its unified push to become carbon neutral.

For reference, China has 23 provinces, and close to half have already restated their commitment to the national policy by announcing that cryptocurrency mining would not be tolerated.

The Securities Times, a state-owned publication, ran a story warning the public about the bubble surrounding NFTs. This Shenzhen-based publication questioned the real economic value of NFTs, a topic that many of us have all wondered about at times. Still, the suspicion hasn’t stopped the trend from spilling into less mainstream art circles, where NFT and metaverse-related events are becoming more and more popular.

Selling shovels in a gold rush

While mining in China might be difficult, manufacturing mining machines is continuing to be quite profitable. Canaan, one of the worlds largest manufacturers of cryptocurrency mining hardware, announced its highest quarterly profits to date. The companys Q2 financials showed that the company recorded over about $167.5 million in total net revenue. This was likely driven by the sharp increase in prices this spring, leading to aggressive expansion of mining facilities across the world. The next round of quarterly financials will tell a deeper story, as investors will learn how badly aggressive regulations by China have hurt the industry. Zhang Nangeng, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Canaan said:

We delivered a remarkable performance in the second quarter of 2021. Despite unexpected regulatory policy dynamics and Bitcoin price volatility, we achieved record-high topline results as we delivered a robust 5.9 million Thash/s of computing power to our clients.

Rounding up the trading space

Volume remained mostly flat on exchanges like Huobi and OKEx, as it has for the last 12 weeks. The last major spike came during the sell-off in early May, around the time Chinese regulators began their crackdown. Over this time, FTX has seen a strong increase in volume, suggesting that some Chinese users might be connecting to exchanges that havent traditionally been a dominant player in the Chinese trading space.

FIL remains popular on Huobi, finishing in the top five on Thursdays 24-hr volume chart. This token has maintained popularity among traders in China, despite being about 50% below its all-time high from earlier this year. ADA, SOL, and DOT were assets that showed up high on OKEx volume charts, which mirrored global volume distributions. Speaking of Solana, Chinese users on Weibo reacted strongly to the network going offline on Wednesday, with some criticizing the networks decentralization. Discussion broke out about whether Ethereums early technical issues were comparable to this event, proving that Solana and Ethereum maxis will disagree in any culture, regardless of the language.

Unleashing the eCNY

The central bank digital currency created by the Chinese federal bank is now being pushed out even further, as popular app Meituan is offering roughly $1.50 in eCNY (digital yuan) to users who open a digital wallet and use its services.

Meituan is most widely known for its bright yellow food delivery service and shared bikes, which can be found on most city streets. The campaign is meant to encourage low-carbon living, and is open to nine pilot cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen and Chengdu.

 

The wallet interface is minimalist and allows users to convert, deposit, and transfer the eCNY

 

The eCNY, which originally was positioned as more of an institutional remittance tool for commercial banks, is now aggressively being pushed towards retail users. Already, large franchises like McDonalds and Zara display eCNY payment signs at point-of-sale counters across the country. The current digital payment space is dominated by WeChat Pay and Alipay, but those two will likely have a hard time holding control of market share if the central government is interested in forcing eCNY into competing applications.

Ironically, Meituan has a special role in Chinese cryptocurrency meme culture. Token holders often joke they will be forced to work in food delivery whenever the market crashes, leading to the meme below.

 

The Great Crypto Meme War. There will be a great crypto meme war | by MAO DAO | Jul, 2021 | Medium
Meituan’s iconic delivery drivers are the source of many crypto-related memes during a market crash.

 

At the end of March, Meituan revealed it had around 570 million users. Other financial apps, including banking apps, have already integrated the wallet services into their products.

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Fidenza: Tyler Hobbs wrote software that generates art worth millions

Computer scientist turned generative artist Tyler Hobbs writes code artistically, which then creates visual art that has sold for millions.

Along with 998 siblings, Fidenza #313 was minted for 0.17 ETH on June 11th, after which it was immediately sold for 0.58 ETH. Just over 10 weeks later, the NFT nicknamed Tulip sold for 1,000 ETH on Opensea $3.3 million at the time.

Fidenza is the brainchild of Tyler Hobbs, 34, who quit his computer engineering job to work as a full time artist. He struck ETH when he discovered Art Blocks, an art platform that creates NFTs based on generative art, and became a curated artist.

The work is named after a town in northern Italy, which Hobbs stumbled upon via Google Maps. Inspired by abstract expressionist painter Francis Klein, Hobbs likes to use the names of places for his art because they carry little baggage or definitive meaning.

A total of 999 works were dropped, selling out in 25 minutes for 0.17 ETH, or about $400. The approximate $400,000 in sales were split 90/10 between Hobbs and Art Blocks. On the secondary market, chiefly Opensea, his works come with a pre-programmed 10% commission, which is automatically shared 5.0%/2.5%/2.5% between himself, Art Blocks, and Opensea. With an estimated 85 million in secondary sales, Hobbs has already earned over $4 million in commissions.

As a coder, he felt it important to create art using the tools he knew, making people ask what separates man from machine?

Hobbs says that buyers come from around the world and are most commonly middle aged men. These largely inexperienced art collectors who come from the crypto or technology world have less of an inherent bias against this artwork, whereas many traditionalists feel that there’s something inherently less human or less real about his style.

They’re generally both interested in the artwork, and they’re willing to risk a fairly large amount of money on something that’s unproven I think it takes a special breed of person to be that kind of collector.

 

 

Fidenza #313

 

 

Fidenza

The mechanics of a generative artwork drop on Art Blocks are unique, as the art does not exist until it is minted by the buyer. Minting begins at a pre-announced time, which Art Blocks advertises. To mint, buyers pay the predetermined ETH-denominated price along with necessary gas fees, and receive the artwork upon its generation which takes up to 30 seconds in the case of Fidenza.

 

 

 

 

The code that creates the artwork on the blockchain uses the randomized transaction hash of the buyers transaction as an input. This string of data is then interpreted by the code, which assigns the artwork with various overlapping characteristics according to parameters pre-programmed by the artist, to generate the artwork in real time. Like a sperm fertilizing an egg, the contribution of the minter is a unique, direct, and necessary ingredient of the artistic equation.

 

 

 

 

Because the code for Fidenza is on the blockchain, anyone can use it to create similar pieces. However, because Fidenza is limited to 999 numbered copies, such bootleg Fidenzas would not be signed by the artist much like if someone copied an artists style with the same materials and tools.

While Hobbs considers it interesting for people to be able to explore that algorithm and appreciate the aesthetic value it can create, he makes it clear that his vision for Fidenza is now complete. I think the 999 is sort of the perfect test run of the algorithm, and captures everything that I could have wanted it to capture, he says, adding that he likes that there is a clear start and a clear finish.

There’s a certain artistic challenge to creating an algorithm that will create something with a lot of beautiful variety within those 999, while still maintaining a consistent level of quality

He is unconcerned about fakes due to the unfalsifiable nature of blockchain provenance, but acknowledges that someone could sell them as unofficial Fidenzas. While he is unable to ascertain the legality of doing so, he finds the thought of others co-opting the program for profit as unethical and disrespectful.

 

 

Various punks. Source: NFTX.org

 

 

CryptoPunks, one of the first and most well known NFT sets, is a victim of such replication. While the floor (cheapest listed NFT of the set) for one of the 10,000 original Punks sits around 100 ETH, a “Phunk which faces the other way can be had for a mere 0.04 ETH. Zunks go for 0.05 ETH, HD Punks for 0.02 ETH, and Bastard Gan Punks for a respectable 0.50 ETH. If imitation is flattery, it can be argued that these copies only affirm and increase the value of the real punks.

 

 

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Struggling artist

Growing up in central Texas, Hobbs dabbled in sports, a variety of music, and often spent time drawing comic books by hand. He wanted to go to art school, but my dad talked me into studying computer science instead for pragmatic reasons. He completed his bachelor studies at the University of Texas at Austin.

Graduating in 2010, he found work as a computer engineer with database company DataStax, where he focused on an open source, high performance database. Hobbs was satisfied, seeing programming as as good of a job as I could have hoped for, staying at the company until 2017.

Hobbs tried his hand at many styles of art including traditional artwork, as he referred to his oil paintings and figure drawings. These long-established artistic traditions however lacked an intimate connection to the artist himself a 21st century computer scientist.

 

 

 

 

Hobbes believes that to make exceptional art, it is important that the art relate to the artist and their unique skills because that’s where you have the most interesting things to say. This can be seen throughout history from stone-age hunters who drew images of their game on the walls of their dwellings, to the likes of Da Vinci, whose figure drawings were based on his study of human anatomy.

 

 

Clarion, a work from 2017. (Source: tylerxhobbs.com)

 

 

While searching for a personal connection to his art, Hobbs discovered the generative art genre: art created in a way by which an autonomous system can independently determine features of an artwork that would otherwise require decisions made directly by the artist. With programming close to his heart, the gears began to spin.

I started wondering if I could write a program that would create a painting.

From 2014, Hobbs began using tools that were not designed for making artwork at all, but the results that I had were really interesting artistically, he recalls, referring to his early experimentation with generative art. He found the results much more interesting than the paintings that I’d been making, inspiring him to continue developing his methods.

 

 

 

 

By 2017 he had grown enough confidence and savings to quit his job in order to focus full time on art, creating 100 pieces per year. Making a living selling prints and commissions was hard, as it was far less than he earned as an engineer.

 

 

LOXODOGRAPHY, a work from 2019, which shows clear hints of what is to come. (Source: tylerxhobbs.com)

 

 

Suffering from financial pressures and loneliness, in 2018 he joined some of his former colleagues in founding Travel Boss, a startup focused on business travel where he worked part time to leave room for art. The company shut down early this year due to the pandemic.

Artblocks

Losing his job was a blessing in disguise, because it was around this time in February 2021 that he discovered Artblocks. Though he had been generally aware of blockchain technology before, he admits that he had never been interested in working in the industry nor investing in cryptocurrencies.

I was fairly sceptical of NFT’s in general, until I heard about Art Blocks. Art Blocks totally changed my opinion, because of how great of a fit it is for generative art specifically.

Hobbs considered Art Blocks a huge breakthrough for Generative Art, which he says has been struggling since its inception in the 1960s. With an audience willing to play a direct role in the creation of their purchased generative art, there was finally a product-market fit.

The curated stream is the most prestigious, with artists selected by the platform’s curation board after a lengthy vetting process. Hobbs applied to be a curated artist, because I knew that the artwork was good, and I have a relatively well proven track record of making good work and had a good network, he said with well-placed confidence.

A high bar

The initial income from minting was life changing for Hobbs, because it meant the security that I could continue to work full time on artwork for several years, even with zero secondary sales. Though he has sold most of the ETH, he maintains a substantial position which he suspects will rise in value.

Much of his time is currently spent connecting with collectors, who naturally want to form relationships with the artist whose million-dollar works they own. Behind him is a stack of rolled Fidenza prints, which he is in the process of shipping out. I allow the owners to order prints and it’s limited to one print, he clarifies, explaining that he charges only reasonable printing costs of up to $600 a pittance considering the floor rests around $800,000.

 

 

 

 

Though Hobbs will certainly be continuing his daily artistic practice, his next moves will be more intentional. He intends to flip his process of releasing early sketches as he works, instead starting with the finished product and only later showing partial works

I’m 100% focused on releasing quality work, he says, and though he is in no hurry, he hopes to artistically outdo himself once more.

I know that that’s a high bar, but I do also feel that I can meet or exceed it in the future at least in terms of how I view the quality of the work.

 

 

 

 

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs

Shanghai Man: China declares victory over crypto — Is this the end of the crackdown?

This weekly roundup of news from Mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong attempts to curate the industrys most important news, including influential projects, changes in the regulatory landscape, and enterprise blockchain integrations.

Victory for the regulators

After a tumultuous summer of crackdowns, the Chinese regulators are declaring their victory in eliminating illegal cryptocurrency trading activities in the country. This revelation came in the outlook section of the “China Financial Stability Report 2021” released by the People’s Bank of China on September 3.

In the section titled Major Achievements in the Battle to Prevent and Defuse Major Financial Risks, it emphasizes that regulatory work in internet asset management, equity-based crowdfunding, internet insurance, virtual currency trading, online foreign exchange trading, and other areas has been basically completed.

The lengthy report from the PBOC declares victory on the crackdown on digital assets. Source: http://www.pbc.gov.cn/goutongjiaoliu/113456/113469/4332768/2021090315580868236.pdf

While this might sound like a giant negative for the industry, most projects and companies in China are now breathing a sigh of relief. The end of the crackdown means that companies can have a little more breathing room to operate without fear of legal action.

Chinas public blockchain industry, or whats left of it, will no longer have to exist in the shadows. Theres also hope that upcoming editions of Shanghai Mans columns will feature more discussion about development and innovation, and less about crackdowns.

 

 

Most of the damage from regulators impacted the mining space, although exchanges and brokers are definitely shifting away from China long-term. Players like ByBit and Amber have already announced they dont accept Chinese users, which might be a trend going forward if the risks of doing business in China dont balance out with the rewards. Bigger players like Binance and FTX will have much bigger decisions to make, but at the moment, arent shying away from onboarding and servicing Chinese users.

From Sichuan to San Antonio

After winding down operations in China, many large mining companies began seeking greener pastures overseas. Since Texas governor Greg Abbot tweeted that Texas would become a crypto leader, many cryptocurrency mining companies have moved to the Lone Star state in search of regulatory stability.

 

 

Bitmain, the largest mining manufacturer in the world, has a facility in Rockdale, Texas. Rockdale is a town with less than 6,000 people, a far cry from the 21 million people that populate its home in Beijing. Incidentally, Bitmain is also deploying $62 million worth of hardware into the state of Georgia.

 

 

File:U.S. Route 79 is main street of Rockdale, TX IMG 2255.JPG - Wikimedia Commons
This quiet town in Texas is now home to a large Bitcoin mining facility. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

 

Shenzhen-based BIT Mining is pumping in $26 million to build a data center in Texas as well. It joins BlockCap, Riot Blockchain, and other mining companies already in the area. All these businesses will be buoyed by the news that state legislators have signed Texas House Bills 4474 and 1576, legalizing cryptocurrencies under commercial laws.

Texas is now the fourth US state to recognize the status of digital assets, giving investors and companies clarity that is sorely lacking in China. Just this summer alone, different regulatory bodies within China have flip-flopped on the legal status of cryptocurrencies. This is causing a weakening belief in the sustainability of the Chinese market and should push even more companies abroad.

One country, two regulators

An executive for Hong Kongs Securities and Futures Commission believes the recent number of fraud cases points to a need for stricter regulation. The special administrative region has a much looser policy towards digital assets, allowing exchanges like FTX, Bitfinex, and other Fintech companies to set up shop.

Hong Kong has always been seen as a bridge between corporations and the robust Chinese market, although in recent years, that dynamic is starting to reverse. With tighter rules and higher uncertainty in Hong Kong, Singapore is enjoying a lot more growth in the cryptocurrency space, with a number of high-profile industry players taking up residency there.

Non-fungible trends

The overall trend of NFTs hasnt been lost on the Chinese market. OKExChain launched its OKExNFT marketplace on September 2, joining the likes of Binance and FTX who have already launched similar platforms.

While not possessed with the most creative naming team, it does house a number of Loot-lookalike NFTs known as Root, aimed at grabbing the NFT and GameFi market. Chinas gaming and trading markets, in the past, have been very active, making this a logical move. Whether OKExChain can match the success of other exchange sidechains remains to be seen.

Steph Currys decision to join FTX as an ambassador received mixed reviews as some pointed out that the NBA star, known in China for his playful personality, had matured into a master of business.

 

OKExNFT Marketplace launched this week, with a small GameFi offering.

 

 

 

Vanilla Finance Closes Pre-Seed Investment Round Led by UOB Ventures, Paper Ventures and ABCDE Labs