1. Home
  2. Columns

Columns

We’ve passed peak corporation already — Michael Anderson, Framework Ventures

The pandemic has changed society forever and in many cases, not for the better. But when historians look back in a few decades, will they see this period as a turning point in the transition from an economy dominated by corporations to a new crowdsourced model where participants are incentivized with tokens to grow a project and share in the profits?

It may sound far-fetched given that mega-corporations dominate the present reality, but imagine a world in which Uber drivers and their passengers own and operate a decentralized rideshare network. Or one where Airbnb property owners, guests and even the cleaning staff share in the success of the cooperative business.

What has happened over the last 10 to 12 months would have probably taken 10 to 12 years had it not been for the pandemic, explains Michael Anderson, co-founder of Framework Ventures. A VC fund, Framework Ventures has raised $115 million for two investment funds and is a major DeFi player, getting in early on Chainlink, Synthetix and Yearn.finance.

Anderson says the concept of a decentralized collective effort has become normalized by working from home.

That kind of concept of working for a company where you show up every day, and there’s an office [] that’s kind of been broken down, he says. It forces people to have questions as to do we need that going forward?

The Uber as a Decentralized Autonomous Organizations (DAO) concept has been around since at least 2016 when blockchain project Arcade City started talking it up in the wake of a successful fundraise for the ill-fated The DAO. However, it’s now finally beginning to capture the zeitgeist. This month alone, Bankless co-founder David Hoffman wrote a long discussion on the topic called The Future of Work, and Bloombergs Joe Weisenthal touched on it in his Theres a New Vision for Crypto piece. Meanwhile, tech billionaire Mark Cuban tweeted at the end of May that DAOs taking on corporations was the ultimate combination of capitalism and progressivism.

 

 

The DeFi sector has been at the bleeding edge of the rise of DAOs and Digital Organizations (DOs), which are similar but are less governed by code and arent autonomous. They enabled a cooperative model and collective ownership of protocols, becoming popular in DeFi as a form of governance and as a way to crowdsource development.

Yield farming may have begun life with a poor reputation as guerilla marketing-meets-Ponzinomics, but it quickly became clear it was a great way to reward the most active participants in a community with tokens and often a share of the revenue. In turn, this incentivizes the best participants to help grow the protocol, bringing ever greater numbers into the project.

That ownership element is what has the power, explains Anderson. And the best communities are the ones where you’ve got the earliest adopters, brought in from the get-go, and they become your biggest supporters, they become customer support, they become business development.

Thinking bigger

If it works in DeFi, theres no reason it cant work in other industries and economies. Any marketplace could potentially benefit, and that doesnt mean simply tokenized versions of eBay or Uber. Anderson uses the example of a clothing production line in which the sourcing of materials, the creation of clothing, distribution and sales could all be incentivized and organized through this new model.

I think what we’ve seen over the last few years is a peak of corporations. And what I think we now have with the formation of DAOs is almost as a replacement for a limited liability corporation or a corporation in general, he says. It’s a replacement of incentivization layers, like equity and stock options, with tokens.

It’s mostly DeFi, but expanding beyond that, I think you can start to take this model into any marketplace. I think it ultimately becomes a really unique way of incentivizing participation.

 

 

The model has plenty of advantages: being decentralized means that anyone, anywhere in the world who has an idea for building on top of the protocol or who figures out a better way to do something can jump in and reap the rewards. The process of iteration and evolution speeds up, too. No longer must you wait for the grinding gears of a corporation to grudgingly accept a new way of doing things. It simply happens via an efficient competition that produces the best outcome for a collective.

Ultimately, that makes things more efficient and scalable, but also more fair and open, Anderson explains, adding that it enables anyone, anywhere, to compete with tech entrepreneurs in San Francisco or Silicon Valley, who previously had the advantage of being in close proximity to capital.

Breaking down those walls is really exciting, for the future of the world, but also the future of work.

Community ownership, I think, is a fundamental difference and a fundamental innovation, he says. And that’s why I love tokens. It is a completely new design space; were just scratching the surface as to how we can use these in different and novel ways.”

More equitable than equity

In a way, DAOs and DOs are a modern spin on older concepts around partnerships, co-ops and collaborations, made a thousand times more efficient by technology. And while our mental models for this sort of ownership currently look a lot like handing out equity, Anderson expects that to change as the use of tokens grows and evolves.

According to Andersen, having a clear vision of the future or a strong thesis about how things may evolve in the future is one of the things that separates Framework Ventures from many other investors in the space. Unlike the short-term, price-oriented thinking that predominates in crypto, Anderson and co-founder Vance Spencer believe in looking at where digital finance is headed over a timeframe of five to ten years and place their bets accordingly. They are popular guests on DeFi-themed podcasts as a result of their inspiring and well-reasoned thoughts about the future.

Frameworks first big success came before theyd even formalized the fund, with Anderson and Spencer developing a thesis around the need for smart contracts to access secure, reliable real-world information, which informed their investment in decentralized oracle network Chainlink:

Mass adoption of interesting smart contracts will require data feeds that are secure, external to the blockchain (i.e., interest rate data from a bank), and maintain privacy when incorporated into a smart contract. Data feeds that meet these conditions are not currently available.

Their investment thesis which my short summary cant really do justice paid off well. Anderson brings up the example of Don Valentine, the late venture capitalist who founded Sequoia Capital, who invested in Apple after having a similar epiphany that personal computers would one day be in every home and on every office desk. This is the secret to successful VC investing, Anderson says.

Finding the pieces that fit into that vision and into that new world, I think, is actually the easy part, he says. The hard part is being able to discern, you know, what that future state looks like.

A long time ago in the startup world

Anderson grew up in Palo Alto, California, the epicenter of the startup world, and attended Yale University in Connecticut. He was planning to study electrical engineering or computer science and play college football. But in September of his freshman year, the fourth-largest investment bank in the United States Lehman Brothers collapsed and filed for bankruptcy. That event led to his fascination with finance and his degree in economics and computer science.

In the aftermath, hed hear firsthand accounts of the turmoil on Wall Street from the family members of his friends, and hed pore over reports in the New York Times and WSJ. He learned about the intricate and arcane nature of mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations.

Once you start to really dive into how in-depth and complicated it gets, I don’t think there’s anyone that actually understands the entire system, he says. You could spend a lifetime trying to figure it out. He gravitated towards fintech as a potential solution.

Software is the eighth wonder of the world in my mind. How can we build software that expedites or emphasizes the power of finance?

He was initially torn between pursuing a career in technology or finance and dabbled in both. While interning at Apple in 2011, he was dismayed to discover a company that creates such elegant products was organized like a stodgy kind of corporate opaque institution, in which even many of the department heads didnt know what product was launching next. He realized he was unlikely to make an impact there.

Anderson also spent three months as a summer analyst at Barclays Bank, where he researched companies considering going public like GoPro and Dropbox.

I was tired of covering them, and I realized that I just wanted to go work for them, he explains. And so that’s ultimately what led me to Dropbox.

He spent three years at Dropbox and another two at Snapchat, mostly in the role of product manager. There he learned how to take an idea from conception to production, keeping users needs in mind as the product scaled up to millions. This knowledge would later prove to be a key experience in how he approaches the growth of crypto networks, none of which yet operate at consumer tech levels.

Despite mining Bitcoin during college, Anderson didn’t truly fall down the crypto rabbit hole until he read the Ethereum white paper in 2015 and a light went off in his mind. Shortly afterward, when he was moving to Los Angeles to work for Snapchat, a friend sent him on a blind roommate date with Vance Spencer, then working for Netflix. The pair bonded over Ethereum pretty much from question one.

Our kind of friendship grew very, very quickly. We started to have an informal investment partnership together, where we were looking at different angel opportunities, and it just kind of grew from there.

Top Shot in all but name

Its one thing to develop a clear vision of the future, and its another to profit from it. As with most things, timing is everything. Unfortunately, Anderson and Spencer were about three years ahead of the market in 2017 with their first venture, Hashletes, essentially an NFL version of the outrageously popular NBA Top Shot.

Collectible NFT player cards enabled users to enter fantasy football games and win prizes. One of Anderson and Spencers contentions about NFTs, which were only starting to see come to fruition in 2021, is that NFTs need to have utility as well as provide digital ownership.

Hashletes was the first app in the iOS store connected to Ethereum, but the project only lasted a season and a half, killed off by high licensing fees and a lack of interest or understanding about NFTs at that time. Anderson and Spencer sold the business to a sports holding group in New York.

It’s definitely hard to push something, especially when you know that this idea should be working but the infrastructure, the technology just isn’t there, he says. [American entrepreneur] Marc Andreessen has said that there are no bad ideas, it’s just the wrong time. So, there’s a little bit of that. You know being too early is also the same as being wrong.

I’d say we definitely built our empathy toward entrepreneurs in the space. And that’s what gave us a lot of the insight into how we wanted to build Framework and why we wanted to build Framework.

Given the newfound interest in NFTs this year, Framework Ventures is once again pursuing the space.

The pairs template for success was created with their initial investment into Chainlink when it cost 11 cents during the ICO in 2017. Andersons investment thesis is still online, explaining why they had a price target of $10$20 for the 11 cent token. Its already blown past that: At around $25, the token represents a more than 22,000% return in about three years.

We made probably 20 to 25 different investments as angels prior to starting Framework, but Chainlink was definitely the best performing out of those. But I think it’s the one that we have the most close relationship with, just because of the breadth with which they can expand into all the different industries.

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

They formalized the partnership afterward, with the Link investment leading to many more, including Aave, dHedge, Synthetix, Yearn.finance, Dodo, Edgeware, Fractal, Futureswap, Kava, Pods, Primitive, Teller, The Graph and Zapper. It’s how we’ve got to know all these other teams. Chainlink oracles are usually the commonplace choice,” he says.

The importance of community

Another premise is that in a decentralized, open-source world in which any protocol can be cloned and see its liquidity siphoned off its the quality of the community around a project thats more important than almost anything else.

The community is something that has the real kind of defensible moat, he says. And so community development for us is paramount. We like to say, you can evaluate the team, you can evaluate the product, you can evaluate the market, but the most defensible elements of any investment are going to be the core team and then how that transitions into the community and community ownership.

Rather than mere investors, theyre active participants in the community, too, if highly influential and cashed-up community members. A sister entity called Frameworks Labs has 17 software engineers building tools and systems to increase growth and engagement for projects they’ve invested in.

We’re one of the larger Chainlink nodes in the network. We’re one of the larger Graph nodes. Were active traders if we’re investing in an exchange, liquidity providing, he says. It just means that we’re rolling up our sleeves being one of the larger users, one of the largest suppliers for most of the investments that we make; its kind of how we define our edge.

 

 

Anderson and Spencer see this as a perfect alignment of interests, and its why this new decentralized organization model can take some of the power back from the tech monopolies and corporations that dominate everyday lives.

Back when the internet began to spread, utopian visions of its potential to democratize the world and give the power back to individuals dominated. What actually happened, of course, was the development of addictive algorithms, filter bubbles and cancel culture, thanks to tech monopolies like Google and Facebook.

It might be another utopian vision, but perhaps the DeFi/Web 3.0 model can succeed where the internet failed. Anderson points out he used to live just down the street from Google. He says, Google had this famous line of: Don’t be evil. Well, blockchains enable something even better, which is: ‘Can’t be evil.

“When you build cryptographic guarantees around transparency and decentralization, you know, there isn’t the ability for a corporation to extract value in the same way.

Radical transparency means the best projects with the most well-thought-out incentives will attract the sharpest minds, and those that hold 50% of the tokens back to dump on retail in the future will get shunned.

I think you don’t really get that far with those types of models because everything is transparent and the incentives are aligned with the users of the product, the users with the networks, more so than anything I’ve seen in the previous tech generations.

 

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

We tracked down the original Bitcoin Lambo guy

Jay is the Bitcoin OG who created a meme by buying a Lamborghini with the cryptocurrency. He went from a poverty-level existence to enjoying a well-off lifestyle in a gated community thanks to mining Bitcoin in the early days but not without having to worry for his familys safety.

As BTC first broke the $1,000 milestone in December 2013, former Chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan suggested that Bitcoin could not actually be used to buy anything of value.

Thats when Jay (not his real name), then in his early 30s, and with the help of his wife who is also a Bitcoiner, used almost 217 BTC to purchase what is believed to be the original Bitcoin Lamborghini at the Lamborghini Newport Beach dealership. He then provided the evidence on the anonymous imageboard 4chan.

This proved that Bitcoin had real value who would accept fake money for a Lamborghini? A meme was born that launched a million other memes.

Its kind of overwhelming as an individual I created a meme.

An archetypal Bitcoin OG, Jay got his start around 2010. Despite being broke and supporting a family on very low earnings in Southeast Asia, he ended up setting up 20 GPUs, resulting in electricity costs that were six times his rent.

 

 

Lambo BTC
Buying a Lambo with Bitcoin in 2013.

 

“I was really poor I made like $8,500 per year while supporting a family, and babies cost money. I had businesses and savings before, but going to university and starting a family got me damn close to $0,” he recalls, bewildered.

Its amazingly hard to HODL bitcoin when you eat pasta every day and make fuck-all, and spend what you do have on computers and miners. But I had that faith, I knew this was world changing.

 

 

 

Today, Jay lives in a gated community within a small city of under 100,000 in Southeast Asia with his wife, three children, and three dogs one of them a professionally trained and imposing guard dog whom I had no doubt was ready to rip my face off on command when I visited.

His home actually consists of two houses on two streets, discreetly connected in the middle, creating an understated facade. Whereas the front garage contains “normal” luxury vehicles, the back holds none other than Bitcoin Lamborghini 2.0.

Sadly because I was so close to $0 and had kids, I had to sell so much BTC so early because I wanted some safety net. I could add at least one zero to my net worth if I had no family but its a paradox because family is why I do it.

Lambo convention
The Bitcoin Lambo in Texas at a CryptoWomen meetup in 2014. Supplied.

 

Wealth worries

Jays fortune is crowned by a loaded 1,000 BTC Casascius “physical Bitcoin” gold coin of which only a few exist. It is, in fact, the most valuable coin in the world, with a face value of approximately $60 million dollars and a collector premium of many millions more.

This is how we came to meet, as I act as a broker of such rarities and wrote the Encyclopedia of Physical Bitcoins and Crypto-Currencies. For Jay, owning such coins can, however, prove stressful “if someone connects me to holding tens of millions of dollars in what are effectively bearer bonds.” Such coins hold the private key to the stated amount of Bitcoins under a tamper-proof label, making them comparable to bearer bonds, gold or cash.

Such privilege is “difficult to deal with” on the family front, Jay says. Living in a country with a huge wealth disparity, he explains that money can be metaphorically used to build either a bigger wall to separate himself from the masses, or a bigger table in order to bring them to his side. “Honestly, I have to do both, but I want to build a bigger table,” he says. He feels that he faces very real threats, including the kidnapping of family members by international criminals.

I had issues with some Russian oligarchs in the past, but I dont think Im a target now.

 

Casascius coin
A loaded 1,000 BTC Casascius coin, which Jay bought for $5,000

Still, its hard to put worry or paranoia aside states of mind that Jay considers natural to him. Late one night, as we enjoyed beer and burgers on the edge of town, Jays merriness suddenly turned to keen attention as he spied a vehicle loitering near his Lamborghini. “Its been there over 30 seconds,” he said, appearing still nervous after the car drove off. “They were probably just admiring the car but what if?” He was visibly uneasy.

Initiation

Jay describes a normal childhood in an average lower-middle-class family in the U.S. midwest. Money was sometimes tight, but basic needs were covered and school was OK. He excelled in geography, which simply came naturally to him without the need to study.

He started working at the age of 12, stapling large boxes together at a warehouse owned by a family friend. The work was repetitive and it was actually illegal to employ such a young child, but Jay was there willingly and feels that he gained a valuable perspective from socializing with business owners at such a young age.

 

 

 

After high school, Jay enrolled in a university close to home to study international relations and computer engineering. He, however, became disillusioned, believing that “a lot of what the university was teaching me was absolute bullshit” and mostly aimed at making him into “a good wage slave.” As he studied money, “it blew my mind that fiat money was based on nothing it was debt.” He dropped out to run his own book-selling business, which he later sold to a firm that itself went on to be acquired by Amazon.

The realization of the financial system and money being bullshit helped motivate me to drop out of university in the U.S.A. and do my own thing.

Jay used the money to travel, first heading to Mongolia, which he felt might be a “missed gem” and might hold economic opportunities. Later in Kazakhstan, he spent time with a group that “trained golden eagles to hunt wolves,” and he heard high praise of Southeast Asia from other passing travelers knowledge he filed away for later. His money ran low, and he soon returned to the U.S. where he found some success trading oil futures from home.

“When the tsunami hit Southeast Asia on Boxing Day 2004, I realized that sitting around doing the bullshit nothing I was doing was bad and jumped on a plane to help.”

Jay decided to stay and attended a local university, this time choosing to study business administration. Years after graduating and struggling financially, he came across the Bitcoin white paper in 2010 via the infamous Cypherpunks mailing list, where it was discussed in the early days of the cryptocurrency. He had read a book about cryptography before he loved reading and the project caught his eye. He found it brilliant, “but I thought there was a very low chance it could become worldwide money it was too crazy.”

The biggest draw was not the money aspect, but the idea that “this breaks censorship.” He recalls someone putting Bible verses into the blockchain early on forever indelible. With Bitcoin, anyone could write freely on the wall of eternity.

 

Celebrating Bitcoin breaking $100 on April 1, 2013. Supplied.

 

The Bitcointalk Forums

The Bitcointalk forum was an interesting place in the very early 2010s, a time when Jay remembers a collection of seemingly “random people with random ideas.” Bitcoin was then a primarily intellectual pursuit, and it attracted socialists and communists in addition to the libertarians who became more associated with the movements history.

One idea discussed around that time included the canceling and reissuing of coins after two to five years of inactivity at an address, while others suggested that mining rewards could be adjusted based on individual need or national income. As there was no firmly established value, the Bitcoin idea was considered quite malleable and not necessarily set in stone it could become anything.

Jay was confused by some of the discourse. “I wasn’t quite well-read in the philosophy then, so I didn’t really understand what the leftists saw in the idea,” he recalls.

The culture of the forum evolved as waves of discourse and new users followed news coverage of Bitcoin. There was a loose “core group” of enthusiasts who considered each other close to the project; “some new people would be added every now and then, and some would leave.” The culture, however, grew more toxic.

Though he first reasons that the toxicity was due to a “Wild West culture” that naturally forms in a gold rush of sorts, Jay notes that people in the contemporary WallStreetBets community, “seem to be incredibly polite and welcoming.” He adds that while he “does not want to say anything bad about anyone,” he assigns some responsibility for the culture upon the Bitcointalk forums administration.

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

“I think that the leadership of a community helps shape it. The person running Bitcointalk was quite inexperienced and pretty much fell into the role I wonder if it could have been different.”

By contrast, the early Ethereum community seemed friendlier at the time, possibly due to the credit of Vitalik Buterin acting as a visible community leader. Buterin reached out to Jay during the process of launching Ethereum, but Jay was unimpressed.

I told Vitalik over Skype that Ethereum was going to fail because it was too centralized.

Despite his concerns, Jay owns some Ethereum and is not an extreme Bitcoin maximalist like some of his peers.

“There shouldn’t be people who hold keys to the internet. It should be entirely math-based, because it can be,” he reasons, referring to what he sees as unnecessary centralization and reliance on human figures within the Ethereum community.

Future directions

Already an old-timer, little more than a decade after stumbling upon Bitcoin, Jay is cautious about newer developments, calling DeFi “definitely risky” due to the risk of the leadership of some projects having the power to unilaterally take control of your funds. He has a similar take on NFTs, saying that “99% of them will become worthless, but some might become cult classics,” a line of thinking that was especially prominent regarding ICOs in the 2017 boom.

All considered, Jay is doing well in life and is focused on his family, but there is a certain unease a restlessness about him, even unrelated to physical safety.

As with many people who reach their goal, he has everything he could ever dream of, but its not exactly clear what he should do next, considering he feels that he has enough to financially cover his descendants to the 4th generation. One things for sure hes not looking for fame. “I don’t really want this article out there, but I think overall it is fair and the story should be told,” he says.

I have reached my goal, so now what? I have accomplished my life goals but I’m not dead yet, so I have to do something. No idea what but something

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

Griff Green: Doge-loving hippy hacker steals crypto before bad guys can

The organizer of The Robin Hood Group which once stole 10% of all circulating ETH from under a black hat hackers nose wants to change the way we think about charity.

A former chemical engineer, Griff Green, 36, traded in his savings for precious metals, which he used to travel the world for years before settling as a Bitcoin missionary in Ecuador. He led a white hat hacker war against the infamous black hat hacker of The DAO, and he organizes cryptocurrency camps at Burning Man to spread the word about crypto while dressed as Santa and riding a massive metal Doge.

His next big mission, with the blockchain-based charity initiatives Giveth and Commons Stack, is to transform the game of economics into one in which donations transform into investments… investments that can even wind up with the donor making a profit.

DAO master

The morning of June 17, 2016, was a pivotal day in cryptocurrency it was the day The DAO was hacked. The DAO was arguably the first major decentralized autonomous organization, having raised 14% of all circulating Ether in existence at the time from over 11,000 investors in May 2016. It functioned as an investor-driven venture fund, with tokenholders able to vote on investment proposals.

But a malicious actor found an exploit allowing funds to be progressively drained from The DAOs accounts. Green quickly organized his white hat hacker collective, The Robin Hood Group, to launch a counteroffensive.

 

White hat hacker and philanthropist Griff Green. (Pic: Supplied)

One week later, Green would be among the first nine graduates from the University of Nicosias Masters in Digital Currency program. He was hired by Slock.it, a company developing on Ethereum, as a community manager responsible for organizing and educating The DAOs community.

Green jumped onto a Slack channel for The DAOs investors, imploring them not to panic as his team rushed to drain what was left of the projects holdings before the attackers could. He encouraged users to spam the network as much as possible to slow it down and increase gas fees, making it harder for the real hacker:

The DAO is being attacked. It has been going on for 3-4 hours, it is draining Ethereum at a rapid rate. This is not a drill We need to spam the Network so that we can mount a counter attack all the brightest minds in the Ethereum world are in on this.

At the same time, his team started replicating the hackers attacks for itself, draining The DAOs wallets of ETH before the hacker could take it.

We had 10% of all Ether in existence.

We were taking a huge risk, Green acknowledges regarding the legality of preemptively stealing tens of millions in Ether so the hacker couldnt. The Ethereum chain was controversially forked following the hack in order to turn back time to before the hack, but Ethereum Classic emerged as a still-valuable token. This meant that Green and crew effectively held 10% of all ETC with the funds they had stolen.

 

 

Legal threats started pouring in, telling the group that the ETC should be distributed, despite the fact that We were just normal people, we didnt have a company, he says looking back. All the members of the group jumped on planes and flew to Switzerland to figure out legal representation, and it was the first time we all met in person. Eventually, the funds were returned through a DApp that Greens team coded.

 

Disco Doge
If you havent ridden around Burning Man on a giant Disco Doge, you havent lived.

About a year later in November 2017, the team had similar success rescuing $210 million from the Parity multisig wallet hack. We wanted to tell everyone, Hey, guess what? We stole all this money, but you can trust us because we already gave back all the money in The DAO, Green recalls. But he explains that this was risky for the now-public team because anyone could use Google to find out where they and thus, the private keys could be found. That night, Green slept on a mattress with a baseball bat in front of the door, fearing someone might come to take the keys by force.

Hacking is not the only way in which Green has put himself at risk in the name of his principles. When the autonomous region of Catalonia attempted to vote for independence from Spain in 2017, Green went to a polling station to act as a human shield to protect the electoral process from the police, who were beating people to steal the ballots. This experience convinced Green that decentralized governance on the blockchain can only work efficiently if people are able to run their nodes without relying on centralized internet providers. The result was DAppNode, which helps people around the world set up peer-to-peer infrastructure.

 

Griff Green
Green wearing his signature Santa suit while discussing charity initiatives with controversial philanthropist Brock Pierce at Burning Man 2018. (Pic: Elias Ahonen)

From engineer to Ecuadorian evangelist

Green was born in Spokane, Washington, where he graduated from high school in the mid-2000s. He was interested in designing planes and rocketships but decided not to pursue mechanical engineering after he realized that much of the industry was oriented toward military applications. Instead, he went into chemical engineering at the University of Washington in 2003.

At the end of his studies in 2006, he interned at biopharmaceutical firm Amgen, where he helped genetically engineer Chinese hamster ovary cells to produce human proteins, he recalls, describing a creepy process in a laboratory filled with vats of blood. Later, he worked as a research assistant at his alma mater, turning algae into carbon-neutral fuel.

He soon found himself employed as an organizer of a really weird political movement in Seattle called Save Our Sonics trying to lobby the local government to keep NBA basketball team the Seattle SuperSonics from relocating to Oklahoma. His efforts ended with disappointment when the mayor sold the team away anyway with just the stroke of a pen, just as a judge was about to rule in the teams favor. This left Green with an impression of political movements being outmatched and outgunned by corrupt elites.

 

An alter to DOGE at Burning Man. (Pic: Elias Ahonen)

 

In 2007, Green joined SNC-Lavalin, a large construction and engineering firm, as a process engineer where he had an ethical dilemma regarding a job requirement to create a structure that sent highly acidic water into the ocean in a country with weak environmental regulations. He tried to tweak the calculation a little bit in order to decrease the pollution level and give the ocean ecosystem a break. His suggestions were not accepted, and Now, theres a pipe that I designed pumping shit into the ocean, and that really weighs on me, he says in a somber manner.

When layoffs came around in 2008, he had been putting his paychecks into gold and silver, as he had recently started feeling like the whole system is a corrupt conspiracy. He bought a pop-top van that he drove to Burning Man, a counterculture event held each summer in the Nevada desert. Something about the experience inspired him to see the world, and he took off on an adventure that never ended precious metals in tow.

He traveled around, volunteering in Ecuador and Columbia the first year and India and Southeast Asia the next, always returning home to Burning Man in August. Along the way, he learned about Bitcoin and bought some with $3,000 worth of gold.

 

 

In 2013, his BTC went to $24,000 I was used to living really cheaply, like $3 per night hostels with cold showers, he recalls. Green saw potential and became so obsessed with Bitcoin that he told his girlfriend, Youre great and all, but I like Bitcoin more, and Im going to Ecuador, and Im going to be the Andreas Antonopoulos of Ecuador, referring to a desire to bring cryptocurrency to the country with which he had fallen in love during his travels.

I became obsessed. My girlfriend got jealous we literally broke up because she was jealous of Bitcoin.

In Ecuador, Green went around college campuses, popping into random computer science classes to give presentations about Bitcoin and teach everyone how to set up a wallet, which he would then fund with a small amount, asking each person to find three new people to send a fraction of their coins.

Id knock on the classroom door unannounced, and Id be like, Hey, I want to give everyone in this classroom a little bit of Bitcoin and explain it to them. Id say five times out of seven, they let me in, Green recalls with a laugh. Soon, however, he saw that Ecuador was moving to ban Bitcoin, so he abandoned his missionary post. I had to bail, he recounts.

 

Griff Green 3
Griff Greens Burning Man camp banner, featuring the Silk Road camel with religious iconography, replacing baby Jesus with a Doge.

The giving principle

Green organizes DECENTRAL and DOGECENTRAL, two cryptocurrency-themed camps at Burning Man, which is a radically oriented 10-day festival founded upon 10 principles including radical inclusion, gifting, radical self-reliance and civic responsibility. With the camps, Green aims to build a bridge between the Burning Man community and the crypto community so there can be an exchange of ideas and culture, something he feels can change the world somehow. The two communities have much in common as socially critical movements but tend toward opposing extremes regarding economic philosophy.

Swayed by his experiences in both political activism and engineering, Green is critical of the hyper capitalism that he sees in the cryptocurrency industry. If all you know is capitalism, then youre just going to do capitalism better, and I dont know if thats necessarily the right thing. But hey, look, theres this gift economy! he says, referring to what is known as the gifting principle at Burning Man, where money and any kind of trade or barter is banned.

The goal is to say, Wow! Look at what economics really is lets go a step beyond capitalism and start looking at how we can coordinate value production.

Green thinks of economies like games one can play the game in a capitalist manner to benefit themselves or they can play for the benefit of others. This desire to create an economic environment that rewards people for doing societal good inspired him to start crypto donation platform Giveth in late 2016. What if we integrate values and culture as part of the economic system? he ponders.

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

Giveth currently functions as a transparent and traceable donation platform where anyone can trace how their donated funds are spent. Id say its like an Indiegogo for donations, Green says. In the coming months, there are plans to release a governance token, to be given out to all donors in accordance with their donations on the platform. These governance tokens could function like something akin to a tax return, where donors receive some money back for making donations.

Commons Stack, a Giveth spinoff that Green co-founded, is creating a general-purpose framework for nonprofit economies by allowing donors to effectively invest in charity-related tokens. If more people also buy that token because they believe that this nonprofit economy is going to create value, then you as an early supporter would actually make money the same way it works in the stock market, Green explains. Of course, it is entirely possible that donors will never get all their money back, but Green is confident that thats OK because the other option is a 100% loss of donated funds.

Every economy is a game. The rules of the game determine your score, and your goal is to get a high score. When you play the American economy game, you try to get as much money as you can. But when you play the help orphans game, you try to get as much money as you can by helping orphans.

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

J. R. Willett launched the first ICO… but still has a day job

ICOs? He held the first one. Stablecoins? He dreamed of them by accident. Vitalik Buterin tried to get him on board to help launch Ethereum, but he was too busy. He is J. R. Willett, one of the most fascinating men in the industry.

Back in 2012, Willett, now 41, felt he could improve Bitcoin by making it possible for anyone to create interoperable tokens backed by the protocol. He released a white paper that described the new model and invented a way to fund the project with a token sale. He procrastinated for the next 18 months, hoping someone else would take the bait. Eventually, he gave in and announced the Mastercoin initial coin offering, which went on to inspire Ethereum and every subsequent ICO.

It felt like I was just putting into words what was obviously going to happen people were already talking about it, and I thought, Why hasn’t someone formalized this at least a little bit? I just got tired of waiting for someone else.

In the early days, he was worried that cryptocurrency would bring about a dystopia where either the late adopters became penniless or a one-world government would form to regulate everyones transactions. Hes still worried, but things are going better than hed feared.

 

 

In the sea of exceptional and charismatic people who rise to the top of the cryptocurrency world, Willett stands out. Not in his absolutist conviction to a set of principles, not in his journey from rags to riches, not in his maniac drive to stick with a project, not in his outsized charitable pursuits, and not even in his artistic endeavors or grand visions for the future. No. Willett stands out because despite the incredible things he has set in motion, he remains a humble family man who never forgot what was most important.

The first ICO

When the world rang in the year 2012, Bitcoin was pretty much the only game in town. Bitcoin, blockchain and cryptocurrency were one and the same, save for the newly birthed Litecoin fork that was not yet three months old (LTC was created via mining, just like Bitcoin). Its here that Willett arrived to stir the pot, publishing what he called The Second Bitcoin Whitepaper.

 

 

We claim that the existing Bitcoin network can be used as a protocol layer, on top of which new currency layers with new rules can be built without changing the foundation, he wrote. The idea was to make it possible to create new, functional tokens on top of Bitcoin in such a way that smart contracts could regulate their interactions. Mastercoin supports creating property tokens to be used for titles, deeds, user- backed currencies and even shares in a company, the white paper explained.

This sounds much like Ethereum today, complete with interoperable ERC-20 tokens and smart contracts. That is no coincidence, considering that Ethereum was partly inspired by Willetts ideas.

Vitalik came to us initially with his ideas, and we told him, Weve got some other things we want to do first.’ He didn’t want to wait, and it’s good for him that he didn’t. Ethereum was the result of that.

Willett even brought up the idea of stablecoins, writing that If you think Bitcoin has a reputation problem for money laundering now, just wait until you can store USDCoins in the block chain! This was a new idea he invented the concept.

Mastercoins launch and token sale was announced in July 2013. It was the first-ever ICO, and coins could be purchased at an exchange rate of 100 MSC per 1 BTC. These first coins were received from the Exodus Address, which served as Mastercoins equivalent to the genesis block while Bitcoin was the beginning, Mastercoin was imagined as the next era.

When Willett announced Mastercoin on the Bitcointalk forum, he thought of it as a one-time shortcut to get around the proper way of raising money. It didn’t feel like an innovation at the time, he says.

I thought I had found a bit of a shortcut I just didn’t have time to go flying to California, putting together a pitch deck and talking to venture capitalists, most of whom hadn’t heard of Bitcoin.

Eventually, Mastercoin evolved into the Mastercoin Foundation, itself evolving into the Omni Foundation, which Willett founded and where he still serves as chief architect. Willett says that transparency was very important to him while creating the nonprofit, and explains how he used a public spreadsheet to record all expenses.

The problem with that was that as we started running out of money, everybody knew we were running out of money, and that took some of the wind from our sails, he recalls with a laugh. Today, Omni Layer is an open source, fully decentralized asset platform that allows for creating and trading custom digital assets and currencies.

 

 

When asked if he harbors any regrets in not becoming a billionaire CEO, he lets out a hearty guffaw. Im sure there would have been things that were fun about it, he says giddily, but goes on to explain that he is a minimalist who barely owns anything that his kids do not need. What do you get from being super-wealthy, if you kind of have a minimalist state of mind? You just get a bunch of problems, he contemplates. Is there perhaps a tinge of regret there?

Maybe the regret there is that I could have done a lot of good but hopefully, those people that do become billionaires will do a lot of good.

 

 

The inventor

Willett led what he calls an idyllic childhood with a father who always had a knack for money and investments and began teaching him coding on the familys Apple II-GS computer when Willett was only 10 years old.

While still in high school in Oregon, Willett spent summers working as a shop assistant doing unglamorous work like sweeping and cleaning toilets. One time, he wrote a mock virus and made his employers believe that they had been hacked. They had an old IBM computer I think I wrote it at home and then brought it in on a floppy disk, he recounts with laughter.

When Willett later learned that he could make a living doing this thing Id been doing for fun, a degree in computer science at Seattle Pacific University was a no-brainer. He graduated in 2002.

After two years as a software developer at dot-com startup Alerio in Oregon, he joined Dynon Avionics, where he was promoted to a senior role. Over his 11-year career there, he created flight planning software and calibrated instruments that went on to be used in applications as exotic as the SpaceShipOne spaceplane, which completed the first crewed private spaceflight in 2004.

In 2012, he joined his present employer, Cozi, as software developer lead, where he designs mobile calendar apps that help families stay organized. It seems a good fit. He says, Ive always considered myself a family man even before I had kids.

Thats right Willett, the inventor of both the ICO and algorithmic stablecoin, still works a day job. You cant have all of your money tied up in cryptocurrencies, he said, referring to the responsibilities of parenthood.

 

 

Concerning crypto

It was around 2010 while working at Dynon Avionics that Willett kind of fell in that [cryptocurrency] hole and never got out. He watched the Bitcoin price rise up to $0.25, and remembers setting up a beige computer tower, which successfully mined a block of 50 BTC on its own over a few weeks with only a central processing unit, or CPU.

CPU mining soon became impossible, as GPUs (graphic processing units) and later ASIC miners (specialized software chips for mining) connected to mining pools came to dominate the landscape. Even then, it was unusual to get a block from a CPU, but it wasnt unheard of, Willett recalls.

Unlike some others from his time, Willett did not come to view cryptocurrencies as a universal savior or liberator of humanity. Instead, he foresaw a dystopian future, which worried him deeply. He never wanted to metaphorically burn the banks or upend the system, because that sort of thing is bound to hurt many, many people who rely on the existing structures.

It looked to me like something that could, if it got big enough, damage the entire worlds financial systems. I thought, this is the sort of thing you better own just defensively, as an insurance policy.

Willett admits that the idea of Bitcoin damaging the global financial infrastructure sounded pretty crazy back in 20102011, when very few people had heard of Bitcoin, but I have always taken the opinion that the government-issued monies are much more fragile than they appear. He adds that a bank run could happen if people lose confidence in fiat, and now, there is a valid alternative for it.

For Willett, money is a shared hallucination that works well if everyone plays along, but can fall apart quickly if people choose to opt out.

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

This is not necessarily what Willett desires, as such a situation would leave those without cryptocurrency in a desperate situation. Not everyone knows about cryptocurrency, and not everyone has the money to invest or the confidence to risk their capital. It would be a tragedy for them to be left behind. But, Thinking about that potential possible outcome, it would be foolish not to own at least some cryptocurrency, he reasons.

If there comes a tipping point where everyone tries to get out of government money and into cryptocurrencies… itd be on the scale of global war in the amount of human suffering.

Willett admits that back in 2012, he vastly overestimated the speed at which cryptocurrency adoption would happen. Some of his writings from the time came with a particularly dystopian bent, such as predicting governments attempting to destroy all decentralized computer networks (including the internet) in order to bring about a strong, centralized, [blockchain powered] one-world government which gets its revenues by tightly reigning in freedom of commerce in order to collect taxes.

When I wrote that, I expected it could be a year or two away, he thinks back. He does not come across as much of a doomsayer anymore. The longer it takes to get there, the less disruptive itll be, he says referring to the view that a larger base of cryptocurrency owners will result in a less turbulent transition toward cryptocurrency.

Willett is confident that there will only be more crypto billionaires, as he expects the bull market to continue for some time. Usually, theres a roughly hundredfold run-up, followed by a roughly tenfold drop. It happens over the course of months or even years, and then it happens again. He considers Ether the best bet today, and recently predicted an ETH top of around $9,500 for this cycle.

Im optimistic that our crypto billionaires, whoever they are, will eventually become crypto philanthropists, especially if this world that were building ends up causing a lot of pain and suffering for people that are late adopters.

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

Roger Ver’s next life: Cryonics meets crypto

Toward the end of our hour-long interview, Bitcoin.com founder Roger Ver drops a bombshell: He had considered killing himself to escape a jail sentence at the age of 23. Even for the most freedom-loving libertarian, this seems extreme. But Ver had worked out a way to escape his own death by having himself cryonically preserved, to be revived at a later date.

At 20 years old, Ver had already signed up with Arizona life extension company Alcor to be frozen after death, long before he was handed a 10-month prison stretch in 2002 for selling firecrackers on eBay.

Itll freeze your body in a big giant vat of liquid nitrogen when you die, in the hopes that future medical technology will be able to fix whatever it is that caused you to die in the first place plus the damage caused by freezing, he explains:

And so in fact, I even considered suicide isnt the right word but I considered killing myself temporarily, going into cryonic suspension and then coming out later, when the technology is better, to avoid going to prison. Thats how upset I was about going to jail.

Now 42, and with a fortune he vaguely refers to as being in the billions, the Bitcoin Cash proponent intends to switch his investment focus to cryonics over the next decade, in the hopes of improving the experimental technology.

Rather than investing in cryptocurrency stuff, I want to focus on the extreme life extension technologies because if you die, you cant enjoy your life anymore, he says. At various points during our conversation, Ver refers to his mission with a well-rehearsed tagline about helping build the tools to give people control over their own money (or variations thereof).

Riffing on this, he says his new focus will be to build the tools that enable people to have as much time as they need in their lives to do the things that they enjoy, and spend it with the people they care about.

If Ver gets run over by a bus tomorrow, theres a card in his wallet and notes on his phone with instructions to immediately get in touch with Alcor to freeze his body, with the hope of eventual resurrection. Thats certainly my hope, he says, adding wryly, The downside of that is that the companys in Arizona, and I’m zipping all over the world.

Paradise in the pandemic

Ver is currently bunkering down from the pandemic on the French-speaking island of St. Barts in the Caribbean, where its summer all year round. Following his run-in with United States authorities, he renounced his U.S. citizenship in 2014 and became a citizen of St. Kitts and Nevis. He spends a lot of time in neighboring Antigua, where he convinced businesses from gas stations to supermarkets to accept BCH. You can now even pay the $158,000 required to become a citizen in crypto.

Compared with 2017 and 2018, when Ver seemed to be everywhere arguing the case for big blocks and peer-to-peer cash, hes been a lot less prominent lately. I absolutely made a deliberate decision to do less media stuff, he says. That civil war is kind of over now. So, I dont think I need to argue with words so much as build useful things for people around the world to use.

Hes still pretty active behind the scenes though, playing an instrumental role in convincing Kim Dotcom to embrace Bitcoin Cash for his K.im content monetization platform.

Speaking to Bitcoin maximalist Tone Vays (who was decidedly unimpressed), Dotcom revealed that Ver had won him over. He shared with me some of the innovations that hes working on. I think the guy at the moment, in terms of his way of thinking and where he is in his innovation, is a step ahead. I feel it would be stupid to ignore someone like that.

It sounds as if Ver may have also extolled the virtues of Bitcoin Cash to Tesla CEO Elon Musk, but hes reluctant to confirm this.

I hate to be coy, but Im not going to comment on that question. Im happy to talk about just about everything, but thats one that I think well have to save for another time.

Well, thats not a No, is it?

 

 

The only bit of the story about Bitcoin forks

As one of the earliest and most ardent Bitcoin proponents, Ver is also one of the most controversial for his role in forking Bitcoin Cash away in November 2017. While BCHs price and hash rate pale into insignificance against Bitcoin, as of late, the networks transaction count is 100,000 more per day than Bitcoins, and its block size is larger too, suggesting it may actually be starting to be used as a currency.

But forks spawn forks, and the once-ally and Satoshi-claimant Craig Wright forked Bitcoin SV away from Bitcoin Cash a year later. At one point, Ver seemed to give some credence to Wrights Satoshi claims, but relations soured, and the Australian now spends much of his time mounting lawsuits against Ver for libel for calling him a fraud. The most recent case was filed in Antigua in September. 100% for sure hes going to lose that one too, says Ver, without even a hint of concern.

But what was he hoping to achieve by hitching his fortune to Wrights in the first place?

Good question, he says, The things that Craig Wright was saying back then are totally different than what hes been saying more recently. Back then, he was espousing a lot of this free market libertarian-type rhetoric. Hesitating, he adds:

I guess at the time, I was hoping to have one more ally. […] It turned out Craig wasnt a good ally.

Yet another Bitcoin Cash fork occurred in November last year, as a result of Bitcoin ABCs benevolent dictator Amaury Sechet trying to impose an 8% tax on miners to pay for development. Rival implementation Bitcoin Cash Node, or BCH, won the battle for the name, and Sechet ended up with a coin called BCHA, or Bitcoin Cash ABC, which is currently worth about $36 to BCHs $852.

While a tax was never going to fly with the taxation is theft elements of the BCH community, the loss of Bitcoin Cashs lead developer, who was instrumental in the creation of the currency, would seem to be a major blow. But thats not how Ver sees it. The only time I ever became short Bitcoin Cash was when Amaury was trying to split the network, he reveals.

 

 

I think it shows just how incredibly distributed, decentralized and censorship-resistant the Bitcoin Cash network is, based on the fact that Amaury is gone and the network is, you know, the price is higher than ever.

And speaking of price, having watched Bitcoin go from cents to tens of thousands of dollars, Ver has some quite optimistic hopes for Bitcoin Cash. He believes the total addressable market for digital cash is 10 times higher than the market for digital gold, and argues that if Bitcoin can hit $64,000, then $600,000 is well within the realm of possibility for Bitcoin Cash.

Despite this, hes no Bitcoin Cash maximalist and entertains the possibility that Ethereum or an Ethereum killer may also one day unseat Bitcoin, if BCH is somehow unable to.

I have just about every cryptocurrency, he says revealing significant holdings of Bitcoin, Ether, Binance Coin, XRP, ADA, Tether and DOT. No DOGE though.

 

 

Forked away from the family

Born in San Jose in 1979, Ver rarely speaks about his childhood, though his independence and rebellious streak were clearly evident even then.

I guess I rebelled I moved out of my biological parents home when I was 16, he says. And then I had kind of a new adopted family that I lived with ever since and consider my family at this point.

He doesnt want to reveal too much about them, especially since there were hacking attempts, extortion attempts and threats to hurt myself or my family. So, I probably dont want to give too many details that might help the world track down my new adopted family.

I was lucky enough to find them, and Im incredibly thankful to have them in my life and to talk to them pretty much daily.

Around 16 or 17, he began to devour economics books, including the work of libertarian author and liberal hate figure Ayn Rand, as well as the writings of Austrian economist and anarcho-capitalist founder Murray Rothbard.

 

Related: Is Ethereum left and Bitcoin right?

 

Ver laughs as he points out that Rand kicked Rothbard out of her inner circle for being too extreme, so thats my intellectual hero.

He wrote a number of really, really compelling, interesting and thought-provoking books with points of view Id never been exposed to. He adds, I have no problem calling myself an anarcho-capitalist or voluntaryist because I think those are the only practical and moral ways for society to function.

Ver is incredibly committed to his libertarian and voluntaryist ideals, to the point where he rationalizes away his millions in donations to the Foundation for Economic Education, Liberland, Antiwar.com and FreeRoss.org by framing his philanthropy as self-interest. Some libertarians, such as Rand, view altruism with a degree of suspicion, believing it to be incompatible with individual rights and freedom.

Its because I like and support what those people are up to, he says. So, I want to donate money to them not because Im being selfless but because Im being selfish. Because the value I think Ill get back from myself will be more than whatever the value of the cryptocurrency that I sent to them would have been.


Economics 101 makes mini-millionaires


Ver put his understanding of economics to good use after discovering he could buy hard drives from bankrupt companies at auction for $100 each, and sell them on eBay for almost $400. This formed the basis of his company Memory Dealers, and Ver later founded Agilestar, which dealt in fiber optic transceivers.

From studying economics books, youll learn thats all any business is: moving things, whether its physical goods or intellectual capital or whatever else, from where its worth less to where its worth more.

One endeavor though almost ruined his life. Like any young man, he says, I liked firecrackers. He explains that he bought firecrackers called Pest Control Report 2000, designed to scare birds away from crops, from Cabelas sporting goods catalog. Noting that these fetched a higher price on eBay, he started reselling them for profit.

It was just kind of a little side project, he says. If Id known it was illegal, I wouldnt have done that.

The authorities charged him with dealing in explosives without a license, illegally storing them and mailing injurious articles. Ver accepted a plea bargain to get a 10-month sentence.

He still believes the charges against him were politically motivated, stemming from his outspoken criticism of the authorities during a run for California State Assembly as a Libertarian candidate in 2000.

 

 

This is impossible to prove, of course. However, Ver says he was the only person out of dozens of resellers charged over the firecrackers, and manufacturer Max2000, which sold a million of them, simply agreed to stop selling them the following year.

Vers opponents continually bring up his criminal record to discredit him. In November 2019, Nouriel Roubini (aka Dr. Doom) attacked him for being a convicted criminal during a debate in London. Afterward, Ver said this was proof hed won.

The fact that he was attacking me for having sold firecrackers on eBay, which has nothing to do with whether or not cryptocurrencies are useful to the world, I think its a pretty clear sign that I did just fine.

Prison life was particularly tough on a freedom-loving libertarian, though he admits the boring parts were preferable to anything exciting happening. Excitement in prison is never ever good excitement, he says. Its only bad excitement. And the longest 10 months of my life also, by far.

 

A few days after he arrived, a prison guard planted a shiv on him and started screaming questions about who Ver planned to murder, convincing Ver hed get another two years on his sentence.

Shocked, Ver began to cry, pleading with the guard, Its not mine, its not mine, I dont know where it came from. Seeing his obvious distress the guard suddenly smiled and patted him on the shoulder. Relax, Im just kidding with you. Have a seat.

Ver thinks of this as psychological torture. I think he was just bored, and the entertainment for him was Lets talk to this new guy, he says. The prisoners know the guards can do whatever they want. I dont know if he was trying to instill that on a new guy. I think that everybody there knows it real quickly that thats the case.

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

On his final day, he found his breakthrough (albeit, minor) moment of vengeance. Ver recalls what the prison guard said on his way out the door: Oh, youll be back.

I said, No, I wont, but youll be back. Youll come here every day until the day you retire.

From Skid Row to Santana Row

Ver made his first million the year after he was released, and the probation officers had to come visit him at his opulent new apartment in Santana Row, San Jose.

It was kind of an interesting experience to have these people. Theyre supposed to be the boss of me and telling me what a horrible person I am and keeping an eye on me to make sure I dont do anything wrong, but Im living in one of the fanciest apartment complexes in Silicon Valley, he says.

I had a lot more financial power than they did. But they had a lot more legal power over me and my life, so it was a kind of an uneasy imbalance of power. Vers sentence included a three-year period of supervised release. The minute it was over, Ver said goodbye to the United States for good and moved to Japan.

I got tossed in jail for the things that I said. And so the day I was allowed to leave the U.S., I left the U.S. and never lived there ever again.

He semi-retired and spent much of his time working on his jiujitsu and competing in tournaments. Now a brown belt, he still carves out an hour for it each day.

He first heard about Bitcoin while listening to libertarian radio show Free Talk Live in 2011. His ears harkened at the mention of buying drugs on Silk Road he wasnt interested in the drugs, he was fascinated with how users could pay with money outside of state control.

I was like, okay, this is the next big thing. This is the opportunity Ive been waiting for my whole life. This is kryptonite to the state in the governments ability to control people. I want to promote that full time.

 

Unlike many new investors who are attracted to the get-rich-quick aspect of crypto, Ver was already rich when he learned about Bitcoin, and was able to establish a different relationship with it.

I had a Lamborghini before Bitcoin had ever even been invented. And I sold the Lamborghini to buy more Bitcoin. But having the money made it much, much easier to get involved, he says.

There are reports that Ver amassed around 400,000 BTC, which today would be worth $20 billion though he gave much of it away to convert unbelievers.

Ver also invested in much of the foundational infrastructure for the cryptosphere, including Bitpay, Zcash, Kraken and Blockchain.info (now Blockchain.com). He was a co-founder of the Bitcoin Foundation and an adviser to Binance. And of course, he spreads Bitcoin Cash adoption through Bitcoin.com. While hes known colloquially as Bitcoin Jesus, he likes to think of himself more akin to Bitcoin Johnny Appleseed, planting the seeds that have all grown up into these big giant businesses that we have today.

While it has made him an extremely wealthy man, crypto has also given Ve’s life a meaning and purpose that it may not otherwise have had. The closest answer I can come up with is that the meaning of life is to enjoy the journey of your life each day, he says. So, figure out what makes you happy, and try and do that.

 

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

6 Questions for Denelle Dixon of the Stellar Development Foundation

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 Denelle Dixon, CEO and executive director of the Stellar Development Foundation.

Denelle Dixon is the CEO and executive director of the Stellar Development Foundation, a nonprofit organization using blockchain to unlock the worlds economic potential by making money more fluid, markets more open and people more empowered. Before joining Stellar, Denelle served as the chief operating officer of Mozilla, one of the most successful mission-driven open-source organizations. During her tenure at Mozilla, she led the organizations business, revenue and policy teams, including the ongoing fight for net neutrality and the global effort to ensure that people can control their personal data. She also pushed Mozilla to understand how to partner with commercial entities while staying true to its core mission of openness, innovation and opportunity on the web. A lawyer by trade, Denelle previously served as a general counsel and legal advisor in private equity and technology. Throughout her career, Denelle has been a vocal advocate for net neutrality, encryption, the disclosure of vulnerabilities by governments, and greater user choice and control.


1 Whats one problem you think blockchain has a chance to solve but hasnt been attempted yet?

There is no shortage of ideas for what blockchain can solve in terms of efficiency, transparency, data security, speed and cost. The great thing is blockchains versatility can be applied to most if not all industries ranging from finance to healthcare to education to retail. And blockchain has been around long enough that its not just for crypto enthusiasts anymore. Companies, organizations and institutions are now looking for ways to make blockchain part of their tech stack. Essentially, if there is a process that can be improved upon with technology, blockchain has the potential to be part of that solution.

But blockchain needs to further mature before we see a fully comprehensive solution happen. So, maybe attempt isnt the right word here so much as fully implemented.

I would love to see blockchain tackle cybersecurity. Staying indoors throughout the pandemic has only amplified peoples reliance on technology through their modes of communication, shopping habits or content consumption/creation. But its difficult for users to choose between protecting their data and the incentives provided to them for providing access to their data not to mention that users are constantly at risk of being scammed or hacked. So, while users need to take a more vigilant approach to safeguarding their own data, blockchain can protect users at the product level via decentralization and built-in encryption methods. Im very excited to see where blockchain projects focusing on cybersecurity end up in the coming years.

 

2 What do you think will be the biggest trend in blockchain for the next 12 months?

From a general standpoint, as blockchain becomes more consumer-friendly, well see more businesses and individuals begin to adopt it. Interest in blockchain is only rising as the technology and infrastructure becomes more robust and useful, allowing people to solve problems in increasingly versatile ways.

This means that industries beyond just fintech will start thinking of ways blockchain can benefit them. I welcome the diversification of industries as they bring more applications, products and services to blockchain, as it indicates growing acceptance by the public that blockchain really can be part of the mainstream.

Regarding financial systems, the conversation around stablecoins and digital currencies will continue to intensify. Were finally starting to see buy-in from traditional financial institutions that blockchain is a cost-effective, swift and powerful solution. If these institutions begin issuing stablecoins on their own, as Bitbond and Bank von der Heydt did, the mainstream consumer will become much more comfortable with the idea of digital currencies and blockchain in general.

 

3 Whats the most interesting place youve ever visited, and why?

This is a hard question because interesting could cover so many feelings. If I had to pick one, I would go with Krakw, Poland. While my visit there was brief, I could feel the history both beautiful and tragic beaming from within the large, culturally distinct and historically significant areas of Krakw. The contemporary city boasts vibrant businesses with historic buildings and churches and cathedrals dotting the landscape. It was a moving juxtaposition for me, especially after visiting the Jewish Quarter Kazimierz which is an ever-present reminder of the tragedies inflicted during WWII combined with more recent brilliance in the resurgence of the Jewish community there with art exhibitions that commemorate the rebuilding. For me, going to Krakw was a lesson in life, art and cultural protection.

 

4 Whats the future of social media?

If anyone has watched The Social Dilemma on Netflix, theyre probably aware that social media has deviated far from its original promise: to provide a space where people can voice their thoughts and connect with one another.

We see now that social media has a whole host of problems. Not only have the psychological and cultural impacts of social media been more dramatic than many of us anticipated but current policies and regulations are not enough to safeguard users.

As with most technology, social media in itself is neither good nor bad. Its a tool, albeit one that is highly susceptible to algorithmic changes and design choices in the hands of a few.

So, will we see a lot more video-driven features because thats what performs best according to the algorithm? Will we see the voices of a few rise to the top because they happened to say the thing that would get the most eyeballs? Will we see companies increase their prominence on social media because their advertising budgets are the primary source of revenue for these networks? Yes to all of the above.

But now we know where the flaws of social media exist, and these networks need to be reexamined, redesigned and rebuilt with not just the input of a few, but from all voices. Thats what itll take to recapture what made social media so special in the first place: to have a platform where your voice can be heard and matters.

 

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

Am I allowed to say @cointelegraph?

The other five are (in no particular order):

@CoinDesk: Their focus on data, research and multimedia content help me keep tabs on broader trends, use cases and innovations taking place in crypto.

@TheBlock__: How they stay updated on all the major players in the crypto/blockchain space short, sweet and to the point.

@ForbesCrypto: Theyre one of the biggest crypto pubs on Twitter and for good reason: They get all the exclusives!

@BlockchainAssn: The Blockchain Association has a front seat to DC policymaking and regulations in blockchain and crypto. I appreciate their nuanced takes on the discussions and legislation circulating in the space.

@CoinMarketCap: CoinMarketCap is a data lovers dream. Aside from the rankings and charts, [what] theyre best known for, CoinMarketCap also puts out great content focusing on global policy, regulations and projects happening in crypto.

 

6 Close your eyes and think of a happy place. What do you see?

I see my family, my parents, my partner, our children and our close friends sitting around a bonfire in our backyard playing a game of charades. It is one of my happiest moments particularly when my team is winning.


 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

You can make money playing in virtual worlds: Gabby Dizon

Altitude Games CEO Gabby Dizon thinks the science fiction-inspired virtual reality Metaverse is being created all around us at increasing speed. “The Metaverse means different online worlds that are interconnected upon some form of shared economy. Usually, this economy is based on a blockchain,” explains Dizon, who also heads Yield Guild Games.

While he thinks we’re still “in the very, very early stages” of building it, blockchain-based games like Axie Infinity and The Sandbox are already developing robust in-game economies. Dizon believes it will snowball from here, as ever-increasing automation is making it increasingly hard for people to find jobs and a place in society.

“A lot of people will be losing jobs in the physical world, and what will they be doing? I think they will be going online, and they will start playing games. Specifically, they will start playing games to earn money.”

This is not entirely without precedent, as locals in hyperinflation-hit Venezuela have been mining virtual gold for profit in the game RuneScape to feed their families for many years already.

Dizon’s game design studio, Altitude Games, is based in Manila in the Philippines, where many Filipinos have managed to stay afloat through endless COVID-19 lockdowns by raising and selling NFT-creatures known as Axies. Though his game design firm started out with free-to-play games, he is now helping build the leisure economy through a play-to-earn gaming model.

He believes that reinventing gaming is the answer to some of the world’s problems. “Play-to-earn has the opportunity to level the inequality of wealth that is happening in the world right now,” he says, full of optimism. This model is especially relevant in developing countries where it has already become reality.

In 2020, he co-founded Yield Guild Games as a guild of investors buying up a portfolio of income-earning in-game NFTs in a swath of blockchain games.

Play-to-earn

Back in the day, gamers paid the purchase price just once for video games that provided endless gameplay, with levels unlocked by way of in-game progression. Then came pay-to-play, which required players to make small purchases to unlock levels or abilities by which to progress.

Free-to-play is another model that can be played for free, though benefits can usually be purchased. Often, such games have purchasable loot boxes containing random in-game goods. This has proven controversial, with European Union regulators calling them “problematic design features” and some countries like Belgium deeming them a form of gambling.

Play-to-earn is a somewhat radical concept that suggests that players actually earn money through the process of gameplay, usually by performing tasks to earn items of benefit to other players. An early example of play-to-earn is found on centralized multiplayer games like World of Warcraft and Runescape, where players can earn in-game gold that can then be sold to other players in exchange for fiat on exchanges like DMarket.

 

 

Dizon explains that “The problem with a lot of the gold farming in games like World of Warcraft and Runescape was that the gold operations were set up basically in sweatshops,” which caused the supply of in-game currency to rise. This led to in-game items getting more expensive, making gameplay more complicated. “These games themselves were not built for that kind of inflation, so value ended up being extracted from the game and harming the in-game economy overall,” he continued.

Its different with blockchain games.

Gamers in the Philippines can earn three times the minimum wage by playing blockchain games. While computer games are a free or low-cost pastime for many around the world, especially considering the global lockdowns due to COVID-19, a growing number of people have realized there’s money to be made playing:

“They are gamers who are playing League of Legends six hours a day. Then they see on Facebook that some of their friends are getting rich playing this game, and they think, ‘Like, how is that possible?’ So, they pop into our Discord.”

Once inside the Yield Games Guild Discord channel, they soon learn the basics of how to get started. This includes setting up a Metamask wallet and security tips around never revealing their private keys or seed phrases. At present, Yield Games focuses on teaching newcomers how to earn money in Axie Infinity, a game where players buy, raise, trade and battle creatures called “Axies.” Since the game runs on Small Love Potion tokens,which can easily be traded on Uniswap and other DEXs, there is real money at play.

“You don’t need to be anyone special or highly educated to do it. You do have to be computer literate and have a mobile phone with internet and some gaming aptitude and then you can start earning money,” Dizon explains.

A key to making play-to-earn a reality, according to Dizon, is to make the process easy to understand. Knowledge about blockchain technology is not required. “When I want to drive a car, or when I start a car, I don’t necessarily know how the combustion engine works,” he explains. “You shouldn’t really have to know how a distributed ledger works to use it in a gaming context.”

Bringing the IP home

Dizon remembers being around computers since he was three years old. That first computer was a 1981 Commodore VIC-20, which his father an engineer who would often travel to the United States on business brought home to the Manila suburb where Dizon grew up. He became interested in games at the age of six, recalling that the Commodore “had a few games it had Hangman, it had Chess, and one or two more.”

He attended Ateneo de Manila University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science in management information systems in 2000. “I wanted to make games, and it was tough when I graduated because there were no companies that were making games,” he recalls of the lack of gaming studios in the Philippines at the time. His first job was in PHP web development, but when he saw a job posting for game developers in Manila three years later, he couldn’t believe his eyes.

Dizon remembers going to visit the Anino Entertainment game studio after applying. “There were several people kind of sleeping on the couches and making what became the first game in the Philippines. I really loved the energy, and I’ve been in games ever since.”

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

In the 2000s, the IT industry in the Philippines was almost entirely based on outsourcing. Dizon had his own outsourcing business, FlipSide Games, where he oversaw Filipino designers working on behalf of overseas clients from 2005 to 2009. But this interaction sat uncomfortably with him, as he felt that his countrymen were getting the short end of the stick due to receiving no intellectual property rights. The rich countries were trading money for the fruits of Filipino creativity.

“The usual case was that someone in America or Europe or Japan would outsource their work to the Philippines where workers would get paid a fixed rate, but they would never really make their own intellectual property. I really got tired of that, so I closed down the business.”

In 2009, he joined Boomzap Entertainment, a small independent firm that was creating its own games in Manila. “They were making their own intellectual property, and that’s what I really wanted to do to make my own IP,” Dizon remembers with pride.

Four years later in 2014, he grew restless and decided that it was time to work for himself again. “I knew that the next step was that I wanted to have my own company again, but creating my own IP this time,” he says. Dizon founded Altitude Games, a studio creating free-to-play games in Manila. Game titles include Dream Defense and Kung Fu Clicker, with the latter boasting over a million downloads.

His company had difficulty raising money because local investors did not understand the business model of creating IP locally. International investors were similarly wary of funding a game studio in the Philippines.

 


 

Fundraising was very hard, and it was very unusual for a startup from Southeast Asia to be able to raise money fast, he recalls. There was a sense that all of Southeast Asia was behind, always playing catch-up to more advanced countries.

Doing what others did a decade earlier did not appeal to Dizon. He wanted to be at the bleeding edge. That’s why the company got into blockchain.

“I felt like for the first time in my career, I was in front of a trend learning about smart contracts at the same time as almost everybody else in the world. You could be one of the leading experts in the world in something and still be based in the Philippines.”

The company’s first blockchain game, Battle Racers, allows users to design and race model cars in Decentraland.

 

 

Into the Metaverse

Last year, Dizon founded Yield Guild Games with the help of 2,500 investors from around the world. The company invests in yield-earning in-game NFTs within blockchain games, and there are plans to turn the venture into a decentralized autonomous organization.

“The guild owns the entities inside these games,” he says, referring to in-game elements that take the form of NFTs, such as in-game real estate. In addition to Axie Infinity and The Sandbox, some of the blockchain games the guild has invested in include F1 Delta Time, League of Kingdoms and Star Atlas.

“The nice thing about these blockchain games is that they are enabled with marketplaces from day one. We actually work in tandem with the developers so that we invest in the economy, and of course, our players take some proceeds of that.”

Dizon sees his work as that of an early pioneer laying out the roads for a coming megacity. He is also a collector of NFT art, which he displays in the Narra Gallery in Decentraland.

 

 

“We bring in the manpower that’s required to populate it [the Metaverse]. We bring them from all over the world, and it gives you equal opportunity whether you’re from the Philippines or from Nigeria or from France,” he says, adding that the Metaverse does not discriminate based on things like skin color, age or location roadblocks that Dizon himself has encountered.

“For me, it’s like we’re settling a new nation in the same way that America was being settled in the 1700s. We’re now settling a digital nation with people who are aiming for a home from around the world.”

Dizon is confident that the range of play-to-earn jobs will expand. “There’s a whole set of jobs that are available in the Metaverse, and it will look a lot less and less like just, you know, killing monsters and getting loot, and it will be more about the different things that are needed to make a town really be alive,” he predicts.

Dizon stresses that there is a need for all types of skill sets to help build these virtual worlds, including programmers, artists, fashion designers, storytellers and architects, to name a few.

He has one piece of advice for anyone of any age, from anywhere, who wants to join the revolution.

“Start by joining a community, and provide value to that community. […] As long as you’re providing value to a community in the Metaverse, you will find your own place in it.”

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

6 Questions for Wes Levitt of Theta Labs

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 Wes Levitt, head of strategy at Theta Labs.

At Theta Labs, Wes works on corporate strategy, marketing and press relations, and analytics. He has been a speaker on blockchain topics at conferences including the New York Media Festival, Blockchain Connect and NAB Streaming Summit, among others. Prior to joining Theta Labs, Wes spent eight years in investment roles at Mosser Capital, a real estate private equity firm; and Redwood Trust, a mortgage real estate investment trust focused on securitized debt. Wes is a CFA charterholder and holds a BS in economics from the University of Oregon and an MBA from the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.


1 If the world is getting a new currency, will it be led by central bank digital currencies, a permissionless blockchain like Bitcoin or a permissioned chain such as Diem?

If it’s only one, I would say CBDCs are more likely since governments are unlikely to give up the power of issuing their own currencies. But Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies can exist alongside CBDCs and serve a different purpose. Even if Bitcoin never replaces the major fiat currencies (or their CBDC successors), it is hugely valuable by providing an alternative to them. The mere existence of Bitcoin, with its fixed supply and pseudonymous transactions, should force central banks to think twice about inflating their currency values away or forcing widespread surveillance on consumers.

It’s true that we aren’t seeing that yet with rampant money creation in the U.S. dollar, euro, Japanese yen, etc. in the past year but that’s partly a function of Bitcoin and other crypto markets just being too small to be a workable alternative yet. But that’s changing quickly you are seeing companies like MicroStrategy, Tesla and Meitu add Bitcoin to their corporate treasury, which becomes more and more feasible as Bitcoin’s market cap grows. Eventually, Bitcoin should grow large enough to be investable even at the scale of central banks, as an alternative or supplement to their gold holdings.

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

I do think it matters, but that it’s best for Bitcoin if we never find out who Satoshi is/was. A real person will have a backstory, profession, country of origin, etc., which could only lead to division and bias in the crypto community. It’s better that Satoshi remain more of a legendary figure that people can interpret as they choose to. I think Satoshi himself realized this, and it’s why he chose to remain anonymous.

 

3 What’s the silliest conspiracy theory out there… and which one makes you pause for a moment?

For silliest, I’ll go with a tie between QAnon and “Bill Gates putting tracking chips in the COVID vaccines.” Both are so stupid that they’ve become useful as a signaling device. If someone believes in one of those things, I can safely ignore anything else they say and save myself the time.

The one conspiracy theory I 100% believe is that David Stern regularly rigged the number-one pick in the NBA draft. Ewing to the Knicks in ’85, New Orleans getting Anthony Davis after Stern traded Chris Paul away, Lebron and Rose go to their hometown teams, the Cavs get three number-one picks in four years after Lebron leaves… way too many examples to have happened by accident!

4 Other than the present day, in what time and in what country would you like to have lived?

I would have enjoyed mid-70s England, mostly for the music. You had the punk scene emerging with the Sex Pistols, The Clash, and The Damned, and many others. Iron Maiden and Motorhead are just getting started along with the whole NWOBHM [new wave of British heavy metal] scene. Plus, if you stick around until the late 70s/early 80s, you’ve got XTC and Depeche Mode and the Police just around the corner. One of the best five or so years in music you can find for a single country.

 

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

My first-ever NFT was purchased for just the price of some ETH for gas I created it myself with Enjin back in 2018. This limited edition “Wes-branded” sword didn’t make it into any crypto games, sadly, but it was obviously a very cool concept, even if it was still a few years before the mainstream use of NFTs. The entertainment space is getting the most attention for NFTs right now, but the idea of taking legendary items with me between RPGs is still the use case that resonates with me the most. I’m not much of an art collector myself, but I could absolutely see myself ponying up for rare items that are interoperable between games now, I can justify that this NFT purchase is an investment I could use across many different games in the future.

 

6 Whats the unlikeliest-to-happen thing on your bucket list?

I’d like to live long enough to see humanity establish settlements on the Moon or Mars or other potentially habitable moons like Europa, and to travel there myself once that becomes feasible at a commercial level (i.e., without having to go through astronaut training just to go!) This still feels like too far away for my lifetime we are 52 years post-Moon landing and barely any closer to permanent settlement. But the pace of technological discovery is always increasing, so I hold out hope that it will be in my plans for 2050 or so!

A wish to the blockchain community:

Stay positive, and keep building! Crypto goes through breakneck cycles of euphoria and despair you have to take a step back and look at the big picture sometimes to keep your head on straight in this wild space.


 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

Making DeFi idiot-proof with Kava’s gamer CEO, Brian Kerr

According to Kava Labs CEO Brian Kerr, the major reason that decentralized finance, or DeFi, has not yet hit the mainstream is that “93% of holders are never gonna touch their own keys.”

Kava is a non-Ethereum-based DeFi platform that enables users to earn interest on the cryptocurrencies they hold. The investors Kerr hopes to reach are those who used an on-ramp like Coinbase or Binance to buy cryptocurrencies that are now sitting on the exchange. They are “worried about ‘fat-fingering’ and losing their funds in a transfer, or something like that,” he says. Being used to keeping their money in a bank account, these investors prefer to keep their cryptocurrencies on a crypto platform rather than in a hardware wallet.

Kavas platform connects lenders with borrowers directly, but the real challenge is “not just creating the protocol on the platform but making integrations on it directly accessible in the venues where people currently live,” he says, referring to exchanges and payment processors.

In the future, he envisions that major players like PayPal and Fidelity, which are both rolling out cryptocurrency solutions, may want to integrate with the Kava API in order to “extend interest-earning products” directly to their users.

“A core belief that we have is that you have to meet users in the venues that they’re at. I think of them like distribution hubs, but really they are retail-focusing apps that have relationships with their customers.”

Kava has already integrated with a number of platforms including Binance, Huobi and Bitmex “Not for listing our tokens but actually the savings products, and the lending products of Kava are directly available on those platforms.” Kerr envisions many more will plug Kava services into their platforms. “Basically, any app where crypto is held, we can expand the custody of Bitcoin or XRP or Ethereum or whatever it might be with financial services to put that capital to work.”

The vision is to allow a user holding a currency like Bitcoin to simply click on the interest-earning product they want and use a slider to adjust the amount of BTC they wish to earn interest on. The user experience is simple, Kerr says, as they won’t even see the Kava user interface or website. “It’s all handled on the back end.”

“I think that’s really the direction that things are going, is that people don’t need to know that DeFi is there.”

A refuge in gaming

Kerr, now 32, describes a rough childhood of being raised by his grandmother in an ethnically diverse and working-class neighborhood where “all the neighbors were doing various forms of drugs, more the hard stuff like meth and heroin. It was very different from your middle-income white suburbia of America that most people think of,” he recalls, adding that for as long as he can recall, he felt out of place as one of the only white people in his school.

It was also a scary environment. “Every day at noon there would be huge fights and police would come in with riot shields,” he reminisces of his underfunded high school that resembled a prison full of gangs and often unable to provide teaching. With that in the background, he gravitated toward a group of students “who liked playing video games.” That’s how he got into gaming, which would go on to define much of his career.

The competitive environment of university, where he first started in software engineering, was an unexpected challenge because in high school, “I was able to coast through that without any real guidance or good habits.” He dropped out.

He soon started taking classes again and eventually was accepted to San Francisco State University in 2007, where he settled on business because he saw it as a generalist degree for an uncertain future. “I ended up switching my major about eight times through that process,” he recalls.

Upon graduating in 2011, he was hired by Sierra Circuits, a circuit board manufacturer, where he was “a sales engineer working with tech guys at Boeing and Raytheon on their prototypes for things that would go up into space.” Though he gained confidence in working with technology, he soon dreamed of leaving the family-run company for entrepreneurship where he could be his own boss.

“All the executives and anyone that got promoted was like within the family, and everyone else was treated almost like a second-class citizen. That was my first education on how companies should not be run. I also realized that I need to do my own thing.”

Leaving the company, Kerr arrived at a fork in the road. On one side was a well-paying job with chip manufacturer Nvidia. “It was sort of a fast track to a CMO [chief marketing officer], definitely a great opportunity for where I was in my life and experience level,” he says, adding that the work would have focused on the companys important gaming product lines.

The other option was to move to London where he would work for Fnatic, a three-person esports-gear startup, “to entertain my entrepreneurial desires, taking this enthusiast esports team and turning it into something real.” The idea was to “build a Beats by Dre, but for gaming gear,” with celebrity gamers and influencers helping design things like keyboards, headsets and mice.

“I had these two opportunities. One was a very reliable corporate job that was gonna teach me a lot about how a big company works that was going to be really good for my career. Whereas on the other side, it was a pretty questionable opportunity.”

He asked various friends working senior-level jobs at different businesses what they would do, and they all considered Nvidia to be the obvious choice. Zero people said to take the role at Fnatic trying to build hardware. ‘That’s preposterous,’ they said.” He decided not to take the advice and moved to London. The work also took him to Gothenburg in Sweden before bringing him back to the San Francisco Bay Area in 2015.

At Fnatic, Kerr helped build the team up from three to over 100 people and learned to run an international business with manufacturing in Asia and partnerships with gamers around the world. Business was booming due to esports entering the mainstream through things like Twitch, a streaming platform marketed toward gamers. Early on, having an esports team was just a hobby between friends and family who might collect the occasional sponsorship and then, “All of a sudden, these teams are worth hundreds of millions of dollars and the lines of business are huge and there’s media rights involved and everything else.”

Blockchain calls

It was in San Fransisco that Kerr met Alexander Kokhanovskyy, a Russian esports founder who was launching DMarket, a decentralized market for in-game items. The ownership of digital assets like character skins or gold for multiplayer games such as World of Warcraft seemed natural and intuitive to Kerr, so he joined the project as an adviser.

“It blew my mind that these guys were able to raise $20 million in about three weeks on effectively a PowerPoint because it was really hard to do that for a legitimate business like mine, with millions of dollars of real revenue.”

Witnessing DMarkets success in gathering investment capital served as Kerr’s wake-up call to blockchain, causing him to look more deeply into the growing industry.

“I was fortunate enough to be able to ping my network and get in front of people like Joseph Lubin and executives at Ripple and others, all within the span of four weeks after deciding to jump into crypto as my next thing, and thats been the story ever since,” he recounts.

“I just knew I was going to dedicate at least the next five to 10 years of my life into this industry because there was so much disruptive technology that was going to be in play. It was just gonna be the best opportunity, for me and then also to give impact to the world.”

Non-Ethereum DeFi

Kerr says that his Kava co-founders came from the poker world and gained respect for the idea of censorship-resistant money because online poker sites would often get shut down by regulators due to gambling laws. When this happened, all the money held by the companies would be seized, meaning that “my co-founders’ money was just locked up for years, and they had no access to it. They weren’t able to earn interest on it. It was just stuck in limbo.” As a result, much of the online gambling industry switched to cryptocurrency.

Kerr expresses wonder at the various ways that cryptocurrency has drawn people in. Whether through poker, gaming, or by encountering it via work or study, there are many paths to blockchain. “I just happened to lean really heavily on the gaming side.”

Kava Labs actually began with a very different mission, he explains. “We founded Kava Labs actually thinking that cross-border payments using digital currencies was actually going to be the biggest game-changing thing. The volumes of trade in foreign exchange are some of the largest in the world, so the TAM [total addressable market] seemed to be so large that you could make an impact there.”

 

(function() {window.mc4wp = window.mc4wp || {listeners: [],forms: {on: function(evt, cb) {window.mc4wp.listeners.push({event : evt,callback: cb});}}}})();

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

The firm’s original goal led the team to work with Ripple to speed up transactions. Some of the solutions it worked on included implementing “noncustodial wallets into Lightning Network with Ethereum payment channels, and Dai payment channels using Dai stablecoins,” he says.

Between 2017 and 2019, the crypto-payments industry “was not going into the billions it was still in the $100 millions,” Kerr said, explaining that the business was not scalable at that volume. With the team being $500,000 in the red with its own money by June 2019, a change of course was needed.

“We did an audit of all of our skills at that time, and we had built up this big wealth of knowledge of all the different blockchains how they work, what would be the requirements to make them interact with each other.”

They decided to build Kava as a platform for accessing DeFi services without needing to rely on Ethereum. The first step was to write a blog post, after which the project attracted a “total of $8 million over the course of a few weeks.”

In October 2019, Binance Launchpad hosted a KAVA token sale and airdrop, a lucky strike that Kerr says resulted in a wide distribution of tokens, which is generally seen as evidence of investor confidence. “It’s been kind of going to gangbusters ever since we launched the Kava blockchain,” which happened the following month.

Despite the hype, the initial minimum viable product took until June 2020. That product was a platform offering collateralized loans first for Binance’s native Binance Coin before expanding to Bitcoin, XRP and others.

Kava has grown substantially since launch, with Kerr explaining that the platform now boasts about $300 million in deposits and $80 million in outstanding loans between an approximate quarter-million accounts.

“I expected it to grow more, but it is the largest in-production non-Ethereum DeFi platform and application that exists today. I’m very proud of that fact, and I think it’s only sort of up from here as we add more assets and add more financial services on top of it.”

Despite his apparent success, it hasn’t been an easy road. “I’ve always had a little bit of imposter syndrome,” he says, referring to the feeling that one’s achievements or position have not been earned. The fact that the industry is rife with scams and hacks no doubt adds to the pressure, and many Bitcoin-maximalist and no-coiner types are known to deride the DeFi industry as little more than a Ponzi scheme. The high rates of return can also paradoxically turn away users who view DeFi’s opportunities as too good to be true.

Kerr has high hopes for Kavas newest feature, a “hard-protocol money market” which was initially set to be released on March 31 to allow users to earn interest on Bitcoin. “It will be very high early on is all I can really say, but it’s going to be likely in the 20%-plus APY range to start,” he says with confidence. However, he does not expect such high returns to last, due to increasing competition between DeFi platforms as borrowers seek the lowest interest rates.

“I think all the DeFi services are going to be commoditized over time. Everything can be squeezed in terms of prices as people chase yield.”

 

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall

This is how to make — and lose — a fortune with NFTs

The rise of nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, has been nothing short of astounding this year. Google searches for NFT are up over 600% since mid-February, hitting initial coin offering mania levels, and the top NFT platforms are turning over millions of dollars each day.

In a single 24-hour period earlier in March, sport collectibles platform NBA Top Shot saw sales of more than $7.89 million, art house OpenSea took in $4.88 million, and digital antique NFT project CryptoPunks netted $3.28 million.

The mainstream media is showing more interest in NFTs than it has in crypto for years, with publications from the BBC to The New York Times running explainers and the odd hit piece. Prices certainly look frothy, with Beeples Everydays selling at Christies for almost $70 million, Jack Dorsey auctioning the first-ever tweet for $2.9 million, and an Alien Crypto Punk changing hands for $7.57 million. Established artists including Banksy and Damien Hirst have jumped onto the trend, along with musical acts Kings of Leon, 3Lau and Aphex Twin.



(Alien Crypto Punk, Larva Labs)


At various points, the crypto community thought that either fast, cheap payments; decentralized finance, or DeFi; or the attraction of hard money might bring in the masses it turns out the great unwashed are more interested in owning a JPG.

Colin Goltra, who co-founded the NFT-based Narra Art Gallery in Decentraland, says this is a very good thing, as NFTs are bringing new demographics into crypto, outside of the usual finance and tech types.

Suddenly weve got this fresh blood of people exploring the space with new eyes, says Goltra, who also heads up Binance Philippines, adding: Its refreshing to interact with new community members youre really inspired by the art, you have a lot of fun, and its kind of like a game to collect.

Make sure youre getting some combination of that stuff out of it too because if youre just treating this as financial speculation, honestly, theres probably other games in town for that.

So, how do you get involved? Magazine spoke to some of the leading experts in the field to find out.

 

 

How do you spot value in an NFT?

Unlike DeFi protocols, where you can value a project by comparing its revenue and growth potential to the price of its token and its total value locked, the value of most NFTs is highly subjective, and sentiment can turn in an instant. Earlier this month, CryptoKitties were changing hands for an average price of $1,263. By later in March, that had fallen to $115.

Its also important to understand what youre actually paying for. With digital art, for example, an NFT gives you ownership of a unique token linked to the art, similar to a certificate of authenticity. But you dont own the copyright of the art, nor do you get a physical copy of it, and it doesnt stop anyone else from copying or viewing it.

Australian dance music producer Flume sold a music and animation NFT, Saccade, for $66,000, despite retaining the copyright to the music and leaving it freely available for anyone to watch on YouTube. Castle Island Ventures founder Nic Carter likens buying an NFT to getting an autographed print:

What Im buying is effectively a digitized version of a signed setlist after a gig, or a signed, limited edition album cover. As I jokingly put it, the NFT should be understood as the autograph, not the art.

The blockchain on which the NFT is minted also affects the price, with users paying a premium for Ethereum-based NFTs, given that the network is secure, decentralized and expected to be around for a while. But the choice of blockchain is less of an issue with in-game assets (which may need a faster blockchain) or with something like NBA Top Shot (which uses Flow), as its the only place you can buy licensed NBA memorabilia.

Value drivers

Different categories of NFTs including art, music, in-game items, virtual land and collectibles have different value drivers, explains Andrew Steinwold, managing partner of NFT investment fund Sfermion.

He says that in-game assets derive value from their utility a sword with 10 times the power of the average sword should fetch a higher price, for example while virtual land is priced according to location content and parameters. Crypto arts value is based mainly on an artists reputation, while collectibles derive their value from the narrative that surrounds the asset.

Across all categories, scarcity and uniqueness help drive value provided there is demand, of course. Collectibles often come in various editions which vary by size and have rarity tiers. First editions in a projects series typically command a premium, explains Delphi Digital research analyst Alex Gedevani. Even better if theres historical significance and/or strong narrative behind it like CryptoPunks, the first NFTs.

Alien and Ape Punks are the most prized CryptoPunks. For the blockchain-based game Axie Infinity, where users raise and battle fantasy creatures called Axies, The scarcest, most valuable Axies are Mystic Axies, says Jiho Zirlin, co-founder of Axie creator Sky Mavis. They have rare limited skins and these skins will have a deeper evolutionary tract than other Axie body parts.

On NBA Top Shot, sport Moments with low serial numbers fetch higher prices, as do those where the serial number matches the players jersey number. A collector recently turned down a $1 million offer for a moment with a #1 serial number, which matched player Zion Williamsons jersey number, #1.

 

 

The NFT art scene is perhaps the easiest for newcomers to understand. Just as in the real world, well-known artists with bigger social followings command higher prices than newcomers. Make sure to look at an artists overall volume of work: Someone pumping out 10 NFTs per day may soon saturate the market. Counterintuitively, however, big-name artists can actually launch a lot more work than others.

NFTs can be released in editions of 10, 50 or even hundreds of copies similar to a real-world artist running off 500 prints and hand-signing them or they can be released as unique, standalone one-of-one editions.

As you might expect, the one-of-one editions are the most highly prized, and thats why Goltra focuses almost exclusively on them. I do like the idea that I can be the unique owner of beautiful imagery, or a beautiful piece of art, he says.

What should investors avoid?

A big red flag comes up for projects that are only in it for the money, and Gedevani cautions against carbon copy clones of successful projects like CryptoPunks and Hashmarks along with celebrity NFTs that appear to be quick money grabs off their audiences. He doesnt mention Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton by name, but he probably doesnt have to.

Another trap is buying stolen art. Russian artist WeirdUndead was outraged to find her stolen work up for sale on OpenSea after someone automatically tokenized it using Tokenized Tweets. She tweeted:


Its an ongoing problem, given how simple it is to mint NFTs now. Visual artist Rosa Menkman likewise discovered that four of her artworks had been tokenized using another website called MarbleCards and auctioned on OpenSea. Apart from the ethical issues, its hard to see stolen NFT art maintaining value if its creator disavows it.

Even when the art is authentic, Steinwold says its important to assess the background and motivation of the person issuing an NFT:

Are they some famous athlete that learned about NFTs last month? Or are they someone that has been in the NFT ecosystem for years and has thoughtfully crafted assets with a compelling narrative?

Steinwold may be thinking of NFL star Rob Gronkowski, who sold $1.8 million worth of NFT memorabilia on OpenSea.

In the blockchain gaming world, Zirlin recommends steering clear of hyped-up but substance-free new projects, or as he puts it: Chasing the new hot thing, trying to be early to a bad project rather than joining a more established project with potential.

In the art scene, Goltra avoids NFT platforms that arent highly selective about the art they carry, such as OpenSea and Rarible. While he says large open platforms such as these are great for new artists and investors, they present logistical problems.

 


Theres just so much work that you have to sift through to find anything of quality, he says. He prefers platforms with filters, including SuperRare which only offers one-of-one single editions Nifty Gateway and Foundation.

Miko Matsumura, general partner at Gumi Cryptos Capital, recommends avoiding pretty much everything. Almost everything in NFT will be worthless in the future, he says, with limited exceptions for those that can be authenticated as having historical significance, such as CryptoKittes or NBA Top Shot collectibles. Dont buy stuff that has no historical value from sources that have no authority, he warns.

Is a potential financial return the best way to approach NFTs?

In a word, no. Those with whom Magazine spoke agreed that collectors with a genuine interest in a category are the most likely to turn out to be successful in this nascent industry. If someone is heading into a collectibles market with the intention of flipping for profit but doesnt understand the nuances of the project, chances are it may not end well, says Gedevani, adding:

We are still largely in the experimental phase with collectibles across many categories like sports, avatars, game items and more. Its better to focus on niches that genuinely interest you and where you can find an edge.

Gabby Dizon, co-founder of Yield Guild Games and Narra Gallery, says were still so early in the NFT game that its very difficult to gauge potential financial returns. A better strategy is to first buy something you would not mind owning for the next five years, with one eye on factors that might see the value increase, like scarcity, desirability, aesthetics and utility.

That way, even if the market tanks, you still own an NFT you like. For Goltra, The financial stuff is secondary, adding: There are pieces I could purchase as speculative plays but I dont because its not the purpose for me. I just try to buy art that I like or that speaks to me in some way.

 

 

Are some NFTs undervalued/overvalued right now?

Mike Winkelmann, the artist known as Beeple, certainly thinks prices are too high at present, telling Fox News: I absolutely think its a bubble, to be quite honest. I go back to the analogy of the beginning of the internet. There was a bubble. And the bubble burst.

Matsumura believes that All types of NFTs are overvalued right now and likens the space to a lottery, where the winners win really big and get all the publicity while the vast, vast majority of people will be losers, economically speaking.

Goltra is also keenly aware the NFT mania could fizzle out, taking those high price tags with it. I know were not immune to market cycles, the way that the rest of the crypto space is, he says. And so, I know that theres a version of this where any media that were doing right now, you know, whenever this next cycle is over, we all look stupid.

 

The best of blockchain, every Sunday

Subscribe for thoughtful explorations and leisurely reads from Magazine.


By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

 

But Yat Siu, CEO of Animoca Brands, believes at least one NFT sector is currently not getting enough love, and thats gaming. Our opinion is that game assets are undervalued because NFTs derive value not just from provenance, scarcity, and general demand, but also from their utility, he says.

If you do wish to acquire NFTs primarily as an investment, then aim for assets that have underlying utility in a scarcity-based game or platform that is likely to grow significantly in terms of users your NFTs will have a better chance to increase in value simply due to demand and supply patterns.

As an example of a wise investment, he notes that crates of NFTs for the Formula One-licenced game F1 Delta Time were released for $500 in 2019, some of which contained sought-after Ferraris that have increased in value to as much as $60,000.

How important is it to understand the secondary sales market?

Steinwold calls secondary sales perhaps the most important indicator of an NFTs longevity, and Dizon cites them as the true test of whether an NFT was worth the initial purchase price.

To better understand secondary markets, Gedevani recommends making use of third-party or community-created analytic tools such as MomentRanks, Intangible.market and Evaluate.market, which help investors gauge the value of NBA Top Shot collections.

Overlooking secondary sales is an easy way to make a mistake of buying an overvalued asset that has already run up substantially in a short time period, he says.

How can you maximize the chances of winning an auction?

While you could learn how to code and use bots, as Steinwold suggests or take a short course in auction game theory the best way to win is to not play the game, says Goltra.

Sometimes you can preempt the auction altogether, he says, suggesting you slide into an artists DMs on Twitter or Instagram and negotiate directly.

I think artists want to know that the collector of the art is appreciating it, and they like knowing who their collector is. To be able to actually strike up a conversation and kind of make friends with the artist is actually a best practice in terms of wanting to win something super rare.

What sort of budget do you need?

A couple hundred dollars is a reasonable budget to begin with in most categories, though given the interest in NFT art at present, a couple thousand might be required to snare a one-of-one edition from anyone with a reputation.

To snag an art bargain on a low budget, you might have to work a little harder. I specialize in buying NFTs of up-and-coming artists who are yet undiscovered and whose NFT artworks are selling for much lower prices than more established artists, explains Dizon. Such gems are more likely to be found on open platforms like OpenSea and Rarible though youll need to spend a bit of time combing through the haystack.

 

 

OpenSea co-founder Alex Atallah says you can turn up hidden gems by looking for artists with few buyers to date but who have strong, unique social media accounts. These are often the ones that will get discovered soon by the NFT community, he says.

Goltra adds that keeping an eye on the upcoming artists with whom better-known artists interact on social media is also instructive. You can kind of tell when theres a new artist thats very prominent, because all the other artists get excited, he says.

Games and collectibles platforms often have very affordable entry points: NBAs Top Shot platform sells common packs for as low as $9, and collector Pranksy claims to have turned $600 into nearly $7 million worth of memorabilia in a few months on the platform.

Siu explains that newer projects sometimes reward early adopters in the community with airdrops and gifts: Getting deeply involved in an NFT project early on is usually a sound strategy because there will often be early adopter drops or gifts for engaged community members, he says, adding: We have given out such rewards in games like F1 Delta Time encouraging players to play more frequently, and some of those rewards ended up becoming quite valuable.

And for those who have no budget at all, you can actually play to earn by raising Axies a pastime that helped numerous Filipino players make it through the pandemic, with some even becoming relatively wealthy in local terms.

There are people making a living playing Axie, says Zirlin. From collectors to play-to-earn grinders in the developing world.

 

 

How do I research the market?

Some of the better-known NFT news sources include Steinwolds Zima Red podcast and newsletter, Delphi Digitals Delphi Daily, Bankless and The Defiant. Art platforms such as SuperRare also feature interviews with artists and other content.

In addition, you can follow as many NFT accounts on Twitter as possible including WhaleShark, DCL Blogger, Loopify, Linda Xie and more and get involved with NFT communities on Discord, such as those of OpenSea and Token Smart. Zirlin says the Axie Infinity community on Discord is the best way to learn how to raise Axies. I suggest becoming a community member by joining the Discord and meeting the other Axie trainers. Talk to other players that have had successful journeys and try to emulate their paths, he says.

Gedevani says your time is well spent browsing social media, listening to podcasts and experimenting with projects. Thats the fastest way to learn, he explains. Follow the builders/investors in the NFT community who have been through all the ups and downs and are best positioned to navigate this market.

Final words of advice

We are still in the early days for NFTs, and no one really knows how the market will develop, so theres an abundance of caution all around. Matsumura notes that in the current bull market, everyone can appear to be winning and making large paper gains, but sentiment can suddenly flip. Some of those things will go to zero and stay at zero forever, he says.

Dizon encourages buyers to do as much research as possible: Do your homework, make sure you love what you are buying and can afford it, then you can pull the trigger. The best time to sell an NFT is when everyone else is FOMOing in. The worst time to sell an NFT is when you need the money.

Steinwold says a long-term mindset is likely the key to success. We are in a frenzied period right now so be thoughtful in what you purchase. Ask yourself: will this NFT be around in two to three years? He concludes:

The NFT zeitgeist only caught on to a wider audience the past few months and this revolution will take many years so always play long-term games with long-term people.

Crypto Bloodbath: $581M in Derivatives Liquidated Amid Bitcoin’s Fall