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The risks and benefits of VCs for crypto communities

Traditional venture capital funds drive valuations through multiple funding rounds. Startups aim for initial public offerings or other exits. Then the sharemarket decides upon a more realistic valuation.

But in cryptoland, tokens introduce market capitalization while a company is being built.

This means there are a lot of competing interests and agendas. Token sales for Web3 startups can be the bastard child of a personality cult leader founder and a bunch of VCs, raised by a group of Discord-dwelling degens manning a DAO, while speculators trade 24/7 and the media circles.

So, how do founding teams get the balance right between the needs and wants of the VCs and whats best for the community? Are the interests of VC funds aligned with the interests of token holders?

 

VC Funding
VC funding is necessary, but are VCs always working in the best interest of the community?

 

 

Even VCs were LUNAtics

Lets start with LUNAs collapse. Who did the due diligence? VC funding can have a big impact on whether the community invests or thinks a project is legitimate or not. The stamp of big-name funds carries credibility and traction before retailers can invest.

Retail investors got rekt when Terras algorithmic stablecoin project and ecosystem collapsed in May. The stories of homes and life savings being lost and suicide hotlines being posted on Reddit were alarming. Memes of Squid Games and Bernie Maddoffs 150-year prison sentence were mashed up next to Terra founder Do Kwons attempt to save the ecosystem with a phoenix-like token called Luna 2.0.

Perhaps representative of retail investors in general, one retail investor who lost a substantial amount when the algorithmic stablecoin collapsed told me, he didnt really get it but thought it was too big to collapse overnight.

On the other hand, some funds that trade complex financial products for a living made a killing.

Who did the due diligence? Who said pegging two related coins via complex math was a good idea? Most were just plain confused.

One very senior risk analyst at a crypto VC fund told me he held grave reservations regarding the algorithm stablecoin. But his team was assuaged by the cap table having some big names in crypto capital.

And he actually read LUNAs filings from the United States Securities and Exchange Commission.

VCs look at cap tables and see who else invested. LUNA was widely considered a blue chip by then, leading among crypto analysts and then reputable institutions, such as Three Arrows Capital, Pantera Capital, and Coinbase Ventures. Pantera notably got its LUNA exit timing right, while Three Arrows Capital is in liquidation and has filed for bankruptcy.

 

 

 

 

Everyone wants to be the smartest guy in the room. With the LUNA example, VC backers must be seeing something you dont, was the thought, according to that risk analyst.

It always was a Ponzi, no point mincing words, he tells Magazine.

He argues that VCs can distort everything, even in who supports what L1 chains. Its a PR war; VCs turbocharge the machine. I call it the VC hunger games.

This is one high-profile example of the perils of VC funding for crypto communities.

What is a crypto VC anyway?

There is a difference between VCs and the retail investor community, and Web3 blurs the lines. Traditional VC fund managers often push for large capital deployment, a board seat, rapid growth and expedited exits. But Web3 VCs are often early investors who first engage as active community members, providing liquidity and governance to build out a project.

Community itself is a vexed concept, as participants can literally sell out, and institutions are part of the community too, having been involved from early on. Ethereum had 3,000-odd participants, a mix of individuals and institutions.

 

 

Squid Games memes emerged quickly after the LUNA collapse, as its founder Do Kwon is South Korean. Source: Twitter

 

 

First, we need to understand who VCs are and where they come from, which will help us understand the dilemma of building an organic Web3 community.

The first crypto native funds emerged from investors who got lucky and made a killing on early crypto projects and were suddenly flush with cash. Many had worked on exchanges in the early days and, consequently, were on first-name terms with every token project that tried to get listed. So, they know pretty much everyone in the ecosystem and usually get the first bite at the early funding rounds of any decent project trying to raise capital.

Coinbase, Ethereum, Consensys and others produced some extremely wealthy individuals who went on to become investors in many projects. Some launched their own VC funds or firms, while others have stayed low-key to investing. But they all know each other, so they can get early access to deals.

Many exchanges also established incubators or accelerators, such as Binance Labs and Huobi, that incubate super early projects and take a percentage of tokens for funding. They can leverage their network for funding and promises of support, such as listing on their exchanges and social media help.

More recently, individuals have pooled capital to become institutional investors e.g., coordinated capital investing through investment DAOs. Legally pooled funds management and taxation laws generally lead to these conversations around creating a DAO and/or legal investment vehicle structure.

So, Web3 VC firms now include a spectrum from 20-something degens who have established their own funds, electricians mining Bitcoin since 2013 to Softbank.

Mark Lurie, a VC turned Web3 founder, says:

What do we even mean by community versus a VC firm? People love a villain and hate the man, but at the end of the day, they are all just people. VC in Web3 is a messy, amorphous concept in Web3. Is a group of 20-year-olds with a website an entity, a VC firm, or is that just a bunch of 20-year-olds? VCs also could just be a few whales.

Yet, there is always a trade-off between an organic community and exit horizons when dealing with tradable liquid tokens.

 

 

 

 

Crypto VC firm to a hedge fund is a continuum

As liquidity is a key aspect of crypto investing, exit time preferences constantly vary compared to traditional VC investments. Liquidity refers to the ease with which an asset or security can be converted into cash at market price.

One of the clearest ways in which VC interests collide with the communitys is in token lockups.

VCs often buy a huge chunk of tokens at an early stage at a very low price, and these tokens are often time-locked, so they cant be sold for one or two years. When the time is up, VCs face the dilemma of dumping their tokens which makes them a fortune but tanks the price of the communitys holdings or hanging on. Typically, VCs are perceived to choose the former.

Lurie thinks the crypto community should create VC review systems for better community building. The community is aware of the quick flip. On-chain vesting is the only thing holding VCs to that vesting schedule, he says.

I wish they could rank VC firms by whether they engaged in quick flips so founders are aware if they are really dealing with a VC or more of a hedge fund.

The capital cycle is different in Web3 compared to traditional VC. Bear and bull cycles also mean that cash preservation can distort investor markets. Exits may need to be expedited in a bear market.

VCs may face conflicts between their own cash position and helping an invested company. Web3 lock-ups of a year or so, for example, are famously shorter than in the traditional VC realm, of, say, seven years.

 

 

a16z
a16z has provided VC funding to everyone who is anyone in crypto. Source: a16z

 

 

Staking (especially in a bull market) may attract VC funding away from riskier seed VC plays. Staking a retail investment once a token lists on a retail exchange can provide better cash returns than a cheap seed deal pre-token launch, locked up for 12 months, that tanks when it lists as a token.

Crypto VC firms invest at various stages and, at times, act like crypto hedge funds. Venture capital invests in startups to accelerate their growth and generate high returns for investors. Hedge funds traditionally invest in a variety of investments, ranging from stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies using complex structures and leveraging in order to boost returns more rapidly.

David Mack, managing director of Koji Capital, tells Magazine, its a continuum:

Crypto VCs are effectively hybrids: When teams are raising seed capital to get resourced to deliver a product, our approach is the same as most venture investors. However, when we realize our investment and hold liquid crypto assets, we start to resemble a hedge fund, often using that liquidity to support the early product we invested in.

This kind of approach is an emergent feature of crypto-focused firms, and founders are really in search of this capability when selecting their investors, says Mack.

If assets are tokenized and liquid, then VCs become hedge funds in the long run. A shift to tokenization, from passive to active assets, is more like hedge fund activities. This can create enduring conflict.

 

 

VC
When VC bets pay off, they pay off big time.

 

 

Liquidity vs. long-term community building

There is a massive conflict between VC liquidity and long-term community building, opines Jonathan Allen, who started his first VC fund out of college. He now runs Mirana Ventures, is a core contributor to BitDAO, zkDAO andeduDAO, and sits on the PleasrDAO board.

Liquidity allows VCs to think about short-term profits in conflict with communities building for the long term.

Liquidity raises a bunch of new issues. Quality communities mean people who are there for the long haul. We have barely scratched the surface of a healthy community that incentivises better community members, argues Allen.

Allen was also a U.S. Army Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) Technician (bomb disarmer) who got into crypto after an injury suffered in Afghanistan in 2012. The EOD motto is perhaps suited to being a crypto VC, too: Initial success or total failure.

He argues that crypto VC has evolved over cycles with increasing community exposure and less VC funding now favored. The alternative is fair distributions of tokens to the most active community members and project users to ensure the most valuable people to the project are motivated by the correct incentives.

We dont want a lot of VCs to own a lot of tokens. A lot of VC funds are maybe not as helpful as individuals or communities. We often advise our portfolio companies to save 30% for angels. Individuals who we feel need to, and can be, more helpful.

Angels are typically the investors who first write a small cheque in return for equity when the company is at a very early stage and the companys valuation is still low.

While the exit cycles in crypto are a key difference from traditional VC, founders can also determine the lock-ups so good-faith investors cannot dump their profits.

Nonetheless, for Allen, community building is key. With a lot of invested projects, we let the code stand for itself, he says. Its about building authentic community missionaries versus mercenaries first movers at scale. VC funding in the form of blitzscaling can grow the wrong kind of community.

Too often, people are free riders they hold tokens and dont do anything.

 

 

 

 

VCs add investor network effects and tokenomics advice

While theres certainly an increasing hostility to VCs in the industry, some founders reject this angst.

Josh Tobkin dropped out of a large economics scholarship to play professional poker and learned to think in probabilities. By the last crypto winter of 2018, he had founded Unity Chain, a crypto lab in Taiwan. He has some well-known investors, including FTX, United Overseas Bank, Coinbase and Razer.

He is now working on a novel blockchain consensus algorithm: the creation of an intralayer that bridges all layer 1s, layer 2s and decentralized apps across all ecosystems. A more secure infrastructure to prevent instances like the Ronin Bridge hack or the liveness faults of Solana. His current project, SupraOracles, plans to have a token, with the infrastructure launching soon.

He believes a VC lead investor adds great value, as the complication is taking a check from everyone. VCs make it much easier to close deals both with other investors as well as social proofing for large corporate partners.

Tobkin tells Magazine, Decentralized retail raises are great, but it helps to find (VC) funds who are passionate about your project when it aids their entire portfolio. Projects need a mixture of both types of funding for their growth whilst balancing decentralization.

Never go full VC, and never go full retail.

Tobkin says VCs played an important role in SupraOracles: VCs were necessary to get started. The cap table [table of investors] amounts are very balanced. We didnt oversell. 1% max for each investor on strict vesting terms. Vesting refers to when equity can be cashed out.

Tobkin also values the Web2 introductions that more traditional VCs can offer.

Crucially, the leads for our rounds have worked for it. They have a massive list of traditional Web2 in need of our exact solution, and they are making introductions. They sell for us its a win-win. Retail generally cant do that unfortunately.

With one integration, were bridging Web2 to Web3 and vice versa. We have VCs to thank for it.

 

 

 

 

Wen token sale?

Tara Fung is another Web3 founder grateful for VCs. She is a Harvard graduate who transitioned to tech with finance skills and a general curiosity.A former chief revenue officer at two centralized fintechs, she wanted to build on the new frontier. Her startup, Co:Create, seeks to help successful NFT projects scale.

Becoming a founder in 2022, she received $25 million in VC funding led by a16z. Her thinking was that the resources would help us deliver faster, and I could focus on building (as I was) feeling like this would be a rocky year.

A16z closed a $4.5-billion crypto fund in May 2022 despite treacherous market conditions. She met a16z partner Chris Dixon four times before meeting the other partners. She notes theres not a ton of diligence at seed. Its a diverse cap table, and obviously, the fundraising timeline sped up due to a16zs participation. She also hand-selected Web3 native angels to be included on the cap table.

 

 

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She highly values that a16z has an in-house research team that I can go to with a problem, such as best practice for tokenomic design. Thats a huge value add. Tokenomic design is an emerging, complex and sometimes arbitrary science.

This is an important theme. How the companies are structured early on has important ramifications. What we do now can set us up for success VCs offer a level of professionalism.

Token sales too early can be a double-edged sword. Fung explains that one challenging aspect of building in Web3 is that founders must build publicly, not behind closed doors.

When and if to form a DAO is now another vexed question alongside wen to have a token sale?

DAOs offer great promise, but what does the timeline look like? You have to be thoughtful and create clarity at the start and let the community evolve.

 

 

Building
VCs can actually be quite helpful in building a community, too.

 

 

Investor protections

Lurie, founder of Shipyard Software, agrees that VCs can work hand in hand with decentralized governance and bring major benefits to the community. He argues that in crypto, its necessary to decentralize governance because the community demands it. It is also a necessity to make the VC model work. VC funding is a competitive and a regulatory necessity to building a viable company, argues Lurie.

To me, a defining characteristic of a VC firm is that it steps up to ensure investor protections and good governance, says Lurie.

Lurie started out at VC Bessemer Venture Partners, and he has seen both sides of the VC spectrum, raising several VC rounds, some hard, some easy, for his startups. This includes an early NFT protocol ICO in 2017.

Decentralized governance is a trade-off with nimbleness. Its tough to start a fully decentralized company from day one. You need to strike a balance. Startups are in a constant battle, and few people make it to the end of that journey.

One of the best reasons for VC-backing is governance a partner on a deal will hold founders accountable, he says.

Are faceless DAOs not accountable to investors?

Weve noted how a VCs interests can work against those of the community, but sometimes, the community can work against the interests of VCs. And communities can vote in a way that totally disregards the law or their obligations. In mid-June, Merit Circle DAO, a gaming DAO, voted to return the investment of a major play-to-earn guild turned early-stage investor Yield Guild Games (YGG) instead of paying out the 30x return it was owed.

 

 

 

 

What will this mean for VC investing in DAOs in the future if the community can simply overturn a contractual agreement with a vote? Whod stump up the funds in the first place?

As it happened, a reasonable deal was hammered out whereby YGG got a 10x return instantly, with no more vesting or risk of a lowered valuation. But it highlights that there are perils, too, for VC investors with the evolving and sometimes flaky nature of crypto communities.

 

 

 

 

 

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Australia’s world-leading crypto laws are at the crossroads: The inside story

As crypto winter sets in once more, industry players in Australia, one of the worlds most crypto-friendly nations, watch closely for a shift in the regulatory climate.

Anthony Albanese, the new Australian Labor Party prime minister, has made regulating crypto a top priority. However, neither he nor his cabinet has given a clear indication of how it may approach the unregulated space.

 

 

Australia's crypto
No word yet on whether Australia’s innovative crypto legislation will go through.

 

 

Labor campaigned for government without a policy for cryptocurrency, says Senator Andrew Bragg, a member of the Liberal Party, which was recently cast into opposition after nine years in government.

The 37-year-old spearheaded a Senate report on crypto regulation last year that made 12 key recommendations on issues ranging from exchange registration to taxation and debanking. Speaking at the Australia Blockchain Week conference in March, he proposed the Digital Services Act, a legislative package that consolidated the reports recommendations into law.

Bragg
Senator Andrew Bragg has been leading the push for better crypto laws down under.

However, Braggs Liberal Party lost its parliamentary majority to the Labor Party in a federal election in May, and the acts future remains uncertain.

There have been no utterances about what Labors policies will be. It could be anything at this stage, he added.

The Treasury declined to comment on its crypto policy plans for the report. So far, the office has only clarified that it will continue to exclude crypto from being taxed as a foreign currency, following El Salvadors adoption of Bitcoin as legal tender.

Industry folk can only guess what the new government might do next, but Ron Tucker, founder and chair-emeritus of lobby group Blockchain Australia, sees a silver lining to this pregnant pause. He warns against the kind of knee-jerk responses to market volatility seen in other countries.

Though we need to protect consumers, if we rush regulation, we will likely get the settings wrong, which will stifle innovation in the ecosystem and lock Australia out of the future growth of the global crypto market, Tucker says.

In truth, the proposals made in the Bragg report are only about 70% of the way. They could do with more work, and recent events such as the collapse of TerraUSD and Celsius have shown where the gaps are. We are now at a critical juncture, and so this is a chance to ensure we dont head down the wrong path.

Pioneer of self-regulation

While the focus has been on knee-jerk bans and crackdowns elsewhere, Australia has been quietly trailblazing a progressive approach to crypto.

There is an unsung story of Australia as a first-mover in this space, says Tucker, who founded Bit Trade one of the countrys first successful cryptocurrency exchanges in 2013 and shortly after led the Digital Currency Code of Conduct initiative that set the best-practice standards for the self-regulatory model that has undergirded the Australian crypto industry since.

 

 

Blockchain Australia
Blockchain Australia developed a world-leading code of conduct.

 

 

Tucker recalls watching the pennies drop as he walked politicians in Canberra through the Bitcoin white paper back in 2014.

The government was very responsive and endorsed our proposals for a self-regulated code of conduct, which was the first of its kind in the world, he says.

There were not many other industry bodies in other countries at the time, but more soon followed.”

The proposed self-regulating model was exported after Tuckers group joined with counterparts in Singapore and the United States by setting up an informal alliance, the Global Blockchain Forum, in 2016. It then grew to have a dozen other member countries that coordinated through a multilateral memorandum of understanding based on the preexisting Australian code of conduct.

While this light-touch approach has given Australian projects space to grow over the years, the government will need to devote greater resources to formalize and enforce a regulatory model as mounting issues exert pressure on the ecosystem.

You need to get the balance right and have a principled approach that remains flexible enough to encourage innovation in the industry, says Caroline Malcolm, head of international public policy and research at Chainalysis an industry consulting firm and blockchain analysis company that recently set up shop in Canberra.

 

 

Crypto regs

 

 

Fraudulent advertising

Crypto ads are in the crosshairs of Australian regulators. The countrys top consumer watchdog, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, or ACCC, recently took Meta to court, alleging the company is legally responsible for losses incurred by users who engaged with scam crypto ads featuring fake celebrity endorsements that have run on Facebook since 2019. This has renewed the conversation around consumer protection for crypto investors in policy circles.

 

 

 

 

Malcolm predicts Australia will likely follow in the United Kingdoms footsteps when it comes to advertising.

Australia has historically had a regime for financial products similar to the U.K., so it is probable it would adopt the same standards for the advertising of crypto, she says.

These include stipulating that companies clearly include a risk disclosure that is put alongside the advertised benefits of the product. It would also see crypto companies come under the advertising regulatory regime and ensure they are responsible for the content of their ads, regardless of the legal structure of their business.

Mapping things out

Tucker believes that token mapping must be the new governments top priority.

This is the most important aspect, as it gives an overview of whats happening and provides a blueprint for the government to respond to new developments in this rapidly changing industry, he says.

A token mapping exercise was the third recommendation of the Bragg report, suggesting the government draft legal definitions of the different types of digital currencies by their functions. In March, Australias Treasury published a consultation paper on a proposed regulatory framework that featured a list of working definitions for tokens.

This paper contained a detailed token mapping that went much further than typical distinctions, like what security and payment tokens are, says Malcolm.

The report details at least 12 working category definitions for tokens in a non-exhaustive list. The government aims to complete the mapping exercise by the end of the year.

This shows a commitment by the government to get across what is going on, and this will be essential for future-proofing regulation here, Malcolm says. Keeping the recent momentum from this public consultation will be crucial, she adds.

The Treasurys paper also proposes rules for secondary service providers who operate as brokers, dealers, or operate a market for crypto assets. Its stated rationale is to minimize the risk consumers face when service providers become insolvent and they cannot withdraw their funds. Critically, however, it specifies that these rules would not apply to decentralized platforms or protocols, leaving DeFi alone.

 

 

 

 

This is a sign that Australia could end up with a very interesting model for the fast-moving DeFi space, says Malcolm.

Excluding DeFi itself is not a rogue approach, however, she says. The EU is excluding DeFi from its Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, which is due to be finalized shortly. (Following our interview, the MiCA regulations were agreed on.) But the EU has also said they will be looking to write rules for DeFi in the near future.

If Australia were to do the same, how would it determine which entities are adequately decentralized?

Malcolm calls this the eternal question that hangs over regulators.

There is certainly a view from some policymakers that what is called DeFi is not always decentralized, she says. How decentralized are those platforms really?

If its sufficiently centralized, it should fall within the existing rules, she says. It is very hard to draw that line, but resolving this is key to determining where the rules apply.

 

 

Debanking
Debanking has been shown to be a huge problem for Australian crypto firms.

 

 

Disrupting debanking

Another persistent risk for crypto businesses is debanking when a bank cuts off services to businesses or people it determines to be risky.

The Australian government has identified debanking as a growing problem and recognizes that digital currency exchanges and fintech firms are disproportionately affected.

Debanking has been rampant in Australia since the early years of crypto, Tucker says. Our exchange has experienced debanking on at least 30 occasions.

We brought it to the ACCCs attention at the time, and they would have liked to have responded, but they were too understaffed to do anything about it, he adds.

Businesses should have a fundamental right to banking, just like individuals, but its not just about writing the laws. We need to make sure agencies like the ACCC have the human resources to manage and the teeth to pursue anti-competitive behavior, says Tucker.

 

 

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Although the Labor government has not announced a clear agenda for crypto, reinvesting and restaffing the public service is a policy priority for the Albanese administration. Under the previous government, outsourcing public jobs doubled between 2015 and 2020. The new government has already pledged 500 million Australian dollars for the first phase of rebuilding public sector capacity.

Malcolm agrees that finding qualified officials not just to write the rules but administer the legislation is critical, but it will be an uphill battle.

Capacity of expertise is very tight, she says. There is not enough expertise among the bureaucracy at the moment, and it takes time to find the right people. Its one thing to write the rules but quite another to have the resources to administer them, she adds.

Theres this strong perception that crypto doesnt want to be regulated. But what weve seen when countries put licensing rules in place is that the exact opposite happens. Suddenly, theres this rush to register because companies see it as a net positive. Many governments are struggling to keep up with this demand for licensing, as most recently seen in the United Kingdom.”

The same could happen in Australia when rules are standardized and the registration wave hits.

We really need a committee of technologists that acts as a bridging body between industry and government, Tucker says. A group established in partnership with Australias Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization would likely be the best avenue for this, he adds.

Collaboration over competition

The unprecedented nature of blockchain technology poses unique challenges for policymakers, which incentivizes governments to work together to identify regulatory best practices. Yet, with enormous potential economic value at stake, states are also vying to attract as much of the burgeoning investment it brings as possible.

Foreign investment in Australia has grown at around 8% per year for the past two decades, now standing at over 200% of total GDP. With finance remaining the third-largest sector for inbound investment, regulators are looking to harness crypto, blockchain and DeFi to spur growth further.

The fact is, we are in a race against the U.S., Japan, Singapore and other advanced economies, says Bragg. Its a race to build the most effective regulatory environment for cryptocurrency, and it plays out across investment, talent and consumer protection.

 

 

Race
Australia is in a race with other countries toward better regulations and attracting investment.

 

 

The Labor government has inherited world-leading policies from the Liberal Party when it comes to cryptocurrency. I believe this parliament can deliver on the bulk of the recommendations made in the Senate report.

Tucker says that while Australia is well positioned, with a strong financial services sector, it should prioritize collaboration with other economies over competition.

There is a far greater upside to international collaboration at this early stage, he says.

We should be learning from each other and closing loopholes together. A patchwork of contradictory laws across jurisdictions will weigh down the development of crypto globally.

Sound regulation has underpinned the robust development of Australias traditional finance sector. Its banking sector has historically been among the most profitable globally, while its compulsory national retirement scheme, called superannuation, was ranked the fifth-best pension scheme in the world last year.

Cryptocurrency is possibly the greatest economic opportunity this country has had since the advent of superannuation, says Tucker. But we must get the policy settings just right.

 

 

 

 

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Old-school photographers grapple with NFTs: New world, new rules

Photography often has to weather disruptive changes from film to digital, for example and photographers find themselves needing to master new technologies or face losing out to more tech-savvy competitors. NFTs are just another transformation in how we consume images. Can photographers adapt and benefit from them?

 

 

Old School Photographers
Coming to grips with the NFT market can give a whole new lease of life to a photographer’s work.

 

Back in the dark ages

I go back a long time in photography. To the dark ages or at least the darkroom ages, to be more precise when images were analog and negatives or color transparencies had to be developed through some arcane magical process I didnt quite understand. If you had told me you had to wave a Harry Potter wand and shout Developus! I would have believed you.

You could make a decent living as a professional photographer in those days. There were a lot of career avenues: portrait shops on High Street, highly paid advertising and fashion photographers, local newspapers employed snappers, and specialist travel or nature photographers could make money from magazines and TV.

 

 

 

 

During the 1990s, there was a huge, disruptive transformation from film to digital imaging. Anyone could do it, and smartphones started to outperform many cameras. The culture changed so that a selfie was more valid than something beautifully lit in a studio. Local newspapers folded or stopped employing professionals. It became a hard slog for many talented people. Stock photography sites cut prices and now sell images for only a few dollars, of which the photographer is lucky to get 20%.

I have noticed that the photographers who are successful are good at marketing. Many people are talented, but you have to ensure that your work is in front of the right people to make money. Its especially important in the brave new world of NFTs, which have become popular with the art and photography communities, even among those who know virtually nothing about crypto.

How do you go about it?

Anyone can go out with their camera or smartphone and take a picture. Then you mint, turn it into an NFT, showcase it on a platform like OpenSea, and wait for buyers to come in Is it really that simple? As it turns out, no, its not even though youll sometimes hear things like this:

June 2021 was just crazy: I had some collections completely sold out. In the short period of time till August or perhaps early September, the market was peaking. I sold maybe 50 pieces in one day! says photographer Jan Erik Waider.

Waider is a fine art and landscape photographer. Based in Hamburg, he has a fascination with the arctic regions and an interest in technology.

Some years ago, I came across his work through his Northlandscapes presets for the professional photographers tool of choice, Adobe Lightroom.

Lava
Lava from the collection Abstract Landscapes by Jan Erik Waider, on OpenSea. (Source: Jan Erik Waider)

Waider created his images with a set of filters for Lightroom, and he realized that other photographers would benefit from them. So, you can buy them as plug-ins for the application. They can speed up complex post-production of landscape images quite a bit. They are also customizable, so you can tweak them to fit your particular vision.

Before he took the leap into full-time professional photography around five years ago, Waider was involved in design and marketing, so he has a firm grasp of the importance of reaching out to find an audience.

As a technophile, he got interested in crypto in the early days. I love to try out new things that pop up here and there. About eight or nine years ago, I got into Bitcoin. Then I stumbled upon NFTs, maybe earlier than some of my colleagues because I wanted to try them out and see where they took me.

When he started creating NFTs, few photographic artworks were on platforms like OpenSea or Rarible.

I was listening to a lot of YouTube crypto channels, and people started talking about NFTs in 2019, he says. I was interested but cautious. It kept growing, so I decided to put up three single works to try it out.

I quickly realized that you have to be active, connect with collectors, so I was tweeting five times a day. I was posting constantly, using optimization tools, but it was still exhausting [laughs].”

For an old-school photographer, its an entirely new marketplace with new rules. People who collect NFTs would probably never go into a fancy gallery to buy some art. The way to draw attention to your work is to build up a following on Twitter and thats it. Other social media platforms like Instagram or Facebook arent even in the game, according to Waider.

 

 

Basalt
Basalt by Jan Erik Waider, one of his single editions on Foundation. (Source: Jan Erik Waider)

 

What are the benefits for creative people?

After a while, Waider sold a genesis piece that is, the first NFT he put up online to a collector of them for 0.5 ETH, which was $1,500 at the time. I was really a little bit in shock at the price.

One of the major benefits of NFTs for creative people is payment for resales. The visual arts market has long been dogged by an imbalance, where someone might sell an artwork for pennies that goes on to be very valuable without the creator profiting at all. Vincent Van Gogh comes to mind, but it is endemic to secondary markets.

Scop.io founders
Scopio founders Nour Chamoun (left) and Christina Hawatmeh (right). (Source: Scop.io)

Waider says, I normally sell an image and dont see a cent of it afterward. With NFTs, I am getting secondary sales, which is purely passive income.

Christina Hawatmeh is the co-founder and CEO of stock image agency Scopio. It was set up nine years ago to showcase diversity in images and licenses visual content from 14,000 photographers, illustrators and creators in 150 countries. We actually have hit the most creative generation in history, Hawatmeh says.

She quickly realized the potential of NFTs, so it was one of the first photo agencies to offer both conventional licensing and NFTs, on the Solana blockchain.

Each image can be published in mainstream media such as a book, advertisement or video but also purchased as a collectible NFT.

For me, it is a practical thing, Hawatmeh says. It solves a lot of my business problems payments, tracking, giving ownership to multiple parties through wallet splitting, giving a chance for the model in the photo to earn also. Web2 photography is broken. This gives us a fresh start and more ownership for the artist.

“We have a goal of elevating human stories from underrepresented communities and regions. Our photographers come from all over the world, and often there are barriers for all these different artists to participate, principally the payment method. How can they receive money for their work? There are things like PayPal, but it is still a problem. Crypto has transformed that. No government can take that away from them.”

Hawatmeh continues, I think we are in a new Renaissance era. Perhaps COVID is similar to what the Black Death did to the Renaissance era meaning people want art and culture more than ever. They want it at the center of their society because they were deprived of joy for so long. Imagery, media and content open up our minds. We now have the tools to connect different parts of the world together to tell better stories on a micro level.

 

 

The Year Time Stopped
The Year Time Stopped, featuring F. Dilek Uyar. (Source: Scop.io.)

 

What are the pitfalls and challenges?

Scopio was due to launch its first book on June 21: The Year Time Stopped: The Global Pandemic in Photos. Its a visual history of COVID-19 with 200 images from around the world. The photos are available individually as NFTs.

Scopio uses Solana as its blockchain network because the cost of minting is cheaper and the carbon-neutrality of the network appeals to both buyers and creators, who often have environmental concerns.

The Year Time Stopped
The Year Time Stopped book and NFT photo collection. (Source: Scop.io)

Selling an NFT for 1 SOL is a far lower price point than the 1 ETH that is often offered on the leading NFT platforms the idea being that its a price range more suitable for a broader range of buyers.

Hawatmeh thinks that narrative and storytelling are a big part of the appeal of photographic NFTs. The more information, the more storytelling, the more time you spend on building that narrative is going to make your images more valuable.

The murky world of legality

Its all well and good for photographers and photo agencies to start selling NFTs of their work, but its not entirely clear yet what they are selling. What rights are creators giving up, and what rights do the NFT owners purchase?

Nancy E. Wolff, a partner at Cowan, DeBaets, Abrahams & Sheppard, is a New York lawyer specializing in intellectual property. She is widely respected as someone grappling with the complex legal issues around new media.

Its a whole new frontier, and technology is always leaping years ahead of the law, she says, while being careful to point out that existing copyright laws and precedents can be applied to NFTs in many cases. In most cases, copyright or commercial use rights are not transferred by the sale of an NFT (though with Bored Ape Yacht Club, you famously do get the commercial use rights.)

“In the same way you might buy a print in a gallery, you don’t own the copyright of an NFT. If you want to buy an NFT, you need to look at the platform’s terms and conditions: What rights are you getting?”

Likewise, if you want to sell on an NFT platform, you need also to be careful about what rights you are signing away. Theres a lot of potential for infringements. For example, if you create NFTs from pictures of NBA stars, something like a collectible trading card. There are still third-party rights to be cleared, whether its a poster to put on the wall or an NFT. Some organizations have become very aggressive about enforcing their rights.

There is still the gray area of what to do with an infringing NFT: The token is immutably on the blockchain, and while the image itself usually isnt (given storage costs), it is often be hosted on a decentralized platform like IPFS, making it more difficult to take images down or delete them.

Occasionally, printed works have been pulped after legal cases, but thats tricky to do with an NFT. Centralized platforms like OpenSea have pulled down infringing NFTs, but decentralized platforms are unlikely to.

Waider believes that in the future, NFTs may give him more say over the final destinations of his imagery. I can see the potential for photographers to control where their images are used. I dont see that happening right now, but it could be implemented, he says.

 

 

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The audience for NFTs

Being at the intersection of art, finance and internet meme culture, NFT fans are not your typical purchasers of conventional photographic art.

Almost always a totally different audience, says Waider. They are mostly coming from the crypto world. Its a lot of tech people in general. So, that also explains why theyre coming from Twitter, as you have a lot of tech people on there. Its a completely different approach to how a classic collector would look at buying a piece in a gallery.

It’s really hard to get into their mindset to know what they like.

He says the collections of some of his patrons are marked by their Catholic tastes. Its every genre you could imagine from photomanipulated stuff to classic landscapes, to portraits, to urban photography, black-and-white photography. So, its a big mix.

 

 

Save the Planet
Save the Planet, an award-winning image by Meric Aktar. A villager waters saplings in an area devastated by wildfire. (Source: Meric Aktar/Scop.io)

 

 

Waider thinks NFT collectors are motivated as much by fun and enjoyment when purchasing as any other consideration. Some people have made money in crypto trading, and they want to enjoy it. If they like a photo, they will buy it, with price being a minor consideration. Many people collect NFTs because the image speaks to them creates an emotional connection. Wolff says that motion is an important element:

“Often, a lot of the interesting NFTs are ones that have some kind of interaction or are built digital, rather than static images.”

Wolff says, I think the NFTs that are most successful are where your buyer and the creator of the object have an experience together, or theres some kind of engagement or they learn something, so they feel like theyre part of an experience. It works very well for concepts and conceptual art, as well as storytelling, where you express more than just the visual aspect.

Waiders tips for photography NFT noobs

  • Its a patience game: Sales rarely happen overnight.
  • You need to study the market.
  • Some platforms, like SuperRare, have a quality vibe.
  • An active Twitter profile is a must.
  • Research pricing and what sells on what platform.
  • Start with a small number of images to test the response.
  • A collection should have a theme, not just be a road trip of vaguely connected pictures.
  • Narrative is important.
  • Creating a good showcase collection of images is a significant investment of effort: Images with good descriptions are more likely to get noticed than ones without text. Careful planning and execution will pay off in time.

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

Risky business: Celsius crisis and the hated accredited investor laws

Accredited investor laws are the bane of many in the crypto industry, who see them as preventing small investors from accessing big opportunities. When Celsius was recently forced to cut off access to U.S. citizens who were not accredited investors, many cried foul.

Did it help some users avoid the current crisis? Or do accredited investor laws go too far in saving users from themselves and from profits, too?

Two weeks ago, as speculation about Celsius solvency began to mount, users started experiencing trouble withdrawing money from their accounts. Though Celsius CEO and founder Alex Mashinsky appeared to initially write the issues off as baseless rumors, the company soon announced a temporary halt on withdrawals. Users were and, as of the time of writing, remain unable to access their funds, which are, at least in theory, still earning interest.

Magazine had interviewed Mashinsky about investor accreditation on May 25 before Celsius ran into serious problems in the public area. The resulting drama makes the topic all the more timely. So, what does Mashinsky have to say about accredited investor laws?

 

 

Celsius
Celsians were affected negatively or positively by accredited investors laws, depending on your perspective.

 

 

Papers, please

Those even casually researching early investment opportunities crypto or otherwise are sure to have encountered queries about their accreditation as investors. How exactly does one get accredited, and why does it matter after all, why should anyone need to get permission to invest their own money?

Roughly comparable accredited investor laws exist in many jurisdictions around the world, but nowhere do they appear to be as serious and prominent as in the United States, where the minimum threshold to be allowed to invest in many opportunities calls for $1 million in investable assets beyond ones primary residence or annual income exceeding $200,000. A brief study of United States-based private investment funds might lead one to conclude that investment opportunities unavailable on the stock market are not meant for the commoners, who, by definition, lack accreditation.

 

 

 

 

According to Jake Chervinsky, a lawyer and head of policy at the Blockchain Association, accredited investor laws came about as a consequence of the initial public offering process, which was put in place in the 1930s in response to the speculative bubble of the 1920s when issuers took advantage of post-war prosperity to sell worthless securities to irrational investors.

The goal was to give investors full and fair disclosure of material information so they could make informed decisions about their investments, but the process became so expensive that companies complained, resulting in an exemption for private placements by accredited investors who were in less need of protection. Notably, many consider ICOs in the crypto world little more than an attempt to work around the IPO regulations.

Bank Run
Scenes outside of Celsius HQ last week. Source: Wikimedia

There are two sides to the logic: On one hand, accredited investors are more likely to have a solid enough grasp on business so as to make educated bets and avoid falling for scams, and on the other, such investors can afford to lose money when risky investments dont work out.

The rules, however, have many calling foul the rich have the opportunity to get richer, while the poor are not even trusted to invest their own money. At worst, people see the system as one that is intended to keep the little guy down.

 

 

 

 

Theyre made to kind of protect retail. Of course, many in the crypto space dont see it that way, explains Mashinsky. In April, the firm had to ban non-accredited U.S. investors from taking advantage of its yield products, which allow users to deposit tokens and earn interest on them. In the eyes of regulators, Celsius product was apparently too risky for average people.
Events have subsequently turned out to lend credence to the regulators position.

Accredited investor rules are closely tied to Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering rules, which require companies to know who they are dealing with. Its not like one or two rules; its probably like 100 different rules, he says. Many companies just block all American users and investors due to the regulatory headache.

 

 

 

 

When it comes to regulations, Mashinsky explains that there are two types of companies: those that take care to update their Terms & Conditions and adhere to the rules, and others that think that none of these rules apply to them because theyre on some island in the Caribbean. Celsius is in the first group, he clarifies.

Sooner or later, they come for you. I live in New York City, so I dont have an option of living on some island.

Companies that fail to abide by regulations eventually face subpoenas followed by arrests of their executives, like BitMEXs Arthur Hayes, who was recently sentenced to house arrest and probation due to an AML mishap. It never ends well for them, he adds. When setting up the CEL token, Celsius filed a Form D with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is an exemption from having to register a securities sale and is only available to accredited investors. Mashinsky often refers to this as CEL being registered with the SEC.

 

 

Top 100
Mashinsky has been a regular on the Cointelegraph Top 100.

 

 

Crypto bank run

Mashinsky explains that Celsius is an intermediary helping out non-technical crypto users.

Celsius is basically saying to people: Look, we know most people dont know how to manage keys we will help manage keys for you, run the platform, and do staking on your behalf, Mashinsky explains.

Users have to decide if they want to be their own bank. I would say maybe 1% of the population knows how to manage their keys 99% of the population need to use Celsius.

Mashinsky is known to wear a Celsius-branded shirt with the text banks are not your friends, and his Twitter persona is that of a romanesque space-emperor it was created by Cointelegraphs artists for our annual Top 100. He sees Celsius much like a bank that safeguards the assets of its clients and pays them interest.

There is one key difference, however. Real U.S. banks carry insurance with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which guarantees accounts up to $250,000 in the event of insolvency, meaning that mismanagement, bankruptcy, lawsuits or bank robberies cant impact client holdings. Lacking such assurances, regulators dont consider Celsius products fit for the non-accredited commoner Mashinkys 99%.

 

 

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Similarly, to accredited investor laws, the 1933 Banking Act was a response to the Great Depression in which up to a third of banks failed. It was designed to restore trust in the banking system and prevent bank runs, which is when clients race to withdraw their savings before others in fear of the bank going under which causes the bank to go under.

Now that Celsius has faced a bank run of its own in the wake of the crash in crypto prices and swirling rumors about its possible insolvency, the response has been, shall we say, classic the doors have been slammed shut.

 

 

 

 

No insurance

If you read the fine print, which non-accredited investors rarely do, youll find a few salient points.

Celsius does not have an insurance policy, states the companys website, explaining that while assets held by Celsius are insured by fund custodian Fireblocks, the company generates income, or rewards as they call it, by lending assets to borrowers in which case they are no longer held by Celsius: When these assets are out of Celsiuss control, they cant be insured by such insurance.

In order to borrow funds from Celsius, borrowers must generally deposit 150% of the borrowed amount as collateral, according to the site. This means that by depositing $15,000 in BTC, one could borrow up to $10,000. A decrease in BTC price is likely to lead to a margin call, which may at worst result in Celsius selling part of the BTC in order to ensure that they have enough USD to cover the loan in case it goes unpaid. Sometimes, however, extreme market conditions can destabilize an exchange much like rough waves can damage or even capsize a ship.

 

 

Mashinsky profile
Magazine profiled the founder in The adventures of the inventive Alex Mashinsky.

 

 

Its an old story in crypto land. One February day in 2014, the first Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox simply went offline after months of struggling with timely withdrawals. Around $800 million in client funds went poof, and Bitcoin found itself in a multi-year bear market. The story repeated again in the next cycle, with dozens of exchanges from BTC-e to QuadrigaCX shutting their doors and disappearing for good, usually as a result of apparent hacks.

When you have either bad actors or you have situations where people lose money, regulators get very worried about making sure that everybody else is doing the right thing.

Will Celsius be the next situation in which a crypto provider goes under as its pounded by the waves of a bear market?

Buyer beware

When DeFi-like platforms such as Celsius take deposits and offer loans in various stablecoins, they expose themselves to certain amounts of market turbulence. This can cause them to make large trades or moves in order to balance their books, themselves further contributing to the instability.

Blockchain analytics company Nansens blockchain forensics research report on the UST stablecoin depegging suggests that it resulted from the investment decisions of several well-funded entities, e.g. to abide by risk-management constraints or alternatively to reduce UST allocations deposited into Anchor. Celsius was one of these well-funded entities, which, according to Bloomberg, pulled $500 million out of the Anchor lending protocol in the days before USTs crash. Some in the Celsius community think its current woes are payback from big players who got burned in the collapse.

 

 

 

 

While it is obvious enough to state that cryptocurrencies such as BTC, Ether or LUNA can lose much or even all of their value, stablecoins have become a key pillar of the crypto economy to the point that they are treated as de facto USD. However, the likes of Tether, Binance USD or Dai are not actually US dollars at all, but abstractions of them, and may or may not hold up. Terras UST fell from $1 to less than $0.01 in the span of a month.

 

 

 

 

The use of stablecoins is practically mandatory for those participating in the crypto marketplace where many platforms, including Celsius, do not deal in real US dollars but issue loans in the stablecoin of the borrowers choice. Tokens are regularly traded against stablecoins, and one cannot deposit actual USD to earn rewards. But which stablecoins can users trust to maintain their peg? Mashinsky doesnt see it as the platforms responsibility to guide users on this.

Customers just have to do their homework we dont tell them what is good and what is not good. We dont provide financial advice.

While many Celsians have made a considerable return over the past couple of years using the platform and remain devoted to it even during the latest turmoil, its at least understandable why regulators would want to prevent unsophisticated retail investors from getting burned on a platform like Celsius.

Regulators and lawmakers are trying to protect the public, Mashinsky says in apparent agreement.

 

 

Read more:

The adventures of the inventive Alex Mashinsky

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

Soulbound Tokens: Social credit system or spark for global adoption?

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterins Soulbound Token proposal for a robust identity and reputation system has stirred up the crypto community.

Soulbound Tokens or SBTs are non-transferable, non-financialized tokens tied to a unique profile proving verifiable achievements and commitments. Still at the concept stage, its suggested SBTs will be capable of tracking memberships, credentials and affiliations with educational establishments, decentralized lenders and other entities.

Supporters say that SBTs could be the use case for the next bull market. But others have likened the concept to Chinas social credit system and say its an expensive solution to a problem thats already been solved.

So, which is it? Lets take a deeper dive.

 

 

Soulbound Tokens
Soulbound Tokens: Not sure about the name but the concept is interesting.

 

 

Web3 should be more than financial assets

Last month, Vitalik Buterin and co-authors Glen Weyl and Puja Ohlhaver released a paper outlining their vision for Soulbound Tokens, which would enable individuals to accrue permanent non-tradeable records of merits and attributes and store them in a private blockchain wallet.

These would form an essential building block for a decentralized society, or DeSoc, which points away from the current hyper-financialized state of Web3 and depends on non-transferable social relationships of trust. The crypto world, the co-authors say, will move past simple transferable financialized assets.

 

 

 

 

The non-transferable Soulbound Tokens represent credentials, commitments and affiliations and are linked to our Souls. To put it simply, they are tokenized representations of a whole host of possible traits, features and achievements that make up a person or entity. Souls can also issue and attest SBTs to other Souls. Students will receive an SBT, for example, from a college, which will also be represented by its own Soul.

Why we need Soulbound Tokens

Co-author Glen Weyl, an economist with RadicalxChange, provided the core ideas for the paper on Soulbound Tokens. When I get through to him on Zoom, he is just getting his board ready for a paddle around Lake Washington next to his house. As he saunters down to the waterfront, he explains why this new concept is vital.

Right now, almost all the things that happen in the Web3 ecosystem are purely financial objects: Theyre transferable and saleable wrappers, like wallets of transferable saleable assets, like tokens and currencies, theres no actual such a thing as a person. All there is, is a financial holding account, he says.

 

 

 

 

For Weyl, moving decentralization away from just financial objects is critical, even for making the financial aspects of the space work well, as well as for allowing for much more interesting futures.

Weyl believes that without social relationship development, financial relationships on Web3 will continue to be difficult. Its just like a feature of reality, that our social relationships are the fabric on top of which financial relationships are built. And a system thats not able to represent that is going to be extremely limited, hyper financialized, anarcho-capitalist etc.

In a sense, SBTs are a sort of universal aggregation system. Crucially, its not built in the top-down way Chinas social credit system is imposed on the population, but is instead a bottom-up community system owned and governed by network users. You can also have multiple Souls.

 

 

 

 

People would have like two or three [wallets] that represent different, very distinct aspects of your life. You might have one for your health profile, which would all be encrypted and would only have access to doctors or something. You might have one that represents a professional life, like your CV. You might have one that represents personal relationships those might all be unlinked from each other.

Weyl sees Soulbound Tokens as bringing the same values of decentralization to real human relationships and communities. The key element is that the tokens cant be transferred across people. Now what a person is, is actually really subtle when you build it within the Web3 space.

 

 

Graphic: @Leo_Glisic
Soulbound Tokens. Source: @Leo_Glisic

 

 

Decentralized verifiable credentials already exist, so this isnt some sort of Soulbound NFT versus off-chain identifiers debate. SBTs are likely to be a small subset of verifiable credentials that are imbued into an NFT on a blockchain.

Storing verifiable credentials in Web3

Evin McMullen is a co-founder and the CEO at Disco.xyz, which specializes in verifiable credentials and storage solutions in the metaverse. Appearing on the Bankless podcast recently, she said Soulbound Tokens will help bring new communities into the crypto space for the first time.

Its a really exciting moment in our ecosystem because we are looking at our own role in Web3 in a different way than we have before. And so, we as a community have the opportunity to go meet people where they are on their own journeys, which means that we can reach out to so many communities who havent yet engaged with Web3.

 

 

 

 

The tokens are intended to be anchored to the notion of what someones accurate social identity is. A true and indisputable list of achievements, credits and recommendations. McMullen said:

Being able to describe the qualitative traits that we have, as individuals, as non-financial contributions to our communities, things like our achievements, our capabilities, our friendships, relationships, our memberships and secret societies, all of these traits describe us as humans, and deserve the ability to interact with our smart contracts.

 

 

 

 

So, in essence, SBTs are designed to be building blocks to reshape how we interact with one another, build and manage communities. Weyl says thinking about simply recording a resume on a blockchain is too narrow a conception.

Its almost more like some combination of your resume and the set of Facebook groups that youre part of. It represents affiliations that you have.

 

 

soulbound fortune
Fortune notably compared SBTs to China’s social credit system.

 

 

Fuddy duddy FUD

Self-confessed fuddy duddy and Ethereum bear Knifefight isnt buying the pitch, though. He runs the online publication Something Interesting and has been around the tech sector for 20 years.

I think it is a kind of collision of things that have already existed for a long time and things that dont need to exist and theyre sort of mixed together, he tells Magazine. The advantages of one are used to mask the disadvantages of others.

To me, what I see is a very expensive proposed solution to a problem that seems already solved.

For Knifefight, a Soulbound Token is just a digitally signed message that somebody writes about an individual. This has been done before and can be done in other ways.

I think its hard to make the case that we do need it because its hard to make the case you couldnt have already built it for decades. The things that are new here are storage methods, not the things that allow you to issue or to assess.

 

 

Knifefight
Artist impression of Knighfight.

 

 

Knifefight says he struggles to understand the need for Soulbound Tokens, or as he puts it, a collection of subjective opinions. The more that the subjective opinions youre trying to aggregate are similar, the more your aggregation provides value, the more that youre just trying to aggregate arbitrary information, the more youre just like recreating the internet.

He believes there wont be any sudden surge of demand for Soulbound Tokens, not least of which because theyll be super expensive and unwieldy because theyve been put on blockchain.

Use cases and how they might work

But a sudden surge of demand is precisely what Ty Smith is banking on. Smith is the CEO of Coinbound, a Web3 marketing company with 20 employees. Its one of the first companies to get on board with SBTs.

Soulbound Tokens have many use cases straight away: verifying exclusive membership to an exclusive community where you need to be approved by a central authority is a big one. I think thats going to be probably the biggest use of it.

Smith tells me Coinbound has what it calls a mastermind group for entrepreneurs. We are exploring using Soulbound Tokens to give members something that just proves that they are an approved person because we dont want someone to be approved to be part of our community and then go and sell their membership essentially to someone else.

Smith is excited about using SBTs as a way to demonstrate your credentials. You can get a degree on a blockchain, but you cant prove that youre the person that earned the degree until Soulbound Tokens came along. So, this is an innovation that I think is necessary if we are to look towards a more Web3-enabled future where proof of attending a college and getting a degree or proof of working at a certain employer is needed.

But for Knifefight, SBTs are a really expensive and unnecessary way to record a degree. He points out that employers wont care if you kept multiple copies of a degree or who stored the degree. All they care about is who issued that degree and who it was issued to. They dont care about the provenance. Theres no double-spend problem, he says.

 

 

Degrees
Do we really need to have degrees tied to our Souls?

 

 

The double-spend problem describes the difficulty of ensuring digital money is not easily duplicated and cant be spent twice. Bitcoin solved the issue by allowing every member to verify every transaction.

If youre not double-spending, you dont need a blockchain, and its not trivial to use block space, its expensive. Knifefight says theres no reason that a degree or other credential needs to be mediated through blockchain, It could work the same way over email, or chat, like, theres many different ways that people can pass cryptographically signed information back and forth between each other without it having to be stored on a blockchain.

Decentralized loans and digital country clubs

Buterin told Bankless recently that blockchains are indeed useful in this situation. He said they provide account management and keep track of time, which confirms authenticity and patterns of reliability. Buterin added that Soulbound Tokens will also be able to prove you didnt do something, just as well as it proves you did. For example, one possibility is that Soulbound Tokens will make it easier to obtain decentralized loans.

If you want to take out a loan, then one thing you might want to be able to do is prove that you havent taken out any other loans or prove that you havent taken out more than a certain number of other loans. In this case, you would take on a reputation token that you cant hide, even if you wanted to.

Buterin said this would be to prove the absence of those tokens or prove that you have less than a certain number of those tokens in order to show that you havent actually taken out many loans yet.

 

 

Loans
SBTs showing what you have and havent done could be useful for loan applications.

 

 

Coinbounds Smith also believes critics are missing the point. I think people fail to see the need for SBTs because we havent yet seen what a true digital country club essentially looks like, a true membership-only. You have to be of a certain caliber to be part of this group community. He says the unique aspect of SBTs that define them from NFTs is the non-tradeable part, which will help communities know that when they take on initially approved members, those members cant then simply sell on their SBT, like is currently possible with NFTs.

Soulbound Tokens, a better technology?

Smiths brother, Troy, is an engineer running his own Web3 business called Versify. Even before the white paper on Soulbound, he was already building a platform to enable companies to create and distribute NFTs easily. Troy Smith explains, Its very funny timing because what Versify is doing is kind of creating NFTs that are going to be used just like Soulbound Tokens are going to be used. But SBTs are actually a better technology for what Im building.

He says many of his clients have been using NFTs in a similar way to SBTs. The difference is that SBTs cant be sold on. Soulbound Tokens are a much better fit for this type of thing. Because why would you want to transfer an Employee of the Month badge to someone else, you shouldnt be able to do that.

 

 

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Like his brother Ty, Troy is super bullish on the technology. He explains how he sees it working:

If you had the most sales for your company, youd get airdropped a Soulbound Token to your wallet, where you could go off and show it to whoever you want or take it with you to your next employer because your wallet obviously stays with you.

He says the immutable nature of SBTs and how they fit into a wider decentralized society is what sets it apart.

Troy continues, Its just ideas and a white paper right now. So, once it is actually implemented, Id love to help do that. I would like to be the first platform that is actually enabling businesses to issue Soulbound Tokens.

Weyl says its the indisputable patterns that are identified in your Soulbound wallet that are going to be the most powerful, but he says the first problems they will combat are voting fraud, wallets with no accountability, and users making fake or multiple versions of NFTs that were supposed to be scarce.

If youre going to join a DAO, someone might be afraid that youre a Sybil, he says, referring to an attacker who attempts to subvert the services reputation system by creating a huge number of identities to gain large influence. Unless you have enough SBTs that its plausible, they can figure you out, so you might have trouble joining certain opportunities if you havent got a sufficiently rich pattern of SBTs.

 

 

Souls
The name conjures up images of the divine.

 

 

Social recovery, the game-changer for security

According to Weyl, security will be the killer app for SBTs. Right now, you have a choice between custodial wallets, which undermine the whole efforts of decentralization, and noncustodial wallets, which are subject to all the hacking problems. The idea with Soulbound is based around community recovery where your account or Soul will be tied to a set of peers, referees and authority figures who can unlock your wallet.

Weyl explains, For example, if you had your employer, your university, the DAO that you participated in, and a newspaper that you wrote for, the algorithm might choose three of those affiliations.

 

 

 

 

Of course, privacy concerns abound, but mitigating against that, a lot of things in the Web3 ecosystem are already highly public. Weyl gives me the example of if I were an artist making NFTs, Id likely issue press releases, describing the limited nature of the editions. Those statements of ownership at the moment are stored on Web2 sites like OpenSea or Twitter.

If artists could instead have a wallet or a Soul that represents their public profile and contains the information that theyre asserting about the NFTs that theyre issuing, thats just, like, a much better fit than either the current solutions.

Its all in the name, but does Soul work?

The name itself has attracted a lot of attention, given its relationship to divine and eternal concepts. The co-authors say it might just be a holding name to explore the concept, and Weyl admits it may not stick.

Soulbound terminology, I think, is probably not an ideal basis for something that becomes a technical standard. On the other hand, I think it does help inspire people to think in a different way about things, and it inspires our artists and our imaginations.

 

 

 

 

As Weyl picks up the pace on his paddle board across the lake, he tells me he expects Soulbound Tokens will really get going and will have taken on mass adoption by 2024, in the next upcycle.

After speaking with him, its hard not to get caught up with the enthusiasm for SBTs. But gazing into a crystal ball to know how the future will pan out is often a fruitless endeavor.

For his part, Knifefight is fairly confident SBTs are just a gimmick that wont pan out.

I dont think normal people will issue or have Soulbound Tokens by 2024. I dont think major businesses will rely on Soulbound Tokens to make business decisions. I dont think you will be able to translate your Soulbound Token into any significant material value, he says. However, he freely concedes that anyone who predicts the future with certainty could be made to look like a fool.

So, Im foolish for having made those predictions because they will certainly now be invalidated in some surprising way!

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

The trouble with automated market makers

Automated market makers are a true public good in crypto, enabling genuinely decentralized trading 24/7 and supporting the wider DeFi ecosystems. But theyre not without a host of problems, writes digital economist and academic Christos A. Makridis.

The decentralized finance (DeFi) market has surged since 2021, growing from just over $20 billion to nearly $160 billion as of March 2022, compared with a rise in the total cryptocurrency market from $433 billion to $2.5 trillion over the same period.

While the recent crypto washout in the wake of the collapse of Terras LUNA and UST has caused the market value of DeFi to fall almost all the way back down to $60 billion, there is still optimism in the crypto community and the market value will largely return for major crypto assets in the months and years ahead.

 

 

Trouble with AMMs
The trouble with AMMs.

 

 

The rise of DeFi has been thanks largely to the presence of liquidity made possible through automated market makers (AMM). Whereas centralized exchanges function as a custodian of their customers funds and function as a matchmaker for demand and supply, decentralized exchanges (DEX) do not have a custodian.

Instead, peer-to-peer trading, as it was initially designed, is facilitated through a traditional AMM mechanism that says the product of any two assets must always equal some constant. In other words, if Bitcoin and Ether holders put $100 worth in a pool, then the product of the two assets always has to equal $100. If, however, a holder buys more Bitcoin, then the price of Bitcoin rises, and the other side provides more Bitcoin so that the equation balances. The hope is that the pool has many liquidity providers so that there is never a situation where the price of an asset rises so fast that there is insufficient liquidity to facilitate a trade at a reasonable price.

Liquid gold

AMMs have played an integral role in creating liquidity in the overall market. The latest research by Gordon Liao, head of research at Uniswap Labs, and Dan Robinson, head of research at Paradigm, shows that Uniswap v3 has around 2X greater market depth on average for spot ETH-dollar pairs, relative to their centralized exchange counterparts, such as Binance and Coinbase.

Here, liquidity is measured using market depth, which refers to how much one asset can be traded for another asset at a given price level. One reason for greater market depth is that AMMs can unlock a more diverse set of passive capital and institutional investors who have different risk profiles.

 

 

Uniswap 1
Uniswap research.

 

 

Since the inception of Uniswap, other AMM designs have emerged, recognizing that the product of two tokens, X and Y, always equaling a constant, K, is not always the most efficient trading strategy i.e., x*y = K as Haseeb Qureshi, managing partner at Dragonfly Capital, pointed out in 2020. When a buyer purchases large quantities of X, they can experience slippage, which is when buying a token drives the price up before the order finishes executing it (or selling it drives the price down). Slippage can be costly, especially during times of high trading.

To attract greater liquidity and avoid high slippage rates, DEXs have begun to offer extreme incentives for people to stake tokens in exchange for governance rights (and often a slice of protocol revenue), leading to the curve wars, which is a label for the ongoing race to offer better terms of trade. The race to offer better conditions may have some unintended consequences on creating mercenary capital, but the requirement of staking tokens in exchange for governance rights has also created much good.

Curve wars are representative of the fact that governance has some value being able to govern how a protocol distributes its incentives even within its own protocol is very powerful: If you force people to commit to make a decision about something in governance, you can create powerful feedback loops, Kain Warwick, founder of Synthetix, tells Magazine. Warwick has been called affectionately the father of modern agriculture for his role in popularizing yield farming.

Giving away ownership of a protocol in the early part of its lifecycle to the people who provide feedback and test it is incredibly powerful It is a tool you just dont have in the traditional startup world. We are witnessing a renaissance of decentralized finance strategies.

Front running

Although there are many comparative advantages that DEXs hold over centralized exchanges, most notably greater security and opportunities for community building among token holders, AMMs are imperfect. One of the major limitations to AMMs is the phenomenon of front running, which happens when another user places a similar trade as a prospective buyer, but sells it immediately after. Because the transactions are public, and the buyer has to wait until they can get added to the blockchain, others can view them and potentially place bids. Front runners are not trying to execute the trade; rather, they are simply identifying transactions and bidding on them to drive up the price so that they can sell back and earn a profit.

 

 

 

 

By sandwiching the original bid from a buyer with a new bid, the speculator has the effect of extracting value from the transaction. In practice, miners are often the catalysts behind front running, leading to the term miner extractable value (MEV), referring to the rents that a third party can extract from the original transaction. These sandwich attacks have largely been automated and implemented by bots, accounting for the bulk of MEV. In an academic paper, Andreas Park, professor of finance at the University of Toronto, said:

The intrinsic transparency of blockchain operations create a challenge: an attacker can sandwich any trade by submitting a transaction that gets processed before the original one and that the attacker reverses after.

Unfortunately, these attacks are driven by an incentive problem inherent in second-generation blockchains. Validators may not have sufficiently strong incentives to monitor private pools because this reduces their MEV, so the execution risk for users who join these private pools goes up, Agostino Capponi, an associate professor of industrial engineering and operations research at Columbia University, explains to Magazine.

Capponi, together with co-authors, elaborate on this in a recent working paper that points out how private pools do not solve this front-running risk or reduce transaction fees other solutions are required. Capponi continues, Frontrunning attacks not only lead to financial losses for traders of the DeFi ecosystem, but also congest the network and decrease the aggregate value of blockchain stakeholders.

 

 

 

 

Front running can also affect liquidity provision. Price oracles or mechanisms for providing information on prices play an essential role in ensuring adequate liquidity exists in the market. If the latest prices are not reflected on-chain, then users could front run the price with trades and earn a profit. For example, suppose that the latest price of ETH is not reflected on an exchange, which has it lower. Then, a user could buy ETH at its true price but sell it for potentially more, thereby earning a profit.

While price oracles help ensure adequate liquidity, no amount of liquidity can solve the core issue that transactions on-chain need to be as current as possible. Warwick explains:

Price oracles do not directly help because they are pushing information on-chain. If you can front run a change in an AMM, you can front run an oracle update, too. Any transaction sequencing is going to introduce the potential for front running.

That is a challenge that Warwick has personal experience with: In 2019, Synthetix lost billions (technically if not in practice) as a result of an oracle pricing error. Although the funds were returned, the incident demonstrates how costly errors can be.

Look no further than last week when an oracle pricing error on the Mirror Protocol on Luna Classic led to another exploit. Validators on Terra Classic were reporting a price of $0.000122 for both Luna Classic (LUNC) and the newly-launched LUNA when the new LUNA should have been at $9.32. Although the error was eventually fixed resulting from an outdated version of the oracle software the exploiter got away with well over $30 million.

 

 

Defi fees
DeFi fees are a source of ongoing revenue, although not all tokens provide holders with a cut.

 

 

Challenging business models

AMMs were a revolutionary quantitative mechanism for enabling peer-to-peer trading because they instantaneously settle transactions after they are confirmed and included on the blockchain, and they allow any user to contribute liquidity and any buyer to trade tokens.

However, AMMs have largely relied on expectations of future growth to drive their valuations; the revenue from transaction fees is not only small but also fundamentally linked to the liquidity providers not the exchange. That is, while Uniswap could take the fees as revenue, the way the smart contracts are written is such that the revenue goes directly to the liquidity providers.

 

 

 

 

Given that APRs from trade fees might be low, especially in newer AMMs, DEXs rely on offering their governance token for incentives, requiring a high price valuation to onboard and retain liquidity providers. These providers are often mercenary capital going wherever the short-run return is higher. Black swan events, as well as volatility in the market, can damage AMMs beyond repair. For example, volatility in the exchange rate across tokens can lead to a liquidity freeze, according to Capponi and Ruizhe Jia, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Los Angeles.

The reality of the Uniswap business model is not an indictment; it creates incredible value, as evident by recent estimates of its daily trading volume of around $131 million. Rather, that it does not produce revenue is a function of its business model and actually makes Uniswap more of a public good for people in the DeFi community than anything else.

[AMMs] offer an integral service but dont adequately capture the value they provide through their token the current models simply do not provide a transition from pre-revenue speculation to postmoney sustainability, according to Eric Waisanen and Ethan Wood, co-founders of Hydro Finance, in their April white paper.

Emerging business models

Front running is a problem in large part because pending transactions are generally visible, so a bot can detect it, pay a higher gas fee, and thus, the miner processes the transaction first and impacts market pricing.

One way to avoid this is by hiding the transactions. The use of zero-knowledge proofs and other privacy-preserving solutions is becoming increasingly popular because it is thought to minimize front running and MEV attacks by obfuscating the size and time of transactions that are submitted and verified.

 

 

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Hydro Finance is a relatively new project being built on the Secret Network, a privacy-preserving blockchain with smart contracts that contain encrypted inputs, outputs, and state. an encrypted mempool, according to the Network.

Hydro is trying to decouple itself from the permanent reliance on external liquidity providers by growing its own treasury of Protocol Owned Liquidity, and it also codifies buy-pressure through the inflation of the assets that it supports. Instead of giving all of the trading fees to the liquidity providers, the DAO controls the revenue, and the liquidity providers receive the DRO token.

AMMs, in their current form, are impractical but necessary services upon which the growth of DeFi is reliant. It is imperative that we evolve them past their inceptive shortcomings for the ethos of freedom and decentralization in finance to mature, co-founder Waisanen says.

Although AMMs have been absolutely integral to the expansion of the DeFi community to date, new business models may be required to sustain the community going forward. The curve wars that were observed in 2021 are unsustainable in the long run because there is not enough demand for different tokens. Ultimately, the value of a token comes down to the value of the community, which requires a core team to lead and direct traffic. Time will tell how current challenges to the problems plaguing AMMs fare, but one lesson is clear: The DeFi community will need to apply best practices from business to make sustainable and scalable organizations succeed.

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

Thailand’s crypto islands: Working in paradise, Part 1

Walking into Remote and Digitals La Casa co-working space on the tropical island of Koh Pha-ngan, you wonder how anybody gets any work done. I sip a cocktail and wait for my burrito as James Brown plays in the background.

Theres a real palm tree growing at the edge of the cafe, and behind it sits shallow crystal blue water stretching off for miles, with Koh Samuis jungle-covered mountains jutting up in the distance. Adding to the ambiance, kite surfers are getting massive air off small waves, before gently floating back to earth.

30-year-old Belgian blockchain developer Jrme Van Vlierbergen is one of the regulars at this Ban Tai co-working space and runs his Equinox Launchpad here. He explains Koh Pha-ngan (or Koh Phangan) has a thriving crypto scene, mostly populated by digital nomads like himself.

There are a bunch of people here that own crypto or theyre doing something with crypto because when you have money, you like to be somewhere where its a nice place to live.

Ironically, of course, you need very little money to live here. You can rent a desk at La Casa for less than $3 a day, rent a scooter to get around for under $4 a day, and rent a whole house for $500 a month. With beautiful food, postcard-style views and half a dozen other coworking spaces with gigabit internet, its no wonder Koh Pha-ngan has become something of a mecca for crypto digital nomads.

 

 

Working in paradise
Its remarkably easy to join the crypto community in Thailand.

 

 

Theres this crypto island vibe you can find a lot of workshops, a lot of people that work with crypto, and most of them are in the market, says Van Vlierbergen. Crypto social media groups based on the island suggest hundreds of residents are deep into the scene.

Crypto island

Known for its legendary Full Moon Party, Koh Pha-ngans 12,000-strong population doubles or triples at times with American, European and Russian backpackers drawn by the endless parties, yoga scene and general chilled out vibe. Its probably one of the last bohemian island hideouts left in Asia, with package tourists seemingly unwilling to take the ferry ride over from neighboring Koh Samui.

Theres no airport here, says Edwin de Lepper, who runs the crypto-friendly Buddha Cafe. So, it is a journey to get here with the boat, which makes it kind of exciting…

Jerome Van Vlierbergen
Belgian blockchain developer Jrme Van Vlierbergen at the office.

Since the end of the pandemic, hes noticed an uptick in crypto digital nomads mostly concentrated around the co-working spaces of Tropicana, Sunset Hill Resort, Signature Restaurant and High Life Resort.

De Lepper explains recent visitors include big influencers such as MMCrypto (948,000 Twitter followers) and James Crypto Guru (74,000 YouTube subscribers).

There is a tremendous amount of people that come here, and they talk to me and they say, Oh, yeah, Im building a new DEX, or Im building a new crypto project, he says.

I would say there are crypto whales here. The people that are here that I might suspect that they have a lot of money, they dont talk about it. You dont want to scream it from the rooftops I guess.

Koh Pha-ngan isnt the only place in the region attracting crypto digital nomads, with a growing scene in the Thai island of Phuket, another in Chiang Mai in the north of the country, as well as other locales in Southeast Asia, including Bali.

Guy Allison, founder of Blockchain Careers, says that many in the crypto scene flit between Koh Pha-ngan and Chiang Mai.

A lot of people do six months in Koh Pha-ngan and six months in Chiang Mai because the weather can get quite rainy here in OctoberNovember, then they go back to Chiang Mai. And then they come back here in February March for the smoky season.

Thats when farmers burn their fields and biowaste during the dry season to prepare the land for the next years crops, which helps create a thick fog of air pollution around Chiang Mai for months.

 

 

Edwin De Lepper
Buddha Cafe owner Edwin de Lepper

 

 

Work from home, but move home

Paid Network and Master Ventures founder Kyle Chasse called the island home for some time, though he can now be found in the more upscale villas of Phuket. He says people realized during the pandemic that if you could do your job from home, you could pretty much work from anywhere.

Hello, youre working from your house, you have the freedom, he says, pointing out that Thailand is also super cheap compared to the United States.

You have amazing infrastructure; your cost of living is gonna go down your transportation, your food, your utilities, your cell phone everythings cheaper.

Chasse moved to Koh Pha-ngan in 2018 after hearing of a budding Bitcoin community on the island. I went and checked it out and fell in love with it, he says, adding its so safe due to the influence of Buddhism that there have been numerous times hes left his phone or wallet behind only to have someone return it to him.

One of the things I love the most is the people. And of course, its truly like paradise, he says.

 

 

Full Moon Party
Koh Phan-ngans legendary Full Moon Party. Source: fullmoonparty-thailand.com

 

 

The safety of Thailand was a big plus for Vlierbergen, who started off his digital nomad days traveling through the decidedly less friendly Central America and Mexico four years ago while working as a web designer. Having taught himself Solidity, he then graduated to the much better-paid blockchain industry. Good pay thanks to the deficit of qualified devs and a decentralized workforce make crypto the perfect industry for travelers.

 

 

 

 

When the pandemic struck in March 2020, he was already in Asia and headed to Koh Pha-ngan to ride out the storm. But despite enthusing about island life, he admits theres a darker side that social media influencers dont want to show.

Most of the time, it is fake. They want to show the best side of it, he says about digital nomad influencers.

I dont really want to party anymore or take drugs or drink alcohol, you know? And when you travel mostly what they want to do is to get fucked up. So, I think one of the many negative sides of it its how you can feel like, sometimes lonely and hard to connect with people.

Three days later

If you do enjoy partying of course, then being on a tropical island surrounded by beautiful people with a new party to go to every day means its not always easy to find the motivation to get any work done.

Allison laughs about that one.

Its quite a party place. Its difficult to concentrate solely just on work. And I might see someone in the street on a bike who was going to a party, and next thing you know, three days have passed. So, thats the issue, he laughs.

 

 

 

 

Allison explains there are three scenes in Koh Pha-ngan: the party scene (drugs), the bar scene in Thong Sala (booze) and the yoga scene (spirituality). Yoga retreats are a big appeal for some the sorts of places people go on juice cleansing diets for two weeks. In a sad coincidence while Im on the island, Australian cricketing legend Shane Warne dies of a heart attack after a two-week juice diet fast a few kilometers away on neighboring Koh Samui.

All of them [the different scenes] seem to be quite focused on, you know, not doing that much work, he says.

 

 

Thong Sala
Its hard to take a bad picture on Koh Pha-ngan.

 

 

Van Vlierbergen watched one of his digital nomad friends have a complete breakdown after partying too hard for too long.

He was partying, doing a lot of drugs hardcore and microdosing as well [at work during the day] and then he had this, how you call it when your brain just switches off…

“So, this guy went crazy. We had to help him, had to get him to go to a hospital before he got deported back to the U.S.

How practical is it?

Living and working in Thailand requires a visa, of course, and there are a variety of options from hard-to-get special tourist visas that allow you to stay nine months a year through to elite visas that cost 600,000 Thai baht ($17,300) but enable you to stay for five years.

You can also get an education visa as long as you spend a few days a week learning Muay Thai kickboxing or studying the language. Most new digital nomads simply get a 30-day tourist visa, extend it for another 30, then take a quick weekend trip to a neighboring country to start the process all over again. Technically, youre not supposed to actually work on any of these visas, but as long as youre not taking work away from locals, the government reportedly doesnt seem too fussed.

The holy grail though is the forthcoming digital nomad visa costing just 10,000 baht ($290), which the Thai government has announced… but hasnt yet been implemented.

 

 

Sean Stella
Hardforking founder Sean Stella, left. Source: Facebook

 

 

Blockchain media company HardForking founder Sean Stella says its been on the cards for a while.

Things dont typically happen quickly in Thailand, he explains. But every country is wrestling with how to attract people to their countries and make it easy, so I would hope a digital nomad visa to visit Thailand becomes a reality in the near future.

Stella has been a digital nomad since long before the term even existed. Its a lifestyle choice, he says. For me, Ive been doing it for 20 years. I cant envisage any other way of living.

Crypto is an enabler. The phenomenon of being a digital nomad has been around before crypto. But crypto is facilitating the ability for anybody to make a lifestyle choice to go and live wherever the hell they want.

Koh Pha-ngans crypto scene in 2016

Originally from New Zealand, Stella moved to Asia in 2005 and has spent most of his time between Singapore and Thailand, with Koh Pha-ngan a favorite locale over the past seven years. He fell in love with the place at the same time he discovered crypto in 2016 while filming a documentary called Living the Dream about expats who had moved to paradise.

The middle of that process, crypto crossed my path and slapped me in the face. I went, Holy shit, this is amazing. He fell deep down the rabbit hole, socializing with a group of crypto fans every Monday at a bar with mining rigs in the toilets.

Youd go in there and take a pee standing next to a Bitcoin mining rig, he laughs.

Fast forward a couple of months. Heres me paying my bar bills in Bitcoin. We created a little economy amongst ourselves. So, I literally went from using Thai baht to everything I did, to paying for hotels, paying my bar tabs, paying for a meal within this little ecosystem on Koh Pha-ngan and Koh Samui, I just operated in crypto.

That ecosystem has mostly disappeared, however, says de Lepper, who bemoans the fact Koh Pha-ngan doesnt live up to its Crypto Island reputation.

What does that mean, Crypto Island? That means that everybody can go here to the shops and pay in Bitcoin or Dash or whatever it may be. But were not there yet. De Lepper does his best by providing free education for business owners on how to accept crypto and which coins to accept.

Stella estimates there were around 5060 crypto fans on the island in 2016 when he arrived, and numbers took off in 2017. But Paid Networks Chasse says that when he arrived in 2018, interest had tailed off due to the effects of crypto winter.

 

 

 

 

Numbers picked up once again in 2019 with the arrival of large numbers of Russian crypto hippies. There was a lot of idealism, people that understood that the financial infrastructure that we blindly followed was broken, says Stella.

Chasse helped revitalize the local scene when he took over the Utopia resort to create his Cryptopia crypto community, which later rebranded as House of DAO (more about that in part two).

Stella lived at Utopia resort for months and filmed a short documentary (above) about the experience featuring his good friend Didi from the Bitcoin family, and guest stars the on-chain analyst Willy Woo and Bitcoin influencer and occasional insurrectionist Tone Vays.

 

 

 

 

Stella created his media brand HardForking to help educate people about crypto. Its now incorporated in Panama and has set up what Stella calls a legal DAO, where participants create content and are rewarded in both stablecoins and with equity tokens in the DAO.

Effectively, I want 1,000s of content creators who are digital nomads living all over the planet to create content for HardForking. And they are rewarded for their efforts.

Our intention is to build the first legal Dao in crypto media, or media in general.

Heart of the community

The beating heart of the crypto community on Koh Pha-ngan these days is de Lepper, who runs the Buddha Cafe in Haad Salad. Originally from the Netherlands, de Lepper moved to the island three years ago and later rented the former cafe as a place to live.

But when people kept turning up asking for coffee, he reopened it and started running weekly talks called Living Library on interesting topics. Researching one of these about crypto, he became obsessed, and the weekly talks became Crypto Cafe each Wednesday morning with regular guests from various projects.

Edwin
De Lepper has made it his mission to help educate residents and visitors to the island about crypto.

Theres a bank of computers in an alcove at the back for learning how to trade, stake or set up wallets, and hes running Cryptocation sessions to teach tourists about the space.

This island is special because it does have a different energy, he explains. I feel at home and feel free here. And its a beautiful community that is big enough that you dont see each other every day, but you see each other every week.

De Lepper says crypto offers everyone the chance to go live in paradise.

If you know those opportunities, and you start collecting the right projects, the right tokens, over time, you can build up enough money that you can live off the interest.

He estimates there are about 300400 people on the island who work in crypto in some fashion.

One of those is Allison, who runs his Blockchain Careers business from co-working spaces or his home office. We meet for a Korean meal and beers at an open-air restaurant in Thong Sala. He explains that hes been in Thailand since 2011, starting in hospitality recruitment in Bangkok and then moving to Koh Pha-ngan just as COVID-19 struck. On an education visa, he learns the Thai language three days a week, online between work. I probably need to do it every day, but Im sort of getting nearly there.

He fell into crypto recruitment after discussing plans with Chasse that didnt eventuate but led to a gig sourcing talent for Hathor Network. His main client now is Parity Technologies, which developed the Parity Ethereum client, Substrate and Polkadot.

Most of my clients are actually in Europe, a few in South America. Ive got one in America that Im speaking to now. But over time, I want to try and get 60% or 70% of the business in Asia because Im sick of working nights! he laughs.

 

 

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Crypto to go mainstream

Allison says Singapore, Vietnam, Hong Kong and now Thailand are becoming hotspots for crypto in the region, citing the Stock Exchange of Thailands development of a new digital asset exchange and Siam Commercial Banks takeover of the Bitkub crypto exchange in November last year.

I think thats a sign that crypto will go mainstream in Thailand. Its the first traditional bank in the world to buy outright a crypto exchange. And theyve actually come out and said theres gonna be no tax on crypto profits in Thailand, which is a good thing. They seem to want to adopt.

 

 

Guy Allison
Guy Allison at a Korean restaurant in Thong Sala. Despite the baffling heat, few restaurants have AC.

 

 

But personally, Allisons time in Koh Pha-ngan is coming to an end. When we spoke, he had just got back from a trip scoping out Chiang Mai as his new home.

Ive been doing it for two years, and I feel like Ive hit a wall creatively, he says. A lot of people are quite extreme here. Theyre either escaping addiction or they are addicts themselves. And there doesnt seem much in between. So, its difficult, you know?

Maybe I just need somewhere a bit more normal. It is nice here, but a lot of people are very transient, so youll make a good friend, and theyll be gone next week. Whereas Chiang Mai and Phuket a lot of people do live there, and its stable.

In Chiang Mai, he was particularly impressed with the Yellow co-working space, which also offers a business incubator and VC funding. He says thats the sort of infrastructure Koh Pha-ngan is lacking right now.

Im a startup as well, and they said they can help with potential loans in the future. So, for me anyhow, it seemed more serious for work. So, I will try it out probably for six months and see how it goes. And then I can always come back here if I dont like it.

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

You can now clone NFTs as ‘Mimics’: Here’s what that means

In the precariousness of Web3 open-source code, iterative development and move fast ethos, things break. And through breaking, things are also made. A new project allows anyone to create a copy of someone elses NFT, aptly named Mimics.

But how does Mimics work, and what does it mean for the NFT art market to have a new variety of fakes? And will it result in token standards being upgraded and improved?

I met the anonymous founder of Mimics in a Web3 office that was brimming with software developers writing lines of code as they nodded their heads in time to deep house and sipped cups of tea.

On semi-regular occasions, I drop in to visit some local devs in the blockchain space and learn more about what they are working on. They have always been welcoming and jovial, inviting me to share in their ritualistic Friday afternoon meme creation hour and have a go at spinning the in-office DJ decks.

 

 

Mimetics
Artists impression of how Mimics works with CryptoPunks and Bored Apes.

 

 

They even offered me a desk to work from there for free, provided I clean the office once a week. I told them where to go (they were joking, but perhaps only half-joking as I stared at the overgrown vines living in the exposed beams in the roof).

It was at this office that I met the anon who would later take an extended sabbatical from their hand in engineering successful projects and, in their tinkering, discover and open-source a way to mimic your NFTs.

Stealing your NFTs

I think I just broke the NFT market, the anonymous founder told me flatly.

Really? How? I responded.

It turns out that art NFTs have a line of code in them called tokenURI or URI that acts like a pointer to the image being displayed. As the code is public, you can redirect your own NFT to make it look like anyone elses. If you want your NFT to display a Cypherpunk, a Bored Ape, or how about a Pudgy Penguin? You got it.

 

 

Coinmonks
The tokenUri NFT metadata. Source: Coinmonks

 

 

This means that your rare and expensive cartoon image NFT can essentially be cloned, not just by right-clicking copy-save as, and making another NFT of the same image but as a verifiable copy that has remnants of the real thing through code. Users rushing to clone a Bored Ape should beware, however:

This could be a blatant breach of copyright or other IP, states Australian crypto lawyer Joni Pirovich. To determine rights that attach to the ownership of the token, and any image or metadata associated with the token, the buyer should try to identify whether any terms and conditions and any IP license applies to the sale.

Many projects launch or resell on NFT marketplaces such as OpenSea without drafting their own terms or licenses and without revealing their identity. In these cases, they are not acting to protect any IP they own or allowing a person to understand who the copyright author may be and whether there is a human or computer that is generating the art and/or data. In Australia, copyright comes into existence when it is created by its author. In other countries, such as the United States, copyright is a registration system. NFTs (and associated metadata) are available globally and often without clear terms. This makes it unclear what IP laws apply.

Joni Pirovich
Joni Pirovich on LinkedIn.

Noticing that few others have cottoned on to the ramifications of how the NFT metadata works, the creator(s) of Mimics have open-sourced how to do it, of course.

Into the code

When it comes down to it, NFTs are really just tokens with a bundle of metadata. This data about data carries with it all the necessary information for someone else to locate and use it.

NFTs that can be mimicked via their metadata (so far) are ones that adhere to the most common ERC-721 and ERC-1155 standards.

ERC-721 and ERC-1155 standards provide two core sets of functionalities: controlling ownership of the token and getting data from the token. The latter function usually returns the appearance of an NFT to a website or wallet in order to display the NFT when called by a smart contract.

The trick with Mimics was realizing that the tokenURI can be called by a contract address. Particularly, it can be called inside the tokenURI function of another contract. Mimics hacks the metadata, allowing you to make an NFT that mimics the digital media attributes of another, such as an image or animation. Anyone anywhere can run this URI metadata function. Instead of the function being permissioned in the ERC standards so only the user can view an NFT or grant permissions to other sites to view it, it is public.

I ventured deeper into the Discord channel

The Mimics project has open-sourced a codebase so you can mimic the targetContract and targetId of another NFT and make your NFT look just like that NFT.

How about this cute jellyfish? states the Mimicologists Guide docos.

 

 

Mimicologists Guide docs.
Mimicologists Guide docs.

 

 

On OpenSea, we can copy them from the page URL, the Token Id is the number on the far right, and the Contract Address is just to the left of it.

The Mimics contracts are now available. In true Web3 style, Mimics are permissionlessly available but technically a little tricky to access.

Initially, there was no web page front end, so you had to go on an expedition to interact directly with the guild contract on Etherscan. This was recently updated.

Contract Address
OpenSea Contract Address

In a year that has seen some major heat in NFTs, how could Mimics affect markets? In the current context of market crashes, these lines of code and the token standards they draw upon have some serious implications for NFT owners, developers and the market at large.

What does this mean?

At this stage, Mimics dont have implications for NFTs beyond artworks (such as copying NFTs with distinct functionalities to attest to membership). Only the metadata such as name, description, media and other attributes that are provided by the tokenURI can be mimicked. For something to be proxyable, it needs to be an attribute that an NFT provides on a public function or interface (meaning it is accessible by all users and other contracts on Ethereum) and not validated in any way by the website, service or contract receiving it.

 

 

OpenSea bored apes
Bored Ape Yacht Club auction on the OpenSea NFT marketplace. Source: OpenSea

 

 

Instead of being law to provably enforce the rules of the system, code here is the undermining factor in NFT security. Mimics prove the thesis by well-known cryptographer Moxie that crypto lacks cryptography in some respects referring to cryptographically secure components of the codebase that make aspects of unique ownership provable, private and/or permissioned. Ironically, someone has already used the mimic contract to copy Moxies NFTs.

In some way, Mimics demonstrates a coordination failure in how open-source standards are made, peer-reviewed and adopted in Web3. This is until you see that Mimics actually forms part of the narrative of how these standards may evolve over time.

 

 

 

 

Setting a standard:

So, was this all a scam? A Ponzi scheme to short the market or flood it with fakes?

No. It is a game. Mimics are another example of the playful aesthetics and hacker ethic of Web3 culture. It is a light-hearted hack with some serious implications.

Just as in the traditional art market, NFTs can be faked through Mimics. And just like in traditional art markets, this fact challenges users to take responsibility for tracing the provenance of what theyre buying. Identifying vulnerabilities is how infrastructure is strengthened.

I think its cool having copies, as the originals can always be easily verified, states BokkyPooBah, serial NFT artist and open-source software advocate. Perhaps it means people need to be educated on how to verify authenticity, and marketplaces and tools should make it easier to verify.

Bokkys NFT collection features originals and offshoots of well-known collections, including MoonCats, a Kevins collection Bored Ape and a fast food CryptoPunk.

 

 

Mooncat #24916: , MrFahrenheit.eth
Mooncat #24916: MrFahrenheit.eth Source: OpenSea

 

 

The purpose of a blockchain ledger is to prove provenance, yet it is still extremely difficult to verify that an NFT is from a legitimate artist. For example, on the Ethereum Name Service (ENS), people make close copies of well-known artists domain names by replacing 1s with the letter l to trick buyers into thinking its an original. For this reason, Bokky is working on a tool to research ENS names, in the hopes of helping the community at large to spot real versus fake NFT collections.

Mimics also enable new possibilities for what people will build next in the world of NFT art. Perhaps the first mimics will accrue their own value as authentic fakes.

Search ENS
Tool to search registered ENS names by @BokkyPoobah.

The current Mimic contracts only allow one copy of an existing NFT to be made. This could add more value to originals if people want to create provable copies of famous NFTs. For example, some argue that the many clone projects of CryptoPunks actually add more value to the OG version.

The Mimics codebase also includes a defense mechanism. By setting up a Shield of Essence and activating the aura, the shield will protect all NFTs on the same account from being copied (known as poked) by mimics.

Of course, the code is open-source, meaning that shields will only block Mimics but not other iterations of proxy NFTs. Now that the secret is out, it is possible to copy the Mimic contracts themselves, make a few changes, and mimic everything over and over.

Mimics are a call to action to improve NFT standards and decentralized infrastructure at large. The hacker-developer behind Mimics does not just want to break things, but to build.

Current NFT standards do the opposite of protecting your art at the code level, states the Mimics project blog post. While wondering if theyre breaking the NFT market, the hacker also provokes, Maybe this article and the associated code will provide some impetus for a future where ERC standards are improved and iterated on and become even more widely adopted. The goal is to build a better standard for their information infrastructures.

 

 

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Improving token standards requires stronger permissioning at the code level meaning creators of NFTs expressing their preferences at the code level. They would get to decide where that NFT is displayed rather than it being pulled publicly. Technically, you can create an NFT that blocks this at the code level and still be ERC-721 or -1155 compliant. Yet people arent paying enough attention at the code level of the NFT market to put measures inside the function to detect contracts that try to run the code and block them.

Mimics is one example of the broader ethos of Web3. The project embodies core themes of the Web3 ideal: participatory building, self-organizing, and owning ones own infrastructure (or at least, expressing preference over how it is owned and governed).

Web3 originates from hacker communities. Hacking is about reordering. The politics of technology are about ways of building order in our world, states infrastructure scholar Langdon Winner. The ways that the dynamics of reimagining, deleting and revisioning will unfold can never be fully anticipated in advance.

Commonly, in places where Web3 fails, it rises from its own ashes like a phoenix. Epic failures such as Mt. Gox and The DAO hack have helped lead to the proliferation of governance composability and practice today. Understanding this helps to place the recent Terras LUNA and TerraUSD market crash in context.

NFTs may be the same with projects like Mimics, which chip away at the legitimacy of what currently exists, in order to build something better.

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

Crypto is changing how humanitarian agencies deliver aid and services

The primary use case for cryptocurrency in most wealthy countries is acquiring it and holding it, trading it, or using it in various other ways to make more money. In the developing world, where access to financial and banking systems is limited or nonexistent, innovative humanitarian organizations are piloting micro-blockchain ecosystems.

In the summer of 2021, Hope for Haiti was ready to launch a cryptocurrency pilot program to provide 150 mothers with cellphones, digital wallets and payment cards that use near-field communication technology. Each mom participating in its community nutrition program was set to receive $50 per month in cUSD for six months to spend on family essentials. A select group of local vendors was trained to use the system and poised to accept the cryptocurrency payments. On Aug. 14, a magnitude 7.2 earthquake rocked Haitis Tiburon Peninsula, decimating the area.

Hope for Haiti had to delay the project and immediately shifted to disaster relief. The organization received thousands in cryptocurrency donations in short order. Skyler Badenoch, Hope for Haitis CEO, tells Magazine: We probably brought in a hundred grand in crypto to support our earthquake relief efforts. Whether it was $50,000 in Bitcoin from Binance Charity. [..] We were getting Ethereum donated to us. We got $10,000 in Dogecoin donated to us. It came from all over.

 

 

 

 

Just a year earlier, Sandra Uwantege Hart, who at the time was Oxfam Internationals blockchain innovations and cash transfer lead, was preparing to launch a cryptocurrency pilot in the south Pacific Ocean country of Vanuatu. After a successful first effort in the region, Uwantege Hart was hoping to scale Oxfams UnBlocked Cash solution fivefold for this ambitious phase-two project.

Then, just days before launch, Cyclone Harold slammed into the island nation. The category 5 storm decimated parts of the archipelago, an island chain economically dependent on tourism that was already reeling from COVID-19 lockdowns and an active volcanic eruption.

 

 

 

 

Almost overnight, Oxfam and its local partners brought to scale a blockchain lifeline, originally tested with 200 participants and 27 local vendors, to nearly 5,000 households and 357 vendors. They worked with the local chamber of commerce to issue cell phones to merchants and train them on the UnBlocked Cash system. On the ground, a network of about 15 charitable organizations enrolled affected citizens and managed the system. In a conversation with Magazine, Uwantege Hart says that Its almost like the whole idea of a decentralized, distributed model is exactly what worked in terms of how we operated and deployed the system. She adds:

Lets decentralize, lets provide a really good automated tool to deliver assistance and decentralize the way that tool is deployed across multiple organizations in multiple locations concurrently, to make sure that we can scale as quickly as possible.

Uwantege Hart went on to co-found the global technology firm Emerging Impact. Partnering with the Celo Foundation, Kotani Pay and Polish Humanitarian Action, Emerging Impact soon facilitated efforts to integrate DeFi tools into a cash reward program in Kenya. Celo, the donor, built a dashboard to deposit funds directly into Kotani Pay wallets. In the field, Kotani Pay recruited Maasai women to participate in the pilot while Polish Humanitarian Action monitored transparency. According to Uwantege Hart, I cant even tell you how much time that saves.

 

 

 

 

She clarifies further that to make it happen, multiple players from all over came together: “This is between Celo, based in California; Polish Humanitarian Action, based in Poland, with some offices in Somalia; and the implementing partner in rural Kenya, and Maasai women who are building rural infrastructure, building dams to conserve water, so that they can start to increase their agricultural output.

Umoja

The experiences gained and lessons learned in these pilots led to the development of Emerging Impacts Umoja solution, an all-in-one humanitarian assistance suite. One of the first projects to utilize the system was CAREs digital cash and voucher assistance pilot in Ecuador, initiated in September 2021. CARE Ecuadors monitoring coordinator, Ronald Pisco, tells Magazine the pilot provides electronic vouchers and NFC payment cards to 250 women who dont have access to public services.

The participants, primarily migrants and refugees from Venezuela, can use the cards to purchase health services, medicine and hygiene products from 10 participating vendors. The cards are loaded with $50 to $100 in cUSD, with the vendors cashing out and converting the stablecoins into local currency on a weekly or monthly basis.

 

 

 

CARE USAs senior director for market-based approaches, Christian Pennotti, tells Magazine that The end recipients, […] theyre getting handed a card that they can pay for goods and services. [..] They dont have to download a special wallet. They dont need a 17-digit-long key.

Although there can be a high technical barrier to entry into the crypto space, such as access to the internet and cell phones and the need for technological literacy things currently inaccessible to the programs participants Pennotti believes this exchange is pretty straightforward for the women who are participating: On the back end, theres a whole bunch of really incredible things happening. But in her experience, CARE is able to hand her a card, and she gets what she needs.

CARE wanted to test a blockchain-based, easy-to-use, cashless solution to replace an inefficient paper-based voucher system. According to Pisco, it can take weeks to pay back vendors. CARE staff would have to keep track of all the paper vouchers, collect them and send them back to the office. The process is expensive and time-consuming. Uwantege Hart shares that preliminary metrics from the pilot suggest delivery times have been shaved down by more than 50%. Costs have gone down, and ease of monitoring has gone up.

 

 

 

 

Umojas other debut deployment is back on track, as the temporarily delayed Hope for Haiti pilot is currently in progress and recently doubled in size and scope thanks to Coinbase. According to Badenoch, when Coinbase heard about the pilot just after the earthquake, it contributed $150,000. It saw the project as something that would continue to help victims of the earthquake, long after everyone else had gone home.

Badenoch believes that This is the next iteration of our work in our collaboration with important players in the cryptocurrency and blockchain ecosystem. He adds further:

We think that its going to help us tell the story about the value and the power of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology and the ability of crypto and blockchain to help alleviate poverty.

According to Badenoch, Coinbases role in the project is the difference between piloting something that is temporary help and piloting something that actually shifts the way a household economy functions. Hope for Haiti integrated Digicels mobile cash solution into the cash-out process for participating vendors, which means there is a local off-ramp within Haitis financial ecosystem. That is huge. That is the difference between financial inclusion and giving money, according to Uwantege Hart.

 

 

 

 

Financial inclusivity

Uwantege Hart believes that humanitarian aid is ultimately short-term assistance. She says that one of the challenges for all humanitarian agencies is how to responsibly transition people from receiving a bunch of stuff or payments for free into a scenario more focused on recovery, where they are able to connect the assistance received to regular access to goods or services in their everyday lives.

Progression out of poverty, or the risk-prone situation that has exposed them to poverty, is the primary objective. Emerging Impact hopes to eventually segregate wallets, still attaching them to payment cards but also to payment apps and individual savings accounts.

Following that same train of thought, CAREs other crypto pilot worked with village savings and loans associations in western Kenya adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. In Siaya County, a rural area dependent upon agriculture, CARE asked savings group members what they needed to make them whole. According to Pennotti, they all said they needed more funds to sustain current group businesses or startup funds to facilitate income streams generated from new group businesses.

 

 

 

 

Although nearly 85% of the people CARE works with in Kenya are unbanked and dont have full access to the financial system, many have mobile wallets. Binances Blockchain Charity Foundation funded this project by directly depositing BUSD, a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar, into participants Trust Wallets. The groups then use those funds to purchase goods and services from local vendors.

 

 

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Helen Hai, executive vice president at Binance and head of Binance Charity, tells Magazine, Our pilot project working with CARE and village savings and loans associations was new territory for Binance Charity, but one we found hugely exciting because if successful, it would provide a solution for delivering cash assistance and reaching many financially vulnerable people with a much lower cost compared with traditional methods.

She explains how the process works: All transactions are recorded on the public ledger, which is trackable, immutable and offers 100% transparency to the public. Hai adds:

Our aim was to promote the economic recovery of VSLA members from the impact of COVID-19 and associated vulnerabilities, through the provision of stablecoins offered via blockchain technology. Crypto education was a key part of the success of this project, which meant we were also able to provide a new skill as well as financial assistance.

According to Pennotti, one of the objectives in Kenya was to understand if the tech would work in these communities. Would it be accepted, and what might the benefits be for CARE and for donors?

The other objective was to build institutional awareness around the potential for financial inclusivity. Pennotti was looking for a DeFi project that would help on-ramp these groups to crypto, potentially then taking advantage of staking and other sorts of wealth-generators like yield farming in a way that is accessible. You dont have to understand how it all works, just what the financial benefits are, Pennotti said.

 

 

 

 

Massive $83,000,000,000 Pile of Gold Discovered in China – Here’s How Much It Will Increase Supply

Bitcoin 2022 — Will the real maximalists please stand up?

As I go about the Miami conference, I wonder, Aside from some of the conference speakers, where are these Bitcoin maximalists I keep hearing so much about?

When I tell the customs official Im going to Miami for the Bitcoin 2022 conference, there seems to be a light in the mans eyes. He peppers me with questions, even though Id gotten up at 5 am that day to fly, and my smartwatch is telling me that my energy levels are only at 70%. The customs official has way more interest in the subject than I can handle.

Why am I going to the conference? The philosophy of the event fascinates me its a Bitcoin-only conference with the divide between Bitcoin and the rest of the cryptocurrency world growing year by year.

I dont go into that much detail with the customs official, though. Sometimes, when I interact with too many crypto people, I forget that everyone else has paid so little attention to this space, they still use the terms Bitcoin and cryptocurrency synonymously. If I offload onto the customs official everything thats on my mind, hed probably think Im autistic or drunk (or maybe both).

 

 

Bitcoin 2022
For a conference aimed at Bitcoin Maxis, the crowd seemed pretty comfortable with crypto.

 

 

Florida state of mind

Ive always found Miami strange, but not in a bad way. Florida is known for the Florida Man meme all the wild and wacky stuff happening in the Sunshine State like the naked man downtown who bit off someones face in 2012. But thats largely because of Floridas strong information-transparency laws. As a fellow journalist, I dream about this sometimes. Where Im from, Canada, we have to fight twice as hard for half the disclosure. Florida is brash and loud because its open. In a way, Florida is America.

 

 

 

Indeed, writing in The Globe and Mail newspaper, journalist David Shribman would later say that the American center used to be California, which gave the world the movie theatre, skateboards and the linguistic filler like. Now, Shribman writes, Americas center is Florida. The state is the home of former-President Donald Trump, but it used to be governed by the moderate Jeb Bush in a way encapsulating the transformation of American conservatism of the last decade. Florida is home to the Stand Your Ground self-defense law, the rebellion against COVID-19 mask mandates and, of course, Disneyland. No wonder this libertarian fantasy world is attracting Bitcoiners and the tech elite.

Out of California and into Florida, PayPals Peter Thiel has made the move. So has another member of the so-called PayPal Mafia, the venture capitalist Keith Rabois. Elon Musk, too, has a SpaceX launch site in Florida, and Cathie Woods Ark Invest has moved to the state as well. Somewhere in there is also why Bitcoin 2022, the Bitcoin-only conference that excludes other cryptocurrencies, has come to this state.

Note how so many of these tech people moving to Florida are also Bitcoin people not just in the eyes of the mainstream who use Bitcoin and cryptocurrency interchangeably, but Bitcoin-only Bitcoin people. Thiel and Wood were both listed as speakers at Bitcoin 2022. Perhaps thats only natural.

 

 

 

 

During the conference, one of its hosts Natalie Brunell, speaking on the venture capitalist Anthony Pomplianos podcast, says Bitcoin represents the American Dream, with its ethos of self-determination, freedom, the idea of creating a better life for your family. But its not just that. That reputation of the Bitcoin-only folks often called maximalists is much like that of the new America that Florida has come to represent. Its loud. Its big on individual liberties. The open blockchain is transparent to a fault. Thus, Bitcoin is Florida.

 

 

 

 

Or, at least, thats one idea. On a different episode of the same Pompliano podcast, an enlightening statistic is brought up: 83% of those who own Bitcoin also own another cryptocurrency. For all of Bitcoins distinctness and how its identity is separate from the rest of crypto, that does not seem to extend to its holders. As I go about this Bitcoin-only event in the heart of this new America, I would wonder, How organic, really, is this maximalism sentiment running through it all?

 

 

Stacks community event at Bitcoin Unleashed. Source: Twitter

 

 

Bitcoin to the max

Its hardly a controversial thought to say that other cryptocurrencies cannot be truly compared to Bitcoin because they are not sufficiently decentralized and decentralization is the entire point of the first cryptocurrency. Nor is it outlandish to say that most of the tens of thousands of alternative coins and random blockchain projects are either scams or, to put it politely, overly ambitious. But Bitcoin maximalists have been criticized for taking that idea up a notch.

On the second day of the conference, there is a zinger thrown during the panel called Wartime Bitcoin. The moderator asks what the biggest attack on Bitcoin is. Aleks Svetski, an Australian entrepreneur and author of a book on individual liberties, isnt first in line to speak. But he seemingly gets invigorated by the question. Svetski gestures at the moderator and another speaker. Let me go first, please, he says. Svetski speaks with his hands:

The attack is cryptocurrency. Thats the fucking attack.

 

 

 

 

The crowd cheers. Or, at least, some people do. I can hear the hoots. That is indeed quite clever, I think to myself as I watch Svetski. Hefurther explains his thinking:

The easiest way to Trojan Horse everyone is to pretend like youre building something technically and architecturally similar [to Bitcoin] and add a fucking wonderboy and then roll it out to the lemmings.

Such rhetoric, though those who disagree with it, disagree strongly. As the conference goes on, widely followed Twitter account Autism Capital tweets, We find it incredibly interesting how the majority of the talks at Bitcoin Miami are people justifying Bitcoin against Ethereum. Its not a conference, its a sermon.

 

 

 

 

Indeed, at Bitcoin 2021, the boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. was booed when he showed up promoting an Ethereum-based project. Mayweather obviously didnt do a good job of reading the room. And the boos were perhaps justified, given what happened to the

Ethereum Max token he was promoting to the outside world. But what was on display at Bitcoin 2021 bordered on the religious. A Rolling Stone article on the event was headlined Welcome to the Church of Bitcoin.

But I didnt go to Bitcoin 2021. I only read about it. In person, at Bitcoin 2022, there was much less of that image of Bitcoin maximalism than I expected. Aside from the conference speakers and, I guess, the guys who cheered Svetski, whom I didnt really see, I would meet very few people who are actual Bitcoin maximalists. In fact, walking in and out of the formal talks and the rest of the conference, it seems as if I am stepping into different worlds.

 

 

 

 

Four days in Miami

The conference at the Miami Beach Exhibition Center is altogether four days, with the first being reserved for industry, the second and third for general admission, and the fourth for a music event called the Sound Money Fest.

The way the conference is structured is that there are a few big rooms with stages for the formal events such as the talks, and while those are going on, there is a massive exhibition floor with hundreds of booths by various companies and organizations. There are also quite a few bars strewn around the place.

Everywhere, there are a lot of spectacles around aside from the celebrity speakers like Jordan Peterson and Serena Williams. There is a cyborg bull statue outside mimicking the golden one that stands on Wall Street. Inside, on the exhibition floor, there is another bull that you can ride, a mechanical one operated by the exchange Bullish. The person who lasts the longest at the conference would win a whole Bitcoin.

 

 

 

 

The exhibition hall also has a Bitcoin volcano, referencing geothermal powered Bitcoin mining in El Salvador, and beside it is a stage with a table set up like at the sports network ESPN. Various personalities would sit around that table throughout the day and give their hot takes.

I spend part of my first day in the exhibition hall trying to look for the booth of this Ukrainian mining pool Hiveon. A publicist reached out to me earlier and said a lot about the companys involvement in the ongoing war with Russia Ukraine raised more than $100 million in crypto. I found that link fascinating, how crypto found its way into this big geopolitics conversation. Much of that was based on Ethereum, however, not Bitcoin.

To give you an idea of how big the exhibition hall is, though, and how absurdly bustling with activity it is, I never really end up finding the company.

 

 

 

 

With 20,000 people from around the world descending on Miami Beach, all the celebrity speakers, the global media attention its hard to believe all of that came out of a white paper by a pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto 13 years ago.

Its easy to see, though, that certain diffusion that happens as all ideas take hold. As Bitcoin grew, the border between it and the wider world blurred when it became more mainstream, it also became more mainstream.

Crypto used to be synonymous with Bitcoin because there were no other coins. It was all about peer-to-peer money that cant be controlled by any one party. When more people paid attention to it, they as much started to become influenced by that idea as they started to influence that idea. The result is the tens of thousands of different coins, the Ethereum network and its clones and competitors, the pictures of apes selling for hundreds of thousands, the blockchain movement hoping to tap the technology but not the coin, and the scams and the hacks. That is the term crypto as we know it today.

 

 

 

 

At the core of it all, theres still that Bitcoin-only movement, still focused on that singular original idea of peer-to-peer digital money. But they seem to be getting drowned out. Even at this conference that is ostensibly all about Bitcoin maximalism, the exhibition hall is flush with the sort of crypto companies that the speaker Svetski would call the biggest attack on Bitcoin.

The Ukrainian mining pool Hiveon, for example, whose booth I eventually later found, is for Ethereum. Some at the conference are openly selling NFTs. A writer for The Defiant, a DeFi publication, even says, I see signs that DeFi is taking root in the heart of Bitcoin. As I go about the exhibition hall, I ask myself, Aside from some of the conference speakers, where are all these Bitcoin maximalists I keep hearing so much about?

Much later, I get somewhat of an answer. At the conference, I ran into a team from the media company WGMI Studios that has been going around interviewing attendees. Among the questions it asked is Bitcoin or Ethereum? They later compiled the results for me. Out of 298 people, even at this Bitcoin-only conference, 22% said Ethereum, and 11% said both. One of the WGMI studios guys, Nathan Espinosa, tells me later: We also asked people, NFTs, yes or no? toward the end of the event It was quite interesting to see how [even some of who] chose Bitcoin and talked down Ethereum still supported NFTs.

 

 

 

 

More bull

On the third day, I see the mechanical bull again, the one on the expo floor that anyone can try to ride to win a Bitcoin. I quickly Google the tips and tricks on how to ride a mechanical bull and sign up. How hard can riding a mechanical bull be? I last four seconds.

I turn to less-physical pursuits after that. I play Lightning chess where players have only about five minutes to make all of their movies. I lost two games and won two games, which I think is a respectable finish.

What I truly gain from that chess experience, though, is a spreadsheet of all the side-parties going on that an opponent gave me. Among the 32 events on just the third conference day, there is a yacht party or two and a beach event by Maxim magazine just to give you an idea of what was on offer.

 

 

Bitmex at Bitcoin 2022
BitMEX took this pic at Bitcoin 2022. Looks nice, needs more adoption. Source: Twitter

 

 

ETHMiamis party is, unfortunately, miserable with under a dozen people. I am there for no more than 10 minutes before chugging my beer and walking out.

A much better party and one with an open bar seems to be one by this outfit called Bad Bitch Empire, which bills itself as a private crypto investment club for ambitious women. Yet the promised free drinks turn out to be a mirage, and there are way too many people all squeezed shoulder to shoulder on a tiny rooftop patio.

I go around asking people about my observation, that, somehow, at this Bitcoin-only conference, Ive encountered so few Bitcoin maximalists. A man who works at a Bitcoin ATM provider tells me he feels the maximalists are vocal but not necessarily in the majority. Where are the maxis at the conference? I dont know, but I see them only on Twitter, he tells me. Everyone seems to agree with my observation.

 

 

 

 

I also bump into someone from SpaceX, but it turned out he wasnt an attendee at Bitcoin 2022. In fact, quite few people at those side-parties were, and thats what strikes me. One sullen British guy, who works at a crypto hedge fund, tells me that the conference is not the point. Its the meetings you have with all the people who are in town, he says.

I guess he has a point. The conference talks are streamed online anyway. If youre solely after the information presented, you dont even need to leave your bedroom. Its the human connection with the hordes of other crypto folks all in one place that is the real point of such events. So, why pay $1,099 if you can just hobnob for free at the side parties?

That night at the Bad Bitch Empire event, Bitcoin 2022 itself doesnt really stand out among the dozens of crypto events going on around it the Maxim beach party, the yacht gatherings, even that little ETHMiami gathering, as unspectacular as it was. Its kind of like how, at the conference itself, its theme of Bitcoin maximalism seemed so lost among the wider crypto presence even if, without Bitcoin 2022, there would have been none of these side events promising free drinks.

 

 

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The final hours

On the last day, at the Sound Money Music Festival that is to cap off the conference, I speak to a trio of friends who are the absolute opposite of Bitcoin maximalists. One of them, a graphic designer who has gone into NFTs, an artist who goes by WHUT, proudly tells me that he holds no Bitcoin at all.

When I press him, he says, I have, but it is like a fraction. It doesnt really make sense to even speak about it. But I do have my bag in Tezos is pretty heavy. I own like over 70 NFTs. As an artist, he says, thats what he gravitated toward. He adds that all the altcoins have advanced the crypto mission that began with Bitcoin.

Another among the trio, a recording artist named Cassius Cuve, says:

Mass adoption by way of Web3 is by NFTs. Artists are driving the adoption… You cant have Web3 with only Bitcoin, basically.

Whatever you make of their view, you cant dispute that these guys believe it, and theyre not alone among the thousands of attendees of what is supposed to be a Bitcoin-only conference.

It might seem, on the surface, that the conclusion to draw would be that this Bitcoin-only conference is becoming pointless. But the other perspective is that the very existence of all these non-maximalists validates this conferences purpose. Whats the point, after all, of spreading maximalism if everyone is already a maximalist? Maybe the hordes of non-maximalist crypto people of the past days are exactly the sort of attendees the Bitcoin 2022 organizers want.

 

 

 

 

Crypto once meant Bitcoin. Now crypto has grown to become not only a world of which Bitcoin is only a small part, but also one which Bitcoin doesnt really want to belong. To some, thats a natural progression. To others, its a perversion. But to everyone, its a process that is plainly happening. Therein must lie the true raison dtre of the conference, its reason for being what it is: to counter that rising tide, to play the yang to the growing yin.

Its hard to say how successful that mission statement is, but like how people say any publicity is good publicity, what matters in any endeavor isnt so much how far you go but that you take a little step each day and do not stop. Exposing all those thousands of crypto folks to maximalist thought maybe that in itself is a victory.

 

 

 

 

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