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Machi Big Brother withdraws defamation lawsuit against ZachXBT

Jeffrey Huang withdrew the lawsuit after ZachXBT edited his article that Huang claimed to be defamatory.

Taiwanese music celebrity Jeffrey Huang, also known as "Machi Big Brother," has withdrawn a defamation lawsuit against internet sleuth ZachXBT.

In a bilateral announcement dated Aug. 14, Machi Big Brother said "Zach has many times in the past been of great service to the crypto community and pursuing legal action against him was a last resort but not the right path," after ZachXBT made a series of his amendments to his article that sparked the defamation suit from Huang. 

Meanwhile, ZachXBT stated that he "updated my article with additional context from Machi + edits from myself," leading Huang to withdraw the lawsuit. "While I am disappointed it went down the legal route in the first place I am appreciative we are able to find a resolution," Zach wrote.

In June 2022, ZachXBT published an article on Medium alleging Huang embezzled funds related to his work at past crypto projects. Huang denied the allegations. The accusations have not been proven in a court of law. At the time of publication, ZachXBT's original allegations regarding embezzlement have been removed. 

On June 16, 2023, Huang filed a defamation lawsuit against ZackXBT in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, writing, "I have consistently maintained that the allegations in his article are false." When questioned about the likelihood of answering a court subpoena regarding his corporate activities, Huang wrote "I'm legit asf."

ZachXBT then posted a request asking for community donations for the former lawsuit's legal fees. Within 24 hours, over $1 million was solicited with notable contributions from Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao and Kraken co-founder Jesse Powell. A prominent on-chain researcher, ZachXBT's investigative works have been cited as evidence in aid of ongoing lawsuits and criminal proceedings. 

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Whale sells 1,010 NFTs in 48 hours in ‘largest NFT dump ever’

With the Blur marketplace set for a second airdrop soon, Nansen’s Andrew Thurman theorized that this major NFT dump could be a play to reap extra BLUR token rewards while also booking some profits.

According to data from Nansen, nonfungible token (NFT) whale Jeffrey Hwang — known colloquially as Machi Big Brother — dumped 1,010 tokens for a total of 11,680 Ether (ETH) or $18.6 million in the space of 48 hours.

In a Feb. 25 Twitter thread, Nansen’s Simian Psychometric Enhancement Technician Andrew Thurman highlighted the trading activity over the previous two days, and noted that it's “likely the largest NFT dump ever.”

The major selling event included 90 Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFTs, 191 Mutant Ape Yacht Club (MAYC) NFTs and 308 Otherdeed NFTs to name a few.

Notably, however, Machi Big Brother (Machi) promptly bought back 991 NFTs following the dump, with Thurman theorizing that could be a play to either book some profits while also conducting “one big wash trade to generate huge Blur airdrop profits,” or a “pretty naked market manipulation. ”

Machi is reportedly one of the biggest receivers of the BLUR token airdrop from upstart NFT marketplace Blur, which recently ousted OpenSea from being the top-ranked NFT platform in terms of trading volume.

On Feb. 14, the project started dishing out its first round of airdrops to the community, with the amount of airdropped tokens depending on the user’s level of platform engagement and Ethereum-based NFT trading activity.

On Feb. 17, blockchain analytics platform Arkham Intel indicated that Machi had received 1.8 million BLUR tokens, and cashed it all out for $1.3 million.

As such, Machi could be looking to score some fresh BLUR tokens in the next round by ramping up NFT trading activity, while other whales may be looking to do the same also.

Related: Blur founder Pacman puts the NFT marketplace war into perspective

Looking at the floor prices of top collections that Machi initially dumped, BAYC, MAYC and Otherdeed NFTs have seen their prices drop 7.77%, 9.2% and 8.16% in the past 24 hours, according to data from NFT Price Floor.

“One man's quest for an airdrop is wrecking some markets,” Thurman noted in a subsequent post.

At the time of writing, BLUR sits at $0.79 with the price declining by 17.7% over the past seven days, according to CoinGecko.

On Feb. 22, the Blur team tweeted that the project will soon airdrop $300 million worth of tokens in its second round, or “season two.”

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