ALSO: Binance.US' SEC probe, Celsius's new deal, Swan's bitcoin trust and more |

Sept. 15, 2023

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Welcome to The Node! This is Daniel Kuhn here to take you through the latest in crypto news and why it matters.

 

In today's news: Celsius and Core Scientific reached a $45 million deal to settle a mining dispute. Binance.US not cooperating in SEC prove, SEC says. And Coinbase refuses to refund $1 million gained from the Curve hack.

 

The takeaway: Sam Bankman-Fried blames everyone but himself for FTX's collapse in recently leaked private writings.

 

Trading Feed

Coinbase, the largest U.S. exchange, gained over $1 million from the $73 million Curve exploit in July by validating the block in which a trading bot paid a 570 ETH (~$1.06 million at the time) gas fee to fast-track an arbitrage trade. Exploit victim Alchemix is seeking a refund from Coinbase, but the crypto exchange has not yet turned over the money despite the fact that almost all the looted assets have been returned. It was the second-biggest payment ever tied to the practice known as MEV. Elsewhere, bitcoin mining pool F2Pool returned 19.8 BTC to Paxos after paying $520,000 fee on a transaction worth just $2,000 earlier this week.

 

Non-Cooperative?

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission accused Binance.US of not cooperating in its probe of the company, in new court docs. The exchange’s holding company BAM provided approximately 220 documents, “many that consist of unintelligible screenshots and documents without dates or signatures,” the SEC said. The SEC also, again, raised concerns about Binance’s ability to potentially access customer funds in the U.S., and has launched an inquiry into wallet custody Ceffu (nee Binance Custody).

 

A message from Simpluris

If you purchased FEI or TRIBE tokens in the Genesis Event between March 31 and April 3, 2021, a class action settlement may affect your rights.

An NFT legal notice has been issued to wallets with instructions on how to file a claim. 

 

You can learn more about the settlement and file a claim here:  www.feitribesecuritiessettlement.com

 

Bitcoin Only

Crypto custodian BitGo and bitcoin financial services firm Swan plan to form a BTC-only trust company as a means of offering custody without exposure to the rest of the digital asset market. The joint venture, which is subject to regulatory approval, will combine BitGo's custody capabilities with Swan's expertise in onboarding and fraud prevention. It would be the U.S.' first bitcoin-only trust company, according to a press release on Thursday evening. Swan has been hit by recent events at custodial services providers Prime Trust (which was put into receivership by regulators) and Fortress Trust (recently purchased by Ripple).

 

Mining for Settlement

Crypto mining providers Celsius and Core Scientific have reached a tentative $45 million deal to resolve a long-standing legal dispute. Celsius had previously filed claims of $312 million after Core powered down Celsius mining rigs in January, citing unpaid dues, and filed motions saying Core should be held in contempt of court. The new deal will see Celsius acquire an 85-acre Texas mining site and pay $14 million in cash as well as the remainder in adjusted claims to settle charges, if approved by judges in Texas and New York, jurisdictions where Core and Celsius have respectively filed for bankruptcy.

 

The Takeaway: Fried Ethics

(CoinDesk)

The New York Times recently got hold of a trove of writings from Sam Bankman-Fried, supposedly from when he was under house arrest. While the most interesting parts are yet unreleased – like a 70-page Twitter thread reportedly offering the ex-CEO of FTX’s “side” of the business failure – there are notable quotes and details that shed further light on SBF’s state of mind before and after the collapse of his crypto empire. 

 

Most notably, Bankman-Fried still seems unwilling to take any responsibility for what happened — or even register that $8 billion *somehow* went missing, people lost life savings or that he could spend the next decades of his life rotting in prison. And, somehow, his biggest regret still seems wrapped up in his fallen public persona, as if the weekly court hearings and ongoing bankruptcy process are a detour from his life as a magnanimous, beloved statesman he was destined to live. 

 

“I’m broke and wearing an ankle monitor and one of the most hated people in the world,” Bankman-Fried reportedly wrote. “There will probably never be anything I can do to make my lifetime impact net positive.”

 

To be fair, the NYT gave no indication of the real context of why or when Bankman-Fried wrote this down, and it is essentially a personal diary that was leaked to the press. But: What. The. Hell. How unbelievably self-involved does a person have to be to write that they feel broke after losing so much money for so many people. 

 

It’s true Bankman-Fried’s lifestyle came crashing down along with his company — he had a taste for luxury real estate, private jets and on-demand delivery. It’s all just another example of how his reputation as a Corolla-driving billionaire schlub was a front. 

 

Worse, he reportedly wrote: “And the truth is that I did what I thought was right.” Taken together with the line above, this is exactly the same “ends justify the means” mentality that got Bankman-Fried in trouble in the first place. 

 

A lot has been written about SBF’s breed of “effective altruism” and why people who pursue profit at all cost because they think they’d be more impactful choosing how to give away their wealth is ultimately … ineffective. But a recent Bloomberg Businessweek article about SBF’s parents, the Stanford Law School professors Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried shows again how certain philosophies have a family resemblance. 

 

Bankman and Fried were supportive of SBF on his rise to fame, and remain so in his infamy – despite the fact that he’s thrown their multi-million dollar property in limbo by breaking bail. Bankman, in particular, was reportedly a familiar face at FTX where he regularly attended the closest things to board meetings the grossly mismanaged business had, and gave tax advice. Bloomberg reported that he was treated as a kindly old man, responsible for translating his sometimes hot-headed son’s comments and acting as a sounding board as SBF tried to determine the “right” move.

 

If SBF got his “business sense,” whatever that’s worth, from his dad, he seems to have inherited his mom’s entire system of ethics. SBF has a reputation as a leading consequentialist philosopher, the people who think seriously about the Trolley Problem – or abstract scenarios hypothesizing on whether it’s better to let a train run over one person or turn a lever that would kill many. 

 

And so it was a family of would-be do-gooders, along with Gabe Bankman-Fried, Sam’s younger brother, who ran a charitable organization funded almost entirely by FTX dollars (and who spent his time daydreaming of buying a private island on which to do bleeding edge lifetime extension research without interference). But, like, aren’t consequentialists supposed to actually think about the consequences of their actions? Or were the Bahamian vacation properties always the end goal?

 

Although Bankman-Fried seems unwilling or unable to confront his own choices, in his private writing he seems to dote on the mistakes of those around him. Most regrettably, Bankman-Fried has seemingly constructed a narrative that his ex-girlfriend and ex-employee Caroline Ellison is really at fault. At one point, he literally writes that Ellison oversaw one bad trade that led to bankruptcies at FTX and Alameda. It was her who failed to hedge the hedge fund. 

 

And while he was vaguely aware of the “Fiat@” account used to pilfer customer funds, SBF had nothing to do with it. Instead, dastardly lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell, the law firm overseeing FTX’s bankruptcy, constructed the narrative that he misappropriated user funds.  

 

It’s just odd, before he was caught up in a world of trouble, that Bankman-Fried was unconcerned with consequences and now that the ends he wanted are totally unreachable he remains unconcerned. It’s just a shame, considering that in a document titled “Truth” he said: “It’s something that I believe fairly strongly in.”

 

Read this article on the web.

 

– D.K.

@danielgkuhn

[email protected]

 

A message from Bitget

Bitget Marks 5 Years in Business by Looking Forward to the Next 5 – and Beyond

 

In 2018, the year Bitget launched, at least 23 other exchanges failed. The next year, that figure was 252, then 2020’s figure exceeded that. After that came FTX’s implosion. It’s no accident then that Bitget is still in business and is, in fact, thriving.

 

“In retrospect, 2018 marked the rise of Ethereum and the dawn of a cryptocurrency frenzy,” Bitget Managing Director Gracy Chen wrote in a letter to employees. “However, as crypto prices plummeted, most speculators fled, leaving only a resilient 10% still holding their ground. It was during this pivotal moment that Bitget emerged. We envisioned a crypto revolution that will reform the way finance works and people invest forever, creating a more equitable future.”

 

Bitget can be overlooked in the centralized exchange market.  Continue Reading

 
 

Off-Chain Signals 

  • A $3.4 Billion Crypto Market Splash? – Unchained
  • How Did I Meet SBF?? Some Background. – Tiffany Fong
  • Argentina’s ‘pro-crypto’ presidential candidate may actually prefer the dollar – Protos
  • Gemini accuses DCG of ‘gaslighting’ Genesis creditors – Blockworks
  • Sam Bankman-Fried deserves human rights – Crypto Critics Corner
  • Why ‘rage quitting’ is a growing DeFi trend that’s upending DAOs – DL News
 

Computing Power

 
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