ALSO: SBF's AI investment, Ethereum Foundation sells ETH, Bitstamp courts EU banks, FloorDAO forked and more |

Oct. 9, 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: DOJ says SBF's good bet on AI startup isn't a defense. Bitstamp in “advanced” talks with several “household name banks” in Europe. And Avalanche's version of Friend.Tech suffers $3 millionexploit.

 

The takeaway: Sheila Warren argues Sam Bankman-Fried won't be a one-off, if the U.S. fails to deliver on clear and transparent crypto rules.

 

AI Paid Off?

The U.S. Department of Justice is seeking to prevent FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried from discussing AI startup Anthropic's fundraising efforts (valuing the firm at $4 billion) in his defense. In a Sunday court filing, the DOJ said SBF’s $500 million investment in Anthropic in 2022 came from customer funds, and claimed SBF’s attorneys may wrongly argue FTX “victims will ultimately be made whole.” DOJ called that line of reasoning “impermissible,” in part because it’s “immaterial" whether some FTX investments end up in profit. Current FTX management have held onto its stake, and have sought permission to sell it for a profit. The DOJ has previously tried to bar SBF’s lawyers from saying FTX creditors will receive most or all of their funds back.

 

“The trial has started off strong for the Department of Justice. On Friday, Judge Kaplan overruled 65% of the objections by the defense, which was a much smaller proportion than the day before, when Bankman-Fried’s lawyer’s really got on his nerves. In comparison, he rejected none of the prosecution’s objections Friday…”

 

Looking for more in-depth reporting on the SBF trial? Subscribe to "The SBF Trial" newsletter pop-up, written by CoinDesk reporters and editors on the ground in court.

 

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Eureka! MiCA!

Deribit, the largest crypto options exchange (accounting for 86% of the market in September), will soon offer derivatives tied to XRP, SOL and MATIC and is seeking a brokerage license in the EU. These prominent token listings could boost liquidity in the wider crypto market, CoinDesk reported. Separately crypto exchange Bitstamp is in “advanced” talks with several “household name” European banks to provide its white-label crypto toolkit. Senior executive Robert Zagotta told CoinDesk the EU’s Markets in Crypto Assets ruleset is easing the way for conventional firms to get into digital assets. Last, Bank of Italy Director Piero Cipollone, who is set to join the European Central Bank’s governance board, backed plans for a digital euro on Monday. The ECB has previously asked to postpone a decision on a retail CBDC until it works out privacy and legal concerns.

 

Hacks, "Hacks" And Hacks!

FloorDAO, an “NFT-Fi”-focused spinoff of once respected token management protocol Olympus DAO, forked after disaffected members were stripped of voting power in a protocol upgrade. A group of activist investors sent $2.5 million of the original DAO’s treasury to a splinter group called FloorkDAO and offered to redeem FLOOR tokens for $5. Meanwhile, some $3 million worth of AVAX tokens were drained from Stars Arena, an Avalanche-based clone of social platform Friend.tech. The weekold project warned users from depositing funds and confirmed the “smart contract” vulnerability, which had been downplayed by Avalanche founder Emin Gün Sirer after being flagged by onlookers. Finally, South Korea’s largest exchange Upbit told regulators it received an average of 879 hacking attempts per day.

 

Market Movers

The Ethereum Foundation has seemingly sold off a portion of its tokens, a semi-regular activity that almost always gins up controversy. Ether (ETH) prices slipped some 1.5% after a “Grant Provider” swapped ~1,700 ETH for $2.7 million in USDC, according to Arkham. As of April 2022, the EF, which some call a centralizing force in Ethereum, held over $1.29 billion in ETH, about 0.297% of the total ETH supply at the time. Separately, Messari found investments in crypto firms fell to its lowest lowest level in three years — with under $2.1 billion being raised across 297 deals in Q3 2023. That’s down from a peak of nearly $17.5 billion across over 900 deals in Q1 2022. Investors are now apparently focusing more on early-stage projects and infrastructure than user-facing apps.

 

The Takeaway: Rules Rule

 

Sheila Warren is the chief executive officer for Crypto Council for Innovation.

 

It feels like all eyes are trained on two courthouses in New York this week, as two men with (formerly) distinctive hair launch defenses against their alleged bad behavior. But just as the Elizabeth Holmes trial was not about Theranos' diagnostic testing, the SBF trial is not about crypto. It’s a tale as old as fraud.

 

The actions of a single person should not, and do not, serve as a barometer for the crypto industry. Sam Bankman-Fried is having a spectacular and ongoing implosion, and as this trial continues, we expect to see further evidence that Sam was out there primarily for himself.

 

In an ideal world, the focal point of the trial would be the harm to customers caused by the actions of a few. The cult of celebrity around SBF and the need for "a bad guy" storyline are parts of the problem.

 

Victims deserve more than headlines; they deserve restitution. And true remorse? That's not just a legal term; it's a moral imperative that must be visibly demonstrated.

 

It’s important to note that while other countries are watching this trial with the seemingly requisite ghoulish interest, they’re not seeing it as a referendum on an entire cryptocurrency industry or asset class. If we take a step back and look at what's happened outside the U.S. since the SBF news broke, other countries have doubled down on this tech. Governments around the world are actively building legislative and regulatory frameworks; offering important legal certainty to ecosystem operators and crucially, enhanced protection for consumers.

 

Earlier this year the EU put in place comprehensive legislation and is already iterating on it. The Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation (MiCA) is the first big piece of legislation from a leading economy to legislate digital assets and introduce a harmonized regulatory framework.

 

It lays out rules for the EU’s 27 member countries covering issuers of stablecoins (categorized as asset reference tokens or electronic money tokens), unbacked crypto assets, trading venues and exchanges (known as crypto asset service providers or CASPs). Decentralized finance (DeFi), non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and staking were all, sensibly, carved out of this piece of legislation, though the European Commission has a mandate to study and report back to legislators on these aspects before too long.

 

MICA was adopted in May 2023, with rules on stablecoins applying from the middle of next year and rules on CASPs from the end of 2024. In the meantime, more detailed technical rules, fleshing out the law, are being worked on by the European Supervisory Authorities and will be finalized before MiCA applies.

 

In the last year, the United Kingdom has made moves to develop its framework for digital assets. While the journey has not been totally smooth sailing, and organizations have experienced registration delays, the country is moving forward.

 

This progress can be seen in a consultation by His Majesty's Treasury, titled "the future financial services regulatory regime for cryptoassets," which concluded on April 30, 2023. The Treasury is expected to publish its response to the consultation in the coming weeks. A pivotal moment in this development came when the Financial Services and Markets Bill received approval at the end of June, enabling legislative changes that give regulators more oversight of cryptoassets.

 

Further, the Bill expands the scope of the Banking Act, and includes payment systems using digital settlement assets. This will include some stablecoin activities and could pave the way for a new regulatory regime. The bill also allows the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to oversee crypto asset promotions, with new rules applying from Sunday.

 

The government's ongoing goal is to establish the U.K. as a leading global center for crypto assets. This objective originated from statements made by the former Economic Secretary to the Treasury John Glenn in April 2022, and has been reiterated by the current EST Andrew Griffith. These aspirations have a significant impact on the speed and direction of policy-making.

 

Japan, which heeded lessons learned from a previous crisis and put consumer protections in place, has incorporated Web3 into its national economic plan. Additionally, in June this year, the Japanese Financial Services Agency (FSA) amended the Payment Services Act (PSA). The agencies wanted to update the country’s regulatory framework for stablecoins and crypto assets. This amendment revised the definition of crypto assets, included new guidelines for crypto asset exchanges, banking and travel rules, as well as a new framework for stablecoin issuers.

 

Leaving aside SBF, a general lack of regulatory infrastructure and a default to deregulation have done little to deter antisocial behavior in the crypto industry. Humans are going to human, and the goal of regulation should be to disincentive bad behavior, make it very hard to get away with, and create a path to accountability and consequences when some try it anyway.

 

 

Read the full article online.

 

– Sheila Warren

@sheila_warren

 

How Bhutan Became a Carbon-Neutral Hub For Crypto Mining

 

Bitdeer’s new 100 MW facility is the first phase of the company's Bhutan project for the small, mountainous nation.

 

The Kingdom of Bhutan, nestled in the foothills of the Himalayas, recently became home to a massive new 100 MW crypto mining data center. And yet few know about it. Indeed, many of us know little about this mysterious Himalayan Kingdom.

 

Bhutan might not seem like an ideal place for a crypto mining data center. It has a lot of mountainous terrain, when data centers normally lay on flatter ground. For why Bhutan is now home for a massive crypto mining center, we must go back to 2005. Continue reading

 

**This is sponsored content by Bitdeer

 

Off-Chain Signals 

  • Are SBF's Lawyers Playing With Fire in the Courtroom? – Unchained
  • FRAX taps Treasury yields with new staking vault – Blockworks
  • Gitcoin DAO gaffe sees $500,000 in GTC tokens lost forever – DL News
  • Inside FTX’s All-Night Race to Stop a $1 Billion Crypto Heist – WIRED
  • BAYC Creator Yuga Labs Announces Major Restructuring – The Defiant
 

All Work & No Play???

 

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Now is your chance to join our Women of Consensus community and get a pair of Pro or Explorer passes for 90% off. These passes are limited so act fast! 

 

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