The SBF Variety Hour
Do you work for a DAO? Get affordable, premium healthcare by signing up with Opolis. Dear Bankless nation, Things are starting to feel a bit more peaceful after a November where FTX contagion seemed to be lurking around every corner. The industry isn’t in the clear quite yet, but there are plenty of reasons to be optimistic. For this week’s recap:
– Bankless team Weekly RecapHere’s a recap of the biggest crypto news in the final week of November. 1. SBF has more to saySam Bankman-Fried’s unstoppable desire to both speak at length about what went wrong at FTX while also not directly answering any of the questions his customers want to know has been… a bit of a trip. His bloviating has been so cinematic that Marvel filmmakers will soon make an Amazon miniseries out of the FTX fiasco. No, this is not a joke. This week, we witnessed Sam give a full hour-long interview at the NYT’s annual Dealbook Summit with journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin and a rather friendly audience that presumably did not lose many funds in FTX. The interview is being pretty widely derided as a tone-deaf attempt by Sam to explain himself (poorly) without showing much genuine remorse for his actions. Coffeezilla @coffeebreak_YT
THE CROWD ERUPTED IN APPLAUSE AS INTERVIEWER THANKS SAM BANKMAN FRIED FOR COMING ON… uhhhhhhh wut. this man is a psychopath criminal who just lied for an hr straight.
11:16 PM ∙ Nov 30, 2022
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Here are some of the excerpts from the interview… When Sorkin read letters to Sam showcasing the financial pain that many FTX users were now in as a result of FTX’s actions, Sam didn’t give many answers to their questions. Greg Price @greg_price11
Andrew Ross Sorkin reads a letter to SBF: Sorkin: “Can you please ask SBF why he decided to steal my life savings?” SBF: “Yeah. Um, I mean, I’m deeply sorry about what happened.”
10:07 PM ∙ Nov 30, 2022
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When asked about the co-mingling of funds between FTX and Alameda, Sam denies that it was intentional and attributed the problem to mismanagement of funds:
When asked if his lawyers approved of his public appearances, Sam said “No, they are very much not. I don’t see what good is accomplished by me just sitting locked in a room pretending the outside world doesn’t exist”. Greg Price @greg_price11
Ross Sorkin: “What are your lawyers telling you right now? Are they suggesting this is a good idea for you to be speaking?” SBF: “No. They are very much not.”
10:33 PM ∙ Nov 30, 2022
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When asked about why he deleted the following tweet on November 7th:
When asked about his leaked private messages with a Vox reporter claiming his charity work was indeed a sham:
When asked about the $515 million that was transferred out of FTX’s wallets after its bankruptcy filing:
The crypto community didn’t think much of Sam’s public posturing, especially after the interview was followed by an on-air sit-down with ABC’s George Stephanopoulos, a lengthy Twitter Spaces call, and an extensive Bloomberg feature. For many, they were just more excuses from a guy who should just shut up. Eric Wall @ercwl
I’ve been trying to articulate what exactly Sam appears to be lying about, and to my read it’s this: Sam appears to be saying that Alameda had the right to become a massive counterparty to margin positions on FTX with bullshit collateral.
11:24 AM ∙ Dec 1, 2022
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2. BlockFi is doneBack in July, FTX extended a $400M line of credit to BlockFi, with an option to buy out at $240M. With FTX gone, BlockFi is unsurprisingly toppling over. This week, BlockFi is filing Chapter 11 bankruptcy. You can read the full press release here. BlockFi owes between $1 billion and $10 billion in both assets and liabilities to more than 100,000 creditors, of which one of them is FTX US. The distressed crypto lender has reportedly $257M in cash liquidity on hand. BlockFi is also suing an FTX holding company Emergent Fidelity Technologies for Robinhood (HOOD) shares that it pledged as collateral. ayko2718 @ayko2718
So BlockFi is a creditor to FTX that lent to Alameda that lent to Emergent which is a shell company owned by SBF that bought Robinhood shares that were pledged as collateral to guarantee to BlockFi the loan to FTX that was used to bailout BlockFi itself
3:29 AM ∙ Nov 29, 2022
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3. Are Bitcoin miners okay?The basic business model of an Ethereum staker is: Purchase a hardware node like Avado that costs $1000-2000, stake 32 ETH, don’t get slashed and earn rewards. And the business model of a Bitcoin miner is basically energy arbitrage: borrow millions of dollars to buy ASIC mining rigs, mine Bitcoin, pay electricity costs (a whopping 80% of a miner’s operating costs), sell Bitcoin on the market, service their loans, and reap the leftover in profits. Unfortunately, that business model is proving unsustainable for many Bitcoin miners. Rising electricity costs, the large influx of Ethereum miners pre-Merge (leading to increased mining difficulties), and depressed Bitcoin prices in a bear market are bringing many miners close to capitulation as they become unable to service their loans. The past few months has seen an onslaught of bad news for Bitcoin miners. The largest US publicly-traded Bitcoin mining company Core Scientific posted losses of $1.7B last week and warned in October that it may be filing bankruptcy soon. Zack Voell @zackvoell
November was a remarkably shit month for mining. https://t.co/GFbVQXrPsV
2:42 PM ∙ Dec 1, 2022
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The Antminer S19j Pro – considered to be the most energy-efficient Bitcoin mining machine – is currently cash flow negative at current electricity prices. The result: miners are selling aggressively and Bitcoin hash rates are at a decline. Will Clemente @WClementeIII
Bitcoin miners have been selling relatively aggressively. Combined with the hash rate decline and thus today’s hash ribbon bearish cross, this indicates we are indeed in a period of miner capitulation.
9:03 PM ∙ Nov 28, 2022
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4. MetaMask controversyConsenSys owns both MetaMask and the RPC provider Infura. To a lot of people’s ire, ConsenSys updated its privacy policy on Thursday, stating that it collected user data from MetaMask users. Because most MetaMask users connect to Infura by default, it lets Infura collect the user’s IP address and wallet address in order to process transactions. Dan Finlay of MetaMask claims that MetaMask is doing nothing different from any other crypto wallet. Dan Finlay 🦊💙 @danfinlay
We have literally no desire to store more data than we need to. We just happen to have the most assertively transparent privacy policy in web3, and we’re more self critical about how our current web infrastructure works than others are admitting.
Joseph Lubin @ethereumJoseph
Infura does not exploit this data, nor does ConsenSys monetize it. Infura is pursuing technical solutions to minimize data collection, including anonymization techniques and complete elimination of data collected. 12/21 6:13 PM ∙ Nov 25, 2022
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And while ConsenSys leadership said that concerned users could still always point their wallets away from Infura, some users noted that this wasn’t the easiest process. Chase Wright (mysticryuujin.eth 🦇🔊) @mysticryuujin
So MetaMask says “Just don’t use Infura” – so let’s see how easy MetaMask makes it to “not use Infura”. Part 1 – Installation: The first two screens are straight forward here. They seem to provide a clear privacy policy, that’s good.
3:02 PM ∙ Nov 25, 2022
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5. Layer-2s are boomingFTX is going down, but DeFi isn’t. And the Layer-2 ecosystem on Ethereum has the numbers to prove it. Arbitrum’s number of unique contracts and wallets are increasing exponentially. Aylo @alpha_pls
The number of unique contracts & unique wallets deploying contracts on Arbitrum is going vertical. More protocols, more tokens, more NFTs. More things for people to do. More opportunities for value creation.
5:23 PM ∙ Nov 26, 2022
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Delphi Digital @Delphi_Digital
Yesterday, @GMX_IO had more daily fees than @Uniswap for the first time since $GMX’s inception.
5:06 PM ∙ Nov 29, 2022
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Other news:
Here’s what we have lined up next week.
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