Deel dit artikel

It Takes a Fake Token to Catch a Volume Faker

Last week, the DOJ unveiled an indictment against Gotbit, which CoinDesk profiled in 2019.

Door Nikhilesh De|Bewerkt door Marc Hochstein
Bijgewerkt 19 okt 2024, 4:38 a..m.. Gepubliceerd 18 okt 2024, 11:30 p..m.. Vertaald door AI
NexFundAI's site, before it was taken down (FBI)

Last week, the Department of Justice announced charges against over a dozen individuals and entities, arguing these market makers were wash trading funds and defrauding people. One of the names was familiar to long-time CoinDesk readers.

PS: I'll be at Flyover Fintech in Lincoln, Nebraska on Monday.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Mis geen enkel verhaal.Abonneer je vandaag nog op de State of Crypto Nieuwsbrief. Bekijk Alle Nieuwsbrieven

You’re reading State of Crypto, a CoinDesk newsletter looking at the intersection of cryptocurrency and government. Click here to sign up for future editions.

'Not entirely ethical'

The narrative

Last week, the U.S. Department of Justice brought charges against a number of people and companies including Gotbit, CLS Global, MyTrade, and ZM Quant, alleging these companies were wash trading cryptos, and their operators and some token promoters were defrauding investors as a result.

Advertentie

Why it matters

Wash trading isn't exactly a massive secret in this industry – as I'll get to further down – but it's still a market signal that can portend poorly.

Breaking it down

Alexey Andryunin told former CoinDesk reporter Anna Baydakova in 2019 that he co-founded a company designed to make it appear that random small-cap cryptocurrencies had real trading volume, with the express purpose of making these tokens appear active enough to secure a listing on CoinMarketCap and draw attention from larger companies.

At the time, Andryunin said, "The business is not entirely ethical."

Five years later, prosecutors appear to agree. Andryunin was arrested in Portugal for extradition to the U.S.

You can read Anna's 2019 report at this link.

The other interesting detail: The FBI worked on its own fake token, with a real contract you could track on-chain, called NexFundAI. Its website, which now features a massive "FBI" banner, looked remarkably legit – that is to say, like a lot of other AI-focused crypto tokens making vague but extravagant promises.

Stories you may have missed

Advertentie

This week

soc 101524

Tuesday

  • 21:00 UTC (2:00 p.m. PDT) There was a brief hearing in SEC v. Payward (Kraken) but it seems to have been a short hearing and the trial appears to be scheduled for August 2026.

Elsewhere:

  • (The Wall Street Journal) Fairshake's ads continue to not mention crypto despite the industry super PAC's focus. "Crypto 'is not an issue that moves the vast majority of voters,'” Ohio GOP Senate nominee Bernie Moreno told the Journal. Other reports by Politico and The Washington Post detail the group's coyness, and of course CoinDesk's own Jesse Hamilton dug into Fairshake's secretive practices this past June.
  • (The Washington Post) Climate change is becoming increasingly expensive by worsening droughts and helping lead to stronger hurricanes. Also worth reading: This piece on Florida's insurance market.
  • (The New York Times) Meteorologists are getting death threats now, which is pretty insane. An individual was even arrested for threatening Federal Emergency Management Agency employees.
soc twt 101524

If you’ve got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you’d like to share, feel free to email me at [email protected] or find me on Twitter @nikhileshde.

Advertentie

You can also join the group conversation on Telegram.

See ya’ll next week!

Note: The views expressed in this column are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of CoinDesk, Inc. or its owners and affiliates.

Lebih untuk Anda

BitSeek: Decentralized AI Infrastructure Revolutionizing the Web3 Industry

Lebih untuk Anda

tr check UAT

dd