Weekly recaps
Issue 62 – Grassroots
Coinbase’s Stand With Crypto Alliance fudges the numbers, a (former) crypto industry CEO has a meltdown, and another exchange suffers a nine-figure hack.
FollowTheCrypto.org: A new project to track cryptocurrency industry spending to influence 2024 elections in the United States.
Weekly recaps
How will recent Supreme Court decisions affect the crypto world? Also, more absurdity from the crypto lobby, and some new regulatory actions.
Weekly recaps
The crypto industry jumps on the Trump train.
As election season kicks into high gear, we need to watch how cryptocurrency companies are influencing US politics.
Many yearn for the “good old days” of the web. We could have those good old days back — or something even better — and if anything, it would be easier now than it ever was.
AI can be kind of useful, but I'm not sure that a "kind of useful" tool justifies the harm.
"Ownership" means ten different things to ten different people. Let's talk about what we actually want.
Prominent crypto venture capitalist Chris Dixon provides an unconvincing bible for blockchain solutionists.
Silicon Valley's "effective altruism" and "effective accelerationism" only give a thin philosophical veneer to the industry's same old impulses.
Citation Needed features critical coverage of the cryptocurrency industry and of issues in the broader technology world.
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Are US legislators warming to crypto? The SEC approves Ethereum ETPs, and a crypto bill gets through the House.
As election season kicks into high gear, we need to watch how cryptocurrency companies are influencing US politics.
I am more worried about privacy than crypto crime.
The Justice Department worries about the stability of Ethereum, DCG tries to bilk their subsidiary's creditors, and Biden threatens a crypto veto.
Changpeng Zhao's sentencing, FOIA requests reveal past FBI investigations into Coinbase, and the SEC is on a Wells notice bender.
Many yearn for the “good old days” of the web. We could have those good old days back — or something even better — and if anything, it would be easier now than it ever was.
The Binance CEO's sentencing draws near, and prosecutors have been busy chasing down other crypto criminals. Also, lawmakers take another stab at stablecoin regulation.
AI can be kind of useful, but I'm not sure that a "kind of useful" tool justifies the harm.
The bitcoin "halving" looms, and that may not be as good news as coiners hope. Also, Terra committed fraud and Uniswap got a Wells notice.
An interview with Ryder Ripps, a defendant in the Yuga Labs v. Ripps case about Bored Ape Yacht Club trademark infringement and racism.
Crypto-related litigation is in full swing, as the Terra civil fraud trial has kicked off and two other cases against crypto companies have survived motions to dismiss.
"The judgment has to adequately reflect the seriousness of the crime, and this was a very serious crime."