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Wherever you look, as long as you avoid checking what's happening to privacy in the UK, and maybe soon in the US...
For once, people on Crypto Twitter have come together to fight against a common enemy: the overreach of regulators. Last week, news broke that a jury in Manhattan had found Roman Storm, the creator of Tornado Cash, guilty of operating an unlicensed money transmitter.
As a reminder, Tornado Cash is a non-custodial mixing service, allowing anyone to obfuscate the trail of their transactions. While North Korean hackers have used it, it has also provided thousands of normal citizens access to much-needed privacy in a world of increasing surveillance.
The bigger threat is the dangerous precedent this judgment could set, with implications for user privacy and open-source developers. Roman had no control whatsoever over the smart contract and could not, even if he had wanted to, stop it. Making him responsible for criminal use of the technology is a bit like asking knife sellers to be responsible when a customer chops up their neighbours instead of onions.
Takeaway: Nothing like a shared enemy to unite and stop the infighting for a bit.
Which, in itself, is quite big news for everyone who, like me, has been holding ETH for the past few years, defending the choice with your lofty integrity and aspiration to see the world computer flourish. Apparently, our time has come, and the ETH price has made our choices seem less off to the outside spectators.
Even Arthur Hayes, the (in)famous co-founder of BitMex - now full-time leisure enjoyer and writer - has been forced to rethink his outlook on the future of ETH. After selling roughly $8.32 million worth of ETH when the price was at $3.5k, g, he changed his mind once ETH crossed $4k.
While his macroeconomic worries, such as tariff fears, lukewarm job report, and a US economy propped up by AI hype, all remain valid, he probably forgot that this market isn't rational. So why expect traders to act that part? Or maybe it was just good old FOMO that got him back in.
Takeaway: No one is safe from feeling FOMO.
We've entered a new era of crypto where outages are not events to decry, but, according to some CT leads, bullish events. The logic is simple: if it was a chain used by no one, no one would care whether it's offline.
The chain in question is Base, the Layer 2 built by Coinbase, which stopped producing blocks for 33 minutes after a switch to a badly configured backup sequencer. All L2s have a sequencer that organizes transactions, batches them, and communicates with the L1.
If the sequencer stops, so does much of the onchain activity because what's a blockchain if no one can transact?
Base has often been criticized for its sequencer setup where Coinbase as the sole sequencer operator acts as a benevolent ruler over transaction ordering. So far, this has stopped no one from using Base, probably aided by the launch of the Base App, and their ability to make you use it to buy coffee while avoiding hipster prices.
Takeaway: These days, just as anything can be a recession indicator, it can be bullish.
Fact of the week: Speaking of overpriced coffee, did you know that instant coffee was invented as early as 1901 by a Japanese chemist named Satori Kato? Only 30 years later, when Nestlé adopted it, it became popular. It remains to this day, with some even using it for self-defense purposes.
Please remember past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Don’t invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. Due to the nature, complexity and volatility of crypto, it may be perceived to be a high‑risk investment. There are no government or central bank guarantees in the event something goes wrong with your investment.
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