This is like the 10th algo stablecoin to eat shit. You would think by now, a risk person could adequately describe these existential risks.
Stablegains was a rent collecting middleman. The risks are not characterized adequately on this page, and there ought to be some level of liability.
Say you promise 0.75% because the bank promised you 1% and you skim 0.25%. Is that scenario fraud? Probably not. At what point is it actually fraud?
My guess is it's not the yield but the loss of deposits.
If you guaranteed 0.75% to your customers and do not deliver, then you are liable. What you are describing is arbitrage and not what this scenario is about.
I wouldn't be surprised if friends of the founders got a half hour heads up before that 08:55 tweet... So that they could withdraw their money at full value.
I assume they might need some more.
https://blog.stablegains.com/we-raised-3-million-and-are-hir...
From their website : "As Stablegains is not a traditional US bank, the funds are not secured by the FDIC. While we aim to make every effort to understand and mitigate everything that can possibly go wrong, there is still a non-zero risk you can lose your deposit. Our advice is to diversify and never invest all of your savings in a single place."
Of course they are selling themselves as pretty safe, and I'm sure they thought they were. But as you mention, it's like the 10th stablecoin to drop, so it's not exactly a surprise that crypto is a risky investment in any case.
The only ones that can "promise" a yield are sellers of titles for a fixed period. Anything else is an estimate at best
We’re approaching a point where being passed over for “culture fit” is a compliment. Hopefully the embarrassment is enough to expand the founder vetting checkboxes.
Exorbitant returns - extremely high probability of ending up at the bottom of the pyramid.
Alice (alice.co / @alice_finance) is another prominent one that may have lost customer funds, which was also using the Anchor protocol. It’s unclear how much they lost, but it’s interesting that Do Kwon’s name is still an actual logo listed on their home page.
And Vertex Protocol (vertexprotocol.com / @vertex_protocol) recently raised $8.5m to launch a trading platform based on the Anchor protocol, but because their Phase 1 beta had just closed and the open launch was not planned until this summer, it looks like they may have just barely dodged the bullet?
What I’m really curious about are the new and (of course) unregulated “insurance” products meant to cover catastrophic crypto depegs, as happened to Terra/Luna. Unslashed (https://app.unslashed.finance/cover) is supposed to kick in after fourteen days, I believe. We’re not quite there yet, it’s barely a week so far. But I’m sure with this kind of implied loss reserves, it’ll be fine…
https://mobile.twitter.com/CurveFinance/status/1416392630754...
They described what they are doing in their documentation, but the core ethical problem here is that the only users that would use their service are those incapable of understanding how UST/Terra worked, because anyone capable of understanding would just deposit funds directly and get higher APR for the same risk! Extremely predatory.
UST fooled many ...not very bright people who genuinely didn't realize it's a ponzi scheme - but obviously smart and technically proficient founders of Stablegains' have no such excuse. Zero room for doubt - they fully knew it's certain to collapse eventually, banking on their legal terms to protect them from liability while privately profiting as long as it works.
Founders of Stablegains belong in prison and everything they own should be confiscated and divided among victims. Sadly they are probably safe - as knowing the inevitability of collapse they must have felt their legalese to be ironclad.
Didn’t think same kind of shit happen in the BTC crazy circa 2017?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXmQW_aqBks
Works every time.
Up to
EDIT: s/advertising/marketing/g I don't really think of them as separate but that's a good point.
That also had a pile of feeder ponzis hanging off the side. They'd claim to be completely uncorrelated with BTCST, but just put their coins into BTCST.
Crypto has now gone beyond replaying old scams from the history of finance, and is now just replaying old scams from the history of crypto. But now they're VC-funded.
1. VCs provide a ton of money, to incentivise token issuers.
2. The issuers pump out a pile of tokens that would constitute unregistered penny stocks. The VCs buy in.
3. If the SEC doesn't bust the issuers, the VCs make a bundle, and much quicker than they could funding a productive company.
4. If the SEC does bust the issuers, the poor widdle investors are protected from the evil issuers, who have to refund investors - the VCs don't lose.
It's the gig economy of penny stock scams, with the legal risk being borne by the issuers.
I'm confused. Were you looking for a cryptocoin that was promising 1,500% gains?
Anyone promising a safe 15% return in a world where your savings account earns 0.15% interest is trying to rob you.
Stablecoins are literally modernised promissory notes and the people hawking them are unregulated banks. It's incredible the people selling these stablecoins are not being regulated as if they are banks.
Just because something didn’t explode previously, doesn’t mean it was safe until now.
Even money market funds, which is what stablecoins are similar to for fiat currencies, are not without risk.
You can talk to the people who built their models and they have lots of fun things to say about the ordeal.
Lambda School and Inflow are two that come to mind.
The main problem with capitalism in one handy sentence.
I was honestly believing that the web3 bullsh.t were just some young people who didn't know any better or some scam-artists (or both), I didn't actually think for a second that a "serious" VC like YC would put money into something like that. Looks like I was wrong.
A company that couldn't get financing any other way could get financing by issuing fixed price convertible bonds. "Fixed price convertible" means the bond can be converted into shares (of the company), but at a fixed price - aka, regardless of the value of each individual share, you are promised fixed a dollar amount of them.
This means if the share price drops, you will be "made whole" by getting issued enough shares to match the fixed price.
It's called death spiral bond, because if/when the price of such a company drops, these convertible bonds will trigger, causing the amount of shares to increase (as they issue new shares), which in turn causes the price of the existing shares to drop, ad-infinitum. Often the owners of the shares would end up with nothing as the shares' value drops to zero (or the company recovers, and they do make some money).
Swap bonds with UST, and shares with Luna, and you get the above scenario.
"15% interest. No surprises."
e: ah, only acting as the middlemen between the end user and a ponzi scheme. Probably that'll give them and their VC backers enough plausible deniability to avoid being arrested.
Article is from July 2021 (according to Google), updated 7 days ago
Once a phrase gains mainstream adoption and starts to rapidly lose meaning, I find that people who care dearly about that thing start calling it something else.
That said -- I really struggle to find the people who are really all in on crypto in a technical sense. Where are the people building cool things and trying to push the boundaries with crypto? Surely it's still happening but just hard to find it in all the debris/trash.
I really cannot believe how we let for so long that many charlatans drive clueless people to financial ruin.
Of course they are not, but UST is. Stablecoins are different from each other. USDT, USDC and DAI are all collateralized (at least partially). UST is minted out of void by burning LUNA, creating demand for LUNA so creators get a profit and turn away, slashing all UST investors. It is an outright ponzi scheme hidden behind layers of DeFi jargons and borrowing trust from true stablecoins like USDC while being fundamentally different from any other responsible stablecoin.
Shares in a company are typically "forfeit" when the company you invested in goes bust.
While its a nice virtue signalling headline - giving up something worth 0 (only not worth a large negative number as shares are limited in liability) is not at all noble.
Ironically, this is partially what made UST so big - because to many people it looked like this:
(1) months of three digit APR - 'obviously unsafe' ('common sense' - high yield is sus, smells like ponzi)
(2) it wasn't a ponzi. Nothing bad happens. Many people make bank. Some have no idea what's safe and were just gambling, some make informed decisions
(3) eventually, the person in question feels stupid for missing free money and decides to put money in with no deep understanding
(4) safe yields crater from a combination of people like that + slow moving, but smart, funds that started to deposit hundreds of millions
(5) person in question deposits into the UST ponzi scheme by extrapolating safety record of non-ponzi farms that are now gone, due to a category error - 'it's defi and it was safe for so long, therefore UST is safe'
(6) not realizing it's a ponzi scheme they don't even try to exit when the gig is up. Massive loss.
Ironically I now see many examples of the same category error but applied in reverse - many people that lost on Luna think its collapse proved that defi is, in fact, fundamentally unsafe, when the reason they lost is because they put their money into a ponzi scheme that leveraged defi brand for marketing.
https://www.investor.gov/protect-your-investments/fraud/type...
2. Algorithmic "stablecoins" don't work, in the same way as perpetuum mobile doesn't work. You think you're inventing a perpetuum mobile, but you're building a Rube Goldberg's machine instead ;)
3. Every algorithmic "stablecoin" can be traced to 2 papers published in 2014: Hayek Money and Robert Sams' Seigniorage Shares
I'm not saying these aren't some other kind of scam but lots of people use "Ponzi" as if it meant any kind of scam... And generally speaking "how many thingy-coins do I own" is the one thing cryptocurrencies focus on making very difficult.
TLDR: Everybody overuses "Ponzi" and it annoys me.
Vegan condoms and sex toys are made without casein or other animal-based byproducts.
Fun fact: a lot [2] of consumer goods use animal-based byproducts either as technical agents (e.g. beer that's being filtered through fish bladders) or as outright ingredients (shampoo, perfume, ...).
[1] https://www.greencondom.club/vegan
[2] https://www.onegreenplanet.org/animalsandnature/products-you...
That being said, calling these platforms "ponzis" isn't correct, the most you can say is that they were front ends for a ponzi. It would be like setting up a front-end to receive investments, and then depositing the money with Madoff. I'm not saying that it is a legitimate business, just not a ponzi.
And I'm not defending these companies either, a very light DD [2] made it obvious that the LUNA-UST mechanism was broken and the collapse was inevitable. It's really messed up that they put clients' money at risk, and that they lost it. I also think that YC is somewhat responsible for this.
What makes the situation even worse is that the collapse didn't happen from one day to the next, they actually had time to pull the money out at a 0.5%-5% loss, but they still decided to wait and see if it would repeg.
[0] https://twitter.com/josusanmartin/status/1478185473499615233
[1] https://twitter.com/josusanmartin/status/1478188494463848448
[2] This DD took me less than 1 hour: https://twitter.com/josusanmartin/status/1524323026942242818
Maybe there's more regulation than I realise (and the emperor has more layers of clothes than Joey Tribbiani), but I'm not seeing it.
I assumed issuance of payment methods was much more strictly controlled than this due to the risk of contagion if the issuer can't meet it's obligations after the transaction (are card payments instant delivery between institutions these days? I always assumed there was a clearing period in the background).
Banning watering gardens is exactly as dumb as banning proof of work. The vast majority of water wastage occurs irrigating farms supporting crops that are unsuitable for that area.
A solar panel connected to a coin miner is only doing good in the world. Where is the negative? You sure it's the mining that is the bad thing and not the dirty energy?
How many people get duped into thinking there's such a thing as "unlimited gain" and "rewards without risks"
Like what, people are just going to give you money without you doing anything?
It would be largely beneficial to everyone, if we were to provide some basic economic/financial/"how money works" lessons to everyone through the use of schools and public education..
So, it’s neither legitimate nor a Ponzi. Cool, what is it then?
Even if your figures seem out of date, your argument against UST also holds for USDT (which underpins much of the crypto price bubble):
There is 7B USD in circulation and the market cap of US(D)T is 74 BILLION USD
All this perceived wealth is going to melt into air soon, and yes a bear market has already arrived.
Why? Because crypto bros are too degen to be okay with 15% yield lol
For one, you are wasting a solar panel that could be offsetting more positive energy usage. And building both the solar panel and the miner is far from emission-free.
Umm, once it's not a legitimate business, it's fraudulent. Exactly what type of fraudulent is a somewhat secondary issue.
[of Boiler Room scams of old] "... often rely on high-pressure sales tactics, such as aggressive cold-calling, misinformation, and extravagant promises to assure buyers that they are buying "a sure thing." [..] The SEC requires brokers to adhere to strict standards when selling securities. Brokers may not misinform or omit material facts when selling securities; nor can they exaggerate their own track records. They are also required to have a “reasonable basis to believe that a recommended transaction or investment strategy is suitable for a customer.”"[0]
Ring any bells?
Do we think customers are really giving informed consent before putting their savings into these platforms?
Bitfinex, for example is being prosecuted. The SEC have cases against a few of the mid-level people, but the founder is hiding out somewhere in Asia, and will never see the inside of a US courtroom.
Also, it's very easy to con someone, but it's almost impossible to convince someone who has been conned that they've been cheated. If you do your due diligence, and disclose your findings, the marks will ignore you, the con artists will smear you in the press, start lawsuits against you, and everyone uninvolved will shrug their shoulders and 'both sides' your feud.
It is another way for retail to hodl their bags for this lie called 'passive income' all into a loss while the VCs dump and exit scam with the founders.
I appreciate the candor -- I still hold out hope, thinking maybe PoS (with equally bought-in parties) could work, but at that point you might as well have regular old paper and pencil coordination/contracts...
The tech is novel, but the applications just don't seem to be falling into place at all... I even consider the ability for it to function as cool points (not NFTs but just a way to make and check exclusive tokens) is OK because it gives community builders a way to pull forward revenue. If I think of it like a self-hosted app for managing exclusive tokens then I can kind of see a use -- if before people didn't have an on-ramp to enforcing their own manufactured exclusivity then maybe it has some positive effects...
Unfortunately right now it looks like the ecosystem is just a backdoor to unregulated securities. Some of the automated exchange stuff (uniswap and co) seemed cool too though I haven't looked too deeply at them.
That's just the way most businesses operate, you build up trust and provide loads of value when you're small. Then, as you expand you take advantage of the trust-inertia to exploit the gap between how much value you are perceived to provide and how much value you actually have to provide to keep getting money (or equity) from people and giving it to yourself.
Building a solar panel and a gpu (say) is not emission free? Because they require energy to refine and manufacture. So we are still back to the fact the issue is with the energy generation. Right?
In 2022, is there any money to be made there, other than:
1. Money that comes from 'less lucky' entrants in the various zero sum schemes?
2. Money that comes from selling shovels to the con artists running #1?
As a bystander, I'm not seeing any other ways that 'web3' is making money - and I'd argue that if it's just those two, then that's a pretty bad use case. I mean, it's good for the participants who are making money, but all that money comes from impoverishing others.
We are mobilizing all these resources and manufacturing capacity to do what? Run infinite loops on a useless program?
Meanwhile at my lab that works on bio simulations they could not find gpus to do their research.
I don't see how they can justify making such a claim. Once you put the money into their system the cash is converted to UST. No one is earning interest on their cash.
Comparing themselves to a bank, and using terminology like "deposit" and "withdrawl" are sketchy as hell. All those imply that the capital is not at risk, which it obviously was.
If you're driving 200kph and crash, you weren't safe before the crash and unsafe afterwards.
This was absolutely a thing; most large Ponzi schemes have feeder funds.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-pwc-madoff-settlement-idU...
Are gamers just running useless programs too?
We mobilise resources for whatever people want to pay for… “why” they want to spend their money on that has never been an issue.
Is Gucci wasting leather that could otherwise be used to make school shoes? Ban Gucci!
What happens when some old depositor wants to cash out? Money comes out of new money that's coming in. As long as there's enough new money it works (the fundamental ponzi property). The system also utilizes some liquidity buffers (liquidity pools with other stablecoins) that can absorb temporary volatility in a redemption demand - which works as long as money flow is positive. When that stops being true, and liquidity buffers run out - both UST and Luna started collapsing, with 100% of inflows redirected to UST sellers.
Viewed as a system - all difference to a traditional, straightforward ponzi disappears. Empirically, this obfuscation is so successful from the marketing perspective algostables with meaningless changes (or even not) will continue to proliferate, although it may take years for any to get as big as UST.
* and also dumping them all together overnight
> Stablegains is not a bank and the assets stored in your Stablegains account are not insured by any private or governmental insurance plan (FDIC or SIPC), nor are they covered by any compensation scheme (including FSCS). There is a range of safeguards in place to help secure your deposits, however holding and depositing stablecoins with Stablegains and third party lending platforms still carries significant risk. Please carefully read our Terms of Use and Risk disclosures in our Learning Center before making a deposit. Any deposit with Stablegains and third party lending platforms is entirely your responsibility. You understand that your principal is at risk.
> Stablegains does not provide any financial, legal, or tax advice, nor should this website be viewed as an offer or inducement to make any financial decisions. The interest rate refers to the level of current daily interest payments, is not guaranteed for any specific period and may be modified in the future depending on the conditions in the lending markets used.
At least you know you can report them to the cops, which you should do if you have been a victim of fraud:
> Stablegains, Inc. is registered as a Money Services Business (MSB) number 31000211740426 with the US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).
The reason YC gave for the rejection was that Mexico was an unknown market, and they felt lending in there was too risky for them.
Makes me wonder what was the decision logic to accept this Stablegains, against that background it doesn't make any sense.
Was YC aware of the ponzi nature of this thing and decided to dip in? It just makes no sense.
Lying about source of potential gains concerns marketing of it - which is something external and done by humans, and not part of the internal distribution of money flows. How can an algorithm itself commit fraud? It can't.
Blockchains themselves have a bright future though as a technology which is truly fantastic and keeps innovating rapidly. Right now, with all the negative press, it may be easy to dismiss it, but it will come back as a trustless computing platform that the world needs.
I am biased, as we chose to build in that domain but proud that we're developing actual new tech for smart contracts... YC, you can still accept us in the next batch :)
Which is precisely why you see dApp usage numbers crater. Check out OpenSea's daily volume on Dune.xyz as an example - down to $30M/day from consistent $150M/day even a month ago.
Like buying a monthly subscription for a tool like, say, Icy.tools, is so much faster when you can pay directly with metamask. No accounts, no logins, no credit card screens.
The catch, of course, is that for the tech to get adopted by the mainstream, you will need way more regulations and safeguards. Maybe KYC on wallets (which means creating accounts/logins), maybe the ability to reverse transactions to reduce fraud.
All of these regulations might introduce enough friction that the final experience doesn't differ much from current legacy systems.
But a built-in browser wallet that makes payments (including micropayments) easier is really needed. It's the only antidote to our current advertising dependent model of the web.
Something like this happened with Madoff in a very similar manner to what you describe.
Madoff was a board member on one the schools at Yeshiva University. J. Ezra Merkin was on Yeshiva University's investment committee. Merkin funneled some of the University's money directly into his own fund which turned out to be 100% invested in Madoff.
Now, in some ways this is an even bigger ethical breach. lets say Merkin didn't know that Madoff was sketchy, why does he have to use his fund as a middle man for the University's funds when Madoff is on the board so he presumably can invest the funds directly with Madoff. The only reason is to skim off the top. For others, who didn't have an entry into Madoff's funds themselves, perhaps the middleman has value (assuming the middleman really believes in the underlying investment, if they are just there to skim off the top, the I would say they are not fundamentally different than ponzi themselves, as they are just pulling a Sgt Shultz, "I see nothing, I hear nothing, I know nothing")
A Ponzi scheme is an investment fraud that pays existing investors with funds collected from new investors.
https://www.investor.gov/introduction-investing/investing-ba...
And by "making money", we really mean transferring money from gullible and/or desperate fools to unscrupulous insiders.
I don't get why calling it a Ponzi is so popular when there wasn't something paying returns using other people's money.
Hanlon's razor.
https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/profile.aspx?facId=697248
https://medium.com/terra-money/have-you-met-marco-216ca2a8b9...
https://assets.website-files.com/611153e7af981472d8da199c/61...
https://cdck-file-uploads-global.s3.dualstack.us-west-2.amaz...
Why did you decide to join Terra?
I thought Terra provided the perfect environment to apply what I learned in my research. Ensuring the stability of a digital currency closely resembled the issues faced by central banks in deciding monetary policy measures, while the lessons learned in studying trading in the equity and bond markets are crucial in guarding against potential manipulation by malicious market participants.
What do you think are Terra’s strengths compared to other blockchain projects or potential competitors?
There are several, but I will mention just three. First, there is no improvisation. In fact, our strong research team stays grounded and informed by the latest research in economics and finance, devoting a lot of attention in making sure that Terra’s ecosystem remains stable. Second, top eCommerce companies in Asia are pushing for Terra’s adoption, ensuring that Terra will be widely used from the start. Finally, the team is composed by a diverse and uniquely qualified set of people that are excited to collaborate in solving one of the most exciting challenges of our time.
Is this even enforceable? This is a contract agreement under duress. You can't absolve yourself just by saying these things; their terms do not supersede the law of the land.
Elements of economic duress
* - Wrongful or improper threat.
* - No reasonable alternative.
* - The other party caused the financial distress.27 March 2022 > There are no lock-up periods. Withdraw your funds any time and keep the interest you earned.
18 May 2022 > There are no long-term lock-up periods.
These guys are going under.
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20220308041252/https://www.stabl...
first a cryptic puzzle as a recruiting tool for analysts: https://twitter.com/Galois_Capital/status/148693793605468979...
followed by months of warnings like this: https://twitter.com/Galois_Capital/status/151217543903232819...
and threads pushing the systemic risk angle: https://twitter.com/Galois_Capital/status/150461116699529216...
That's what a savings account is, essentially. The same thing with bigger numbers isn't immediately nonplausible to someone who doesn't understand the mechanics of what makes savings accounts nearly risk free and how that doesn't apply to the alternative.
But sure, lets make it a moral good that we don't (get to) have money too. The 1% deserve all the money!
I feel like "ponzi" has become the "magazine/clip" derailer of crypto discussions.
> Here is how an algorithmic stablecoin works. You invent two tokens, call them Dollarcoin and Sharecoin. ... The process is sometimes compared to algorithmic central banking, where the central bank maintains the value of the currency (Dollarcoin) by adjusting its supply.
> On first principles this is insane.
Notably, these cards require online funds verification and settlement for every transaction. Some cards you might get through a bank or major card company may not, for convenience sake. But these cards do, for the obvious reason.
They're essentially pre-paid cards that load instantly (at the point of transaction) from a larger balance the dev/company controls.
There are even multiple APIs for creating card issuing APIs, checking account issuing APIs, etc. These have itemized pricing that looks more like AWS/GC/Azure pricing and are more complicated to use, in the same way AWS is more complicated than running everything on a single Digital ocean droplet.
1. Loan Application (Borrower Lying about income) 2. Mortgage Originator ( Not validating loan application ) 3. Mortgage Back Security Creators ( Obfuscate what is in the security ) 4. Ratings Agencies ( Not being honest that step 3 happened ) 5. Sellers of MBS ( Not being honest that steps 1-4 exist )
I don't know enough about crypto to list out all the layers but I'm pretty sure I understand the first step:
1. Claim that underlying technology will be revolutionary just like the internet in a vague way that cannot be validated.
And then the CEO guy basically says that their old school finance may consider it a Ponzi but it’s the future of finance and they’re just gonna end up suffering from FOMO.
Excuse my ignorance on crypto. I don’t understand how UST can drop 90% when I assume it required some sort payment of some other currency/coins to get mint them. I heard it was tens billions of UST was minted. So what happened to these coins? Were they used to pay out the interest?
I’m guessing they don’t have enough users and can make people whole using their seed fund.
You can get rich in a gold rush selling shovels. And it doesnt really matter if there's no gold, or not enough for all the miners to make a living. And why would a shovel salesman focus on the negative like that?
But we're building for a future where apps like Calendly can be smart contracts. With new blockchains* that have a very low tx fee (imagine $0.00001 / tx), I clearly see many services migrate to smart contracts.
They won't require any subscription, existing data is never at risk of being wiped out, and hopefully we will keep optimizing app and data size enough to get back to apps that just work, without the cruft or bad incentives. We're here to make that happen!
* New research papers suggest we can reach > 100k tx / sec with great safety and liveness properties
They answer all your question and are much more cohesive than anything I could type here.
It's very easy to join a "conversation" by picking up a pedantic point. Compare that to arguing over the fundamentals which actually requires some knowledge and experience.
By being pedantic it's very easy to "win" an argument, you're entering with a position you consider factually correct.
It's not at all productive as you indicate, and actually harms more productive conversation by de-railing the conversation.
YC was unique in that 15 years ago the narrative around raising money was radically different: YC was the only game in town that understood the amount of potential being ignored by traditional investors, and so they had a smorgasbord of excellent opportunities to pick from.
The world is very different now, YC demonstrated that their model worked and nowadays everyone has learned from YC…
…that means there’s no longer this vastly underserved market of brilliant teams that just need a little capital and a little faith and a little guidance, which is the market YC excelled in, nowadays everybody understands that and any competent team could raise money with their eyes closed.
Nowadays getting into YC remains perceived as prestigious but it’s not, really, compared to what it once was: the cycle sizes are huge and the quality has plummeted.
I don’t believe YC, as an organisation, is actively intending to benefit from ponzi-like companies, but YCs thesis (bet on a good team and they will do good things) is very vulnerable to a good team working on a god awful idea that has serious fallout when the market conditions have normalised insane behaviour: a decade ago, StableGains wouldn’t have made it into YC because no YC team would have thought it was sensible.
So, while YC should be held accountable, it’s ultimately a market problem, we’re in a market that values these awful predatory financial propositions, hence almost every prestigious investment organisation has some exposure to this sort of company (it’s just not blown up for all of them, yet, but soon come).
The number of developers became a key metric for coins to project legitimacy and there are certainly SWEs who are bad actors and/or knowingly contributing
Scaling also doesn’t seem to be in the interest of miners who essentially provide the network security…
This is a pretty meaningless distinction if you invested in them, because you were exposed to the same mechanics, but it does have some implications for culpability because it's the difference between “should have known it was a ponzi” and “actually operated a ponzi”.
I'd treat the offer of earning 20% interest on a risk-free investment with the same scepticism I'd treat the offer of buying a perpetual motion machine.
You can have abnormally high interest, or your capital can be risk-free. I simply don't believe it's possible to have both, at least not over the long term.
No sign-up flow, no emails, no commitment. You just tap login and you have an account. One more tap and you've paid.
Plus other benefits like effectively free micro-transactions as small as thousands of a penny at a transaction rate in tens of milliseconds, for some chains (e.g. Solana w/Phantom or SolFlare browser extension).
All this adds up to being able to try, pay, assess, and "logout" of any completely novel (to you) service/site faster than a WSJ article page can load.
The effortless of the user experience doesn't translate well to words. Getting use to this frictionless use of compatable web apps is an experience qualitatively similar to browsing the web with an ad blocker. You can't go back. Going back feels broken, messy, slow, and outright aggravating.
What this says about the original purpose of Bitcoin is left to the reader.
For the people who get sucked into these things, it’s asking a lot for them to educate themselves without being burned - especially when there are so many communities dedicated to shoving out naysayers.
They don’t “understand” Mexico and are scared that their investment will get Pemex’d or something - and since that’s a known financial risk their backers would be like “wtf you doing?”
But “unknown” risks (even if actually quite easy to see) don’t have the same pushback from their investors. In fact, their investors may be demanding that they heavily invest in unknown risks.
why the founders didn't flinch... who knows? maybe they decided that 3ac being invested is their security.
That’s disingenuous. When you put money into a high yield savings account, or even into a fiat backed 1:1 stablecoin you’re doing something. You’re providing liquidity. A high yield savings account (2-4%) or yield on a fiat backed 1:1 stablecoin (5-8%) is risky in the sense that you need to trust a bank (or exchange), but that’s eased by FDIC (which some exchanges like Gemini have [1]).
the industry keeps chasing undercollateralized algo stablecoins because of capital efficiency. jon wu explains to laura shin, worth a watch: https://twitter.com/laurashin/status/1525505300219961344
Given that there’s literally no productive return-producing enterprise underpinning any of this it’s totally fine to consider the word ponzi at least loosely applicable to the entire concept of cryptocurrency as practiced.
Skipping the middleman is necessarily better because it is inherently lower risk for an absolute guarantee of 33% more upside.*
Investing in something else with even 16% promised returns, let alone 1500%, is not necessarily better because it is almost certainly higher risk.
* When Anchor (Luna/UST) crashed both StableGains and direct users of Anchor suffered the same percentage losses. But direct investors in Anchor had balances which were necessarily 33% ahead of StableGains investors due to not having StableGains shave off their interest earnings.
but this collapse was entirely predictable- many analysts pointed it out and were mocked by kwon and the self-described LUNAtics.
founders either didn't do enough diligence, or didn't care.
Thanks, some great stuff. This[0] jumped out at me:
"But there is no magic here. There is no algorithm to guarantee that Luna is always worth some amount of money. The algorithm just lets people exchange Terra for Luna. Luna is valuable if people think it’s valuable and believe in the long-term value of the system that you are building, and not if they don’t.
The danger here is that Point 7 never goes away. Any morning, people could wake up and say “wait a minute, you just made up this all up, it’s worthless,” and decide to dump their Lunas and Terras."
You also can't really add "almost always" to "completely safe". It's either "completely safe", or it's not. This statement is just "it works 100% of the time 65% of the time", but with words rather than numbers.
"It's 'completely safe', until it's not" which is exactly the point that I and others in this thread started with.
Due to their actual stability (relative to other stablecoins), they're more likely to trade at a premium than at a discount.
About a year ago I traded 10,000 USDC for 12,100 USDT during a run on a certain DeFi bridge, only to trade it back to 12,080 USDC a couple hours later.
My friends know I'm the local crypto-geek[0] so Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and tokens are brought up to me all the time by people who's knowledge of what any of it is begins and ends with "Last year X coin was $7.00 and this year it's $100.00, and all of the other ones have had gains like nothing else I can invest in."
I can think of at least 6 members of my extended family who are presently invested in cryptocurrency trading (many just say "Bitcoin" and don't actually have any) who are -- in every way -- technologically obliviously ignorant[1]. Half of them, however, are not otherwise uneducated people (one guy is a very well paid VP at a company everyone in my state has heard of and has an MBA from a major university ... he's just not in finance or tech). They're not thinking "well, 15% APY is insane/impossible to provide over the short term/impossible to ever guarantee unless they've invented a time machine or are breaking the law." They're looking at the percentage gains on Bitcoin or Ethereum (depending on when you acquired it, of course -- Lord knows it's taken a hit lately) and thinking "15% sounds easy for a company to pull off in this space."
Everyone in my family who invested in some crypto used some company to hold their crypto. Almost all of them used services/companies that had enough of a strong scent of "scam" that I would have dismissed them without further research. Some used more mainstream crypto-sort-of-banks. Sort-of-banks because none of the companies that my family members chose for crypto trading were FDIC or otherwise insured in a manner that made sure the numbers they see on their page could be turned into dollars in a bank account somewhere else. The surprising thing is that none of them had any idea this was the case! A few family members thought they were buying Bitcoin because they were investing in "cryptocurrency" and it turned out they were buying some strange token running on the Ethereum network.
I'll grant it's a small sample size, but in every way it's consistent ... it's a "gold rush" kind of frenzy filled, unfortunately, with a lot of fraudsters riding the wave of news around the crazy gains of crypto.
The thing that scares me the most is that a few of my family members[2] have done very well trading crypto (4x/5x/10x their yearly salary). Some lost a little, the others gained a little. The ones that did well aren't treating it like a short-term gamble, even watching the prices drop ... it's like they're holding on to the stock of a company that they deeply believe in except ... there's no company.
[0] I don't invest, I did mine Ethereum a while back/spent most of it and made a small profit but did it mostly to learn how the miner worked and how to write CUDA software. I worked SecDev for a couple of years at a global telecom and I enjoy the technology behind it all.
[1] One of them -- not elderly -- called for help reconnecting to his 4G modem (their only internet service). The instruction "reboot your computer" was not understood. I fell back to "turn it off, count to ten, turn it on again." Nope, right back where he left it. I had not seen his computer setup so I could provide no more instruction. When I arrived I discovered he was "rebooting" ... the monitor.
[2] Four, precisely, two who are distantly related through a great aunt and are working together, but are among the most irresponsible people with money I've ever known, and two who are quite good with most things financial.
Edit: Realized my tone was harsh in a few places and there was one inaccuracy.
Elon needs to buy HN and open source the algorithm! /s
This is a story about a company 1) in the crypto space, that 2) lost all of it's users money, and 3) used misleading disclaimers (and potentially trying to change them after the fact)
It has already devolved in multiple threads to discussion about what is-and-is-not technically a ponzi scheme (vs other forms of scams/fraud).
This whole thing is a recipe for a giant flame war.
https://techcrunch.com/2014/08/13/backpack-connects-you-with...
https://techcrunch.com/2016/01/28/shypmate-pays-travelers-to...
Terra and the Anchor protocol should have appeared fraudulent to any expert from the very start.
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/10/early-theranos-investor-tim-...
Terra is a proof-of-stake blockchain
DAI/MakerDAO isn't an algorithmic "stablecoin", it's an unregistered SEF (Swap Execution Facility) which should be regulated by the CFTC in the US, and similar agencies in other parts of the world.
The only reason DAI didn't broke the USD peg during the "crypto" bear market, is because OG's cost base of ETH was zero to 30 cents, and their objective was to save MakerDAO, rather than make a profit on their CDPs.
> the industry keeps chasing undercollateralized algo stablecoins because of capital efficiency.
Isn't it obvious? ;)
The energy industry also chased perpetuum mobile because of the fuel efficiency, so what?
IMO there are ways to design a capital-efficient low-volatility digital assets (not algorithmic "stablecoins" per say - they're impossible), but they will most-likely be illegal in any developed country, as they will be an exotic derivative instruments.
From the JTBD PoV, the job of the "stablecoins" is to hedge your exposure to the volatile "crypto" assets. The only way to do this is either to exchange them to a less volatile assets, or to enter into a contract with somebody else willing to take the risk in exchange for something.
It's extremely profitable to invest in a Ponzi if you are early to the scheme.
“Terra achieves price stability by creating stable incentives for mining (PoS consensus) via highly predictable rewards. We propose a framework to evaluate the stability of Terra’s peg under stress. […] Our findings, based on 1 million years’ worth of simulation data, indicate that Terra’s peg is highly robust under both forms of stress.”
> But is this any more likely to happen than, say, the global thermonuclear war that is held at bay by the principle of MAD? I feel like we are surrounded by doomsday scenarios; economic and existential. Who would pull the pin on this one? Or is the problem blind faith in an algo? - https://twitter.com/thestephoflife/status/151220218743844864...
So what about 0.98 then, or any arbitrary value between 1 and 0? The lower you go, the lower the chance it will bounce back to 1, but the higher your loss if it does. Ultimately it all balances out and each of these bets is just another gamble with no outsized return.
Not only do feeders increase the sales force the reduction in yield by the feeder's profit margin actually helps hit more of the potential market: People hear 20% apy and assume it's a scam... but 15% apy? 10% apy? -- starts just sounding like a good deal.
The entire process is fundamentally flawed. No adjustment will fix a faulty premise. Please stop pushing faulty thinking like this.
The risks seem really obvious after everything falls through but there are plenty of other companies that are "obvious scams" who happen to have made it by luck/skill/investment.
I personally have lots of misgivings about various crypto but I really don't have enough expertise to argue against someone telling me that I just don't understand and everything is fine.
Even when it does go wrong, there still might not be a crime any more serious than being an idiot, obviously would be different if the company misrepresents itself for gain, which would be fraud.
I suspect that many of these people genuinely believe their own hype, which is how they convince others to buy into it.
That's a fair and reasonable reason.
Countries have their own specificities and, very importantly, their own laws an regulations. If you're not familiar the wise move is to stay out.
It’s unclear if they have jurisdiction. The likes of Coinbase’s Armstrong have certainly been lobbying hard to constrain it. In any case, it’s hard to be sympathetic when escaping regulation is the rallying cry of so many crypto enthusiasts.
Where is the line between an outright scam and just people believing their own bullshit.
How much of the real value of cryptocurrency is not monetary? How much of the value is in the existential value of participation, e.g. Dogecoin?
Operative word being "imagine low transaction costs". We're in the 14th year of hearing about how low crypto fees can be compared to Visa, MC and Western Union and yet not a single real example with consumer-level scale has emerged.
Which is why I said that the tech really needs a lot of improvements. But the core idea of a browser wallet that takes care of logins and payments is really powerful and might just be crypto’s killer app
From their site:
> ¹ FDIC insurance applies only to the USD reserve funds. GUSD exist as ERC-20 tokens on the Ethereum blockchain; tokens are under the user’s self-custody, and are not insured through Gemini.
So if you send them USD, they'll hold your USD in an FDIC insured account. If you hold GUSD, and it turns out GUSD is a fraud or is otherwise insolvent, your SOL.
That's interesting. I never thought of it that way. Solutions to the "Amazon doesn't deliver here" problem are quite popular in Ghana. Asking someone returning to get you something is quite common. I have friends who've created businesses around this.
I don’t know anything about stablegains but this reads like they just take money and put it into UST, so users lost 80% of their funds with the depeg. “This is something all users signed up for” -‘stable’gains
The risks are obvious the second you see that they offer 15% yield, which is roughly DOUBLE the current yield of the average junk bond, and about QUADRUPLE the yield at the time YC closed.
A company being unable to meet its original obligations due to a bad business model is a type of financial risk that falls under this definition.
> risk premium arises from supply and demand in markets typically with some kind of quoting system.
Risk premium arises any time there exists an investment that's riskier than the safest possible investment (whatever it may be). No other conditions are necessary.
"Due to unprecedented market conditions on the Terra blockchain - most notably risks of TerraUSD de-pegging as previously disclosed in (help.alice.co......) the UST to USD offramp is unavailable...we are unfortunately uncertain when ramp services will be resumed.
For information on alternative paths to convert to USD please see..."
the alternative paths are withdrawing to a wallet or exchange and getting 8 cents on the dollar.
“Its not a Ponzi, it's just paper thin layer of indirection on top of a Ponzi, which is often how most victims of a Ponzi scheme are brought in” is maybe not as important of a distinction as you are making it out to be.
I'm curious why you call the first one cryptic though? It seems the opposite to me: it refers to all the elements by their actual, real-cryptocurrency-world names. To me, "cryptic" would mean that it abstracted away from all the actual terminology used, and just describes it in terms of pure mathematical finance, which would be cryptic since you'd be left wondering, "uh, what is this referring to? Is this an actual thing?"
I also don't see how it works as a recruiting tool. This is a space that involves exploiting domain knowledge, and it's trying to bring in expert outsiders who just haven't yet used their analytical expertise in this domain. But tweets heavily depend on you already knowing how all these protocols work (e.g. what staking/minting/gauge weight mean). Such a person, if an expert analyst as well, would already be working in the field or exploiting that knowledge themselves, and you wouldn't be plucking such diamonds out of the Twitter rough.
I don’t blame you for getting that impression, though. The Gemini dollar marketing page talks about earning high yields, and it talks about FDIC protection. It doesn’t explicitly mention whether you can get the yields and the insurance as the same time, but the answer is no.
https://twitter.com/galois_capital/status/148693794923729715...
what about makerdao makes it reliant on dao goodwill? the incentive to restore the peg is the expectation of profits from liquidating the overextended.
I didn't said that. Once they're listed on "exchanges" or traded on DEX, their price isn't under control of the protocol, and in theory can be anything.
>they promise to be able to repeg in times of severe distress. even some money markets broke the dollar. they had to be bailed out by the government.
MMFs are funds with the NAV which supposed to be around $1.00 (that in addition to earning an interest). In case the NAV goes under $0.95, the fund has to be liquidated. See "Breaking the Buck":
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/breaking-the-buck.asp
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/mutualfund/08/money-ma...
>what about makerdao makes it reliant on dao goodwill? the incentive to restore the peg is the expectation of profits from liquidating the overextended.
Why people kept locking ETH in MakerDAO CDPs over and over during the "crypto" bear market, when ETH was in the free fall? It doesn't make sense from the economic PoV. It only makes sense if your ETH is cheap and you want to prove that MakerDAO works.
Different agents optimize for different things. Some (most?) optimize for size of their wallet/bank account, others want to save their project/ecosystem. Both types are rational.
If you are a us citizen, you can buy $10k per year from treasurydirect.gov
It’s “risk free” in that it’s guaranteed by the us treasury.
No, that assumption (emphasis added) is popular but utterly false.
In a Ponzi scheme, cash from new buy-ins gets FRADULENTLY reported to existing participants as dividends from the underlying business or investment.
That fraudulent reporting of fake-dividends is essential to the scheme, because it's how the scammer lures in successive waves of investors to keep it perpetuated.
Unsustainable optimistic speculation != Ponzi Scheme
Malcolm Gladwell had a phrase for this in a 1996 article about a vacation town that favoured hiring temp workers from the Caribbean (Gladwell is part-Caribbean) instead of black Americans who lived in nearby towns.
The employers made a decision on the basis known unknowns and unknown knowns. Gladwell described it thusly:
"Better the ghetto you don't know than the ghetto you know".
Whether it comes back or not will depend, imo, on Bitcoin adhering to the 4 year cycle. So far, Bitcoin has gone up after every halving. Bitcoin leads and the market follows on the “inevitability” of Bitcoin going up after a halving.
But Bitcoin has also only existed in a relaxed regulatory regime and a monetary policy of low rates and cheap money. Now cheap money is off the table and the market has become too big to go unregulated.
If Bitcoin doesn’t go up in the next cycle, it might just break faith in the market and then who knows?
I’d check back in mid-late 2023 if I were you. You might also want to learn some solidity development. All the decent devs I know who were active from 2019 onwards made 8 figures this run
from your link:
> In 2008 however, the day after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy, one money market fund fell to 97 cents after writing off the debt it owned that was issued by Lehman. This created the potential for a bank run in money markets [...] the next day the United States Treasury announced a program to insure the holdings of publicly offered money market funds so that should a covered fund break the buck, investors would be protected to $1 NAV
if the US Treasury insured $ust, luna would have been fine
---
> Why people kept locking ETH in MakerDAO CDPs over and over during the "crypto" bear market, when ETH was in the free fall?
they're long eth. it's not altruistic, it's incentive alignment.
It was often in usd.
>"It's 'completely safe', until it's not" which is exactly the point that I and others in this thread started with.
The meaning was: almost all smart contracts were safe, meaning you had to at least check the code before depositing.
It was conflated in the past because without smart contracts ponzi schemes were necessarily executed by people.
>Unsustainable optimistic speculation != Ponzi Scheme
Speculation on a token that doesn't generate any income and isn't backed by anything is one version of a ponzi scheme, yes.
Surely the onus is on those promoting such schemes to convincingly explain their workings; if you can get 20% a year the explanation had better be good...
This is just the last resort of a scoundrel who knows they can’t explain their scam.
Your comment makes me think you might be under a misimpression of how HN moderation works, so here's a refresher.
We moderate HN less, not more, when YC or a YC startup is the story. That doesn't mean we don't moderate at all (though in the case of this particular thread, we literally did not moderate it at all—any perception that made it seem that we did was completely mistaken). This is literally the #1 rule of HN moderation. It's the first thing that PG drilled into me when he trained me to do this job years ago. I hadn't even had a chance to grab a chair yet.
https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu...
The reason we have this rule is that the good will of the community is literally the only value HN has, and that is not worth risking.
Stablegains had nothing going for it, in fact it had all of the risk with none of the reward. 1500% APYs are usually attached to LPs carrying huge risks of impermanent loss rather than stablecoin staking and are usually very transient in that they evaporate within hours.
FWIW I disagree with Anchor being termed a ponzi.
In many jurisdictions around the world, there isn’t much of any difference between “directly handed the loaded gun to the killer” and “pulled the trigger and killed someone”.
Sincerely, an old fart who hasn't seen 35 in the rearview mirror for a while now.
The real money was in services (brothels, gambling, baths) and consumables (food, booze).
[…]
> They won't require any subscription, existing data is never at risk of being wiped out, and hopefully we will […] get back to apps that just work, without the cruft or bad incentives. We're here to make that happen!
I fail to see what the advantages are of having a calendar app/service implemented as a DAO.
I can see the advantages of federation (ala email or the fediverse), and I can see the advantages of a "local first" approach, but what does a web3/DAO bring to the party?
The trustless use-cases I can imagine are quite sociopathic, like selling appointment slots with price discrimination, or reserving a slot for a smaller fee, or allowing resale of appointments or reservations, or remaking any and all of the above transactions into auctions.
Turning every little thing into a multi-sided market sounds exhausting and pathological.
You can apply this sort of thinking to other existing app/site categories, like wikis. No longer do you have to endure edit wars, you can just bid to finalize your preferred version! Unless 50% of the editors veto your edit, in which case you forfeit your bid. Oh joy, now a bad faith actor can't just pay one wiki editor under the table to slant the content your way, you have to bribe a whole bunch to prevail. Yes, that would be a huge improvement.
I don't know, perhaps I am lacking in imagination, but the negative social consequences of monetizing relationships and social transactions are pretty well known and I'm not really seeing a commensurate benefit:
https://rady.ucsd.edu/faculty/directory/gneezy/pub/docs/fine...
For what it’s worth, I was also 35 once.
If you lock your ETH into a CDP - you believe that ETH will not go down. You can also take the DAI from one CDP, exchange it to ETH, and then re-invest it into another (or the same?) CDP - thus creating a synthetic leveraged ETH long position. This can be repeated multiple times;)
My point was that people continued locking ETH into CDPs during the 2018's 90% fall in ETH prices, which only made sense if they had cheap ETH (i.e. insiders/OGs), and their goal was to prevent DAI from de-pegging.
MakerDAO's CDP doesn't seems to be the best instrument for making a LONG bet on ETH. You can just hold ETH, or you can buy ETH futures on Bitmex if you want leverage.
The problem with many algorithmic "stablecoin" designs is the assumption that there always will be speculators willing to take the risk in exchange of betting that peg will be restored. But unlike the designated market makers in some regulated markets, crypto speculators are not contractually obligated to take the risk.
Users need to monitor their open CDPs and add collateral if they are at risk. This has been done to protect users from paying the liquidation penalty fee, which is ~ 13%.
Also, do you really need leverage if your ETH's cost basis is 0 to 30c at the time when market price was in the range of $141 to $816 range?
It's all rounding error to you, you can basically print DAI out of thin air.