Started digging around. Read their TOS and Privacy Policy. Analyzed their relationship with the Anchor protocol.
Then I found screenshots of the founder’s notebooks and code. Showing deposit amounts…
At that point I knew this wasn’t about actually delivering value to customers if they were so sloppy with their security.
*edit: Seems YC participated in the follow-on round after the batch ended, so I imagine some extra due diligence goes into that.
>Finally, as a result of recent events, we have decided to discontinue the Stablegains service beyond the end of June 2022.
>On July 1, 2022, we will stop supporting the Stablegains service. The mobile app will be delisted from App Stores, the web interface will be taken offline, and it is very likely we will not be able to support withdrawals after that time.
[1]https://blog.stablegains.com/were-discontinuing-the-stablega...
Edit: Also, closing a business doesn't mean that you can no longer be held accountable for what happened while your business was opened. Statute of limitations and whatnot (IANAL) may differ from state-to-state, but allowing a business to be immune from prosecution simply because they closed would be one hell of a gaping legal loophole. It'd be like not prosecuting someone for theft or murder because they had stopped stealing or murdering lol.
This applies to investors at any company. At some point you have decided to believe in the founders and executive team, rather than deal with daily operations and micromanaging your portfolio
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30375309
[1] https://twitter.com/terra_money/status/1481701273070047232
The personal network is often more used by founders, who provide introductions to investors. You have to be social to be a founder, which is really why networks are more noticeable therein.
* all the laws are to protect investors from issuers
* splash around money to incentivise securities fraud
* buy a pile of tokens
* if the SEC doesn't bust the issuer, the VC wins big
* if the SEC does bust the issuer, the VC gets their money back and doesn't lose
it also realises liquidity much quicker than the long and tedious process of backing a tech company that does things
So did YC buy the tokens, or buy equity in the company? If the latter, then they're part-owners and may claim to have been completely hands-off, but might need to show it.
When Telegram did its failed ICO, a pile of the VCs who bought tokens behaved with sufficient involvement that the SEC deemed them underwriters, i.e. partially responsible for the offering.
So how much business help did Y Combinator offer this particular blatant Ponzi? Looking forward to YC and PG's comments on this.