The biggest crypto news and ideas of the day Oct. 29, 2021 If you were forwarded this newsletter and would like to receive it, sign up here. Sponsored by Welcome to The Node.
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–Daniel Kuhn
Today's must-reads Top Shelf ENFORCERS WANTED: The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is looking for someone to head its newly announced National Cryptocurrency Enforcement team. The DOJ posted a job opening for the director's role on USAJobs, the federal government's jobs website, which states the director will lead "a team of experienced prosecutors investigating and prosecuting cryptocurrency cases as a central part of a nationwide enforcement effort to combat the use of cryptocurrency as an illicit tool." BACK AND FORTH: The Indian government is likely to regulate cryptocurrencies in its upcoming budget in February, rather than imposing an outright ban. India has one of the most active crypto markets, worth mentioning because the asset class was until recently effectively banned in the country by tight central bank imposed rules. Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden's hoped-for spending bill – the Build Back Better Act – contains new language meant to close tax loopholes for crypto investors … similar to what appeared in the Senate's infrastructure bill (also in the offing). BIG BAGS: MicroStrategy (Nasdaq: MSTR) added almost 9,000 bitcoins to its holdings in Q3, bringing its reserves to 114,042 BTC. The business-intelligence software company's entire market capitalization is roughly $7.4 billion, while its bitcoin holdings are worth just over $7 billion, making the company something of a proxy investment vehicle of BTC. UNREAL? The price of squid, a play-to-earn crypto token, has shot up 35,000% since Oct. 26. The token buys entry to an online game inspired by – but unaffiliated with – hit Korean Netflix show Squid Game. (Beware: CoinMarketCap reported complaints of users unable to sell the token on PancakeSwap, the only exchange it trades on.) Meanwhile, Facebook – renamed Meta's – metaverse project will support non-fungible tokens (NFT). Separately, on-chain data suggests that the recent sale of a CryptoPunk NFT for half a billion dollars was an elaborate publicity stunt. Lastly, a 14-year-old used Solana NFTs to raise $100,000 for (literal) whale conservation. NEW VENTURES: Venture capital firm CMCC Global is targeting $300 million for its latest crypto fund backed by billionaire Richard Li and Gemini co-founders, the Winklevoss twins. Also, Elementus, a blockchain data analytics firm with ties to Peter Thiel's creepy surveillance company Palantir, has raised $12 million in a Series A. Finally, Rally is continuing its push to decentralize its social token infrastructure with a new venture studio called SuperLayer Labs. It'll be run by the Rally's co-founders and funded in part by RLY token's early venture capital supporters, including Marc Andreessen and Chris Dixon.
Happy Halloween, folks. Remember to check your candies for XRPs.
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Overheard on CoinDesk TV ... Sound bites "We see a big opportunity to create a decentralized internet that will give individuals greater control over their digital identity, greater control over their information, greater control over their assets."
–Tomicah Tillemann, global head of policy for crypto at a16z, discusses the venture capital firm's push to put Web 3 on politicians' radar, on CoinDesk TV's "First Mover."
What others are writing... Off-Chain Signals
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Putting the news in perspective The Takeaway Facebook Steals Another Crypto Idea for Its Desperate, Nonsensical Rebrand
Hey, David Morris here. Facebook steals another crypto idea and renames the company after it.
The Oculus VR devices at the center of Facebook's plans have been pretty good technology for at least three or four years now, but sales have been unimpressive. Other VR and AR companies, such as the infamous Magic Leap, have burned money without finding product-market fit. Spending boatloads of cash to drive adoption is the only hope Facebook seems to have of making mass-market VR work.
And even then, it doesn't make sense, because the price of hardware like a VR headset isn't actually the limiting factor in adoption Zuck would like you to think it is. In technology, there's this thing called an "adoption curve" where early tech enthusiasts spend a lot of money on weird things, then more people buy them as they get cheaper. The first part of that adoption curve still hasn't really happened for VR, even during a pandemic when everyone was trapped at home. Making the headsets cheaper can't solve for this clear lack of interest among the very hyper-engaged audience that's not supposed to care about price in the first place.
The desperation of the move becomes clearer when you realize that Facebook as a company has probably already seen its best days. User numbers in the U.S. are declining, particularly among young people, across both Facebook itself and, crucially, Instagram, which had extended the company's relevance a few extra years. Facebooks's growth potential, unfortunately, probably lies in second- and third-tier economies with even weaker governments and poorer citizens.
–David Z. Morris
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The Chaser...
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