Binance Founder Changpeng Zhao Agrees To Step Down, Plead Guilty (wsj.com) 42
The chief executive of Binance, the largest global cryptocurrency exchange, plans to step down and plead guilty to violating criminal U.S. anti-money laundering requirements, in a deal that may preserve the company's ability to continue operating, WSJ reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. From the report: Changpeng Zhao is scheduled to appear in Seattle federal court Tuesday afternoon and enter his plea, the people said. Binance, which Zhao owns, will also plead guilty to a criminal charge and agree to pay fines totaling $4.3 billion, which includes amounts to settle civil allegations made by regulators, the people said. The deal would end long-running investigations of Binance. [...] The deal would allow Zhao to retain his majority ownership of Binance, although he won't be able to have an executive role at the company. He would face sentencing at a later date.
All centralized crypto exchanges are (Score:2)
subject to manipulation one way or another. The whole point of crypto is to be decentralized, and not subject to the whims of any given central banks's ability to digitally print a couple of trillions.
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Yes, those evil central banks and their terrible plan of making sure that their money has more or less the same value from one week to the next and that it's usable for normal people to earn money for their work and then buy food to feed their children. Totally key to keep them away from crypto. Can't have it actually being useful for something.
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You forgot the users avoiding taxes, leaving the rest of us to pay them.
Ban crypto users from driving on US streets (paid for by taxes).
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The dollar has lost half it's value against my house since 2015 but nobody cares about that either.
Re: All centralized crypto exchanges are (Score:2)
Most of South America, China, Africa and Asia do. If you havenâ(TM)t heard yet, the BRICS countries are going back to precious metals to back their investments and looking at other decentralized currency standards.
At the point half the world stops trading in dollars you will care what your real assets are worth.
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The minute anyone tries to wean themselves off the $US as the primary reserve currency they'll find themselves in a civil war pretty quickly. Ask the Libyans.
That isn't going to change in my lifetime and probably not in my children's lifetime.
Any country that goes back to the gold standard is going to learn the economic lessons the rest of us learned during the 19th and early 20th centuries, so good luck to 'em.
(Not that I believe anyone is really going back to a gold standard. It's a
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You can look up the news articles yourself. They are creating a decentralized digital currency backed by gold for trading with BRICS. Russia, Brazil, China and a ton of other socialist dictatorships don't want to trade in USD anymore and many of them have been shaped out of the USD market recently anyway. Once you lose those big countries, their neighbors will have no choice to trade, China owns half of Africa and a significant portion of South America's debt right now and has a ton more tied up in their Ro
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You can look up the news articles yourself.
Not from any source I believe as it happens.
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Well, since you only believe the far-left wing sources, here is the Hamas press agency:
https://www.aljazeera.com/feat... [aljazeera.com]
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You don't really understand how the world works, do you? Al Jazeera, left wing? You need to get out a bit more.
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The reason a
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Tether can print whenever they want.
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If that's their job then they're terrible at it.
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I think you can't work with absolutes in this case. Only compare them with the alternatives. Other solutions to the problem in history have been yet worse.
Re:All centralized crypto exchanges are (Score:4, Insightful)
Instead, they're subject to manipulation by whoever has the most money to begin with, with basically no oversight by anyone who answers to the public. Resulting in . . . what we see on this very web site every day, about exchanges collapsing, founder disappearing with millions (or hundred of millions, or billions) of dollars of other people's imaginary money.
That's so much better!
Re: All centralized crypto exchanges are (Score:2)
The goal of cryptocurrency is not to pool your money at a bank except for investment purposes. The reason these systems donâ(TM)t work because cryptocurrency cannot be centralized, yet it is a good way of burning your cash before a depression which is exactly what happened - tons of pre-pandemic value still is locked up in crypto, the dollar has lost significant value in the mean time while investors diversified the value they âoeburnedâ across the globe.
If everyone lost so much money in cryp
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There exists a whole class of non-custodial exchanges where the wallet remains in your control. Unfortunately, the overall market has yet to prefer actual security over centralized exchanges, which are practically the antithesis of the underlying assets they are trading.
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You can't really decentralize it (Score:2)
The only counter balances to this are Democracy, education and teaching critical thinking and claims evaluation skills. Basically advanced citizenship. Groups of people coming together to watch, control and regulate th
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Nothing you posted has anything to do with decentralization, especially not in the context of public blockchains.
Re:All centralized crypto exchanges are (Score:5, Insightful)
The real problem is that cryptocurrencies are a shitty technology. Ledger transactions are 4-5 orders of magnitude more expensive than traditional monetary transactions – they aren't "currencies" at all. They are long-hold assets at best.
Exchanges like FTX/Binance came along to paper over that shittiness with off-ledger transactions. But it's a scammer's paradise and moreover it violates the whole point of crypto which is to not have to trust a central authority.
I have an idea (Score:1)
Maybe we should stop Chinese firms from buying all our real estate too? Hmmm.
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He's Canadian. But don't let that get in the way of a good rant.
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Stop letting Chinese millionaires do ANYTHING in our company.
Because, yes, the USA is a company. A gigantic megacorporation, not a real country.
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That's just how the culture is over there and if you've provably gotten ahead, there's exactly one way how you did it and it's no with morals or business ethics.
Sounds like the culture hear honestly. I think people are upset because the Chinese people aint white. If China was some bastion of white people, people would be a lot less upset with them.
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CEC-P ought to be angry at the billionaires, but they've trained him to point his anger in the wrong direction.
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Funny, Chinese people used to be white. The term "white" was basically created so the major European countries could refer to themselves and people the admired, like the Chinese.
Don't worry, any country that dares to get big enough to potentially challenge the US will get the same treatment. And if they're annoying enough the'll get kicked out of the white club too. Like Mexico.
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Funny, Chinese people used to be white.
No, you fuckers called us the Yellow Peril for centuries.
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Yeah, before that.
Another Tuesday (Score:2)
Another Tuesday, another crypto scammer getting their come-uppance from the Department of Justice.
Only thousands more to go.
Crypto = North Korea (Score:2)
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"Satoshi" is obviously from North Korea. Only a nation state as corrupt as them could have concocted such a climate destroying, drug distributing, terrorism financing scheme as effective as Crypto. CZ should be investigated for links to NK.
Hey! We are perfectly capable of creating fucked up things and tricking people into them. Like deregulation.
Doesn't make any sense (Score:2)
If CZ doesn't want to spend the rest of his life dodging extradition or rendition then so be it, but Binance is mostly outside the reach of the Feds. Only Binance.us is at risk, and only because Binance did more than just license a name to that exchange.
SBF set us up (Score:2)
SBF was like : all your crypto belong to us!
If SBF would have kept his Caroline under control, Binance would have never been investigated by the SEC.
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Sounds like a robbery (Score:1)
Foreign company robbed of 4 billion dollars.