SBF/FTX
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 01:01 last edited by
I heard they’d approve or reject corporate matters with emojis….
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@Jolly that would be our money, dude.
wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 01:16 last edited by -
wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 01:57 last edited by
@jon-nyc no, I misinterpreted Jolly’s comment.
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@jon-nyc no, I misinterpreted Jolly’s comment.
wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 01:59 last edited by@Ivorythumper whew!
I didn’t take you for a crypto bro. Lol
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 02:17 last edited by Doctor Phibes
I still don’t understand any of this.
It sounds like maybe I’m not alone
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@Ivorythumper whew!
I didn’t take you for a crypto bro. Lol
wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 02:35 last edited by Ivorythumper@Ivorythumper whew!
I didn’t take you for a crypto bro. Lol
We can’t in the house due to MS’s work restrictions.
Good thing— I started seriously thinking about it exactly 1 year ago!
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 10:31 last edited by
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 12:08 last edited by
Yeah, just recently a Sequoia guy said it has done "careful due diligence" on FTX and "there's nothing much we could have done any differently."
SoftBank also invested in FTX but it’s the VC that has also lost a ton of money in WeWork, so I suppose it doesn’t quite qualify as “proper investor” as much as Sequoia.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 13:40 last edited by
Another friend, who's had some dealings with SBF, told me that they paid employees and contractors into their FTX accounts, meaning they're all creditors too.
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 13:47 last edited by
If the company had its own boutique crypto currency which was valued at the most recent transaction price, which in turn was whatever SBF wanted it to be, then I suppose the bubble pop makes sense. But that would be the pop of a bubble that wasn’t inflated with real money to begin with. My question is where did all the real money go? I mean other to Democrats, as SBF tried to climb socially through the high status political ranks of the left.
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If the company had its own boutique crypto currency which was valued at the most recent transaction price, which in turn was whatever SBF wanted it to be, then I suppose the bubble pop makes sense. But that would be the pop of a bubble that wasn’t inflated with real money to begin with. My question is where did all the real money go? I mean other to Democrats, as SBF tried to climb socially through the high status political ranks of the left.
wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 13:56 last edited by@Horace The immediate answer is Alameda but it's still unclear what they were doing with it.
Also it's unclear when the shady stuff (using customer money) started. Did they do that from the get-go? Or was it an act of desperation over the summer when crypto started to go south that they hoped would be temporary?
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 19:20 last edited by
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 20:51 last edited by Jolly
The well from which my money cometh.
Remind me to check my IQ again...
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wrote on 18 Nov 2022, 22:23 last edited by jon-nyc
Check your IQ again.
Nobody disputes that he gives lots of money to Dems. It’s the idea that he suddenly, years into the project, decides to charge Ukraine for it that is ridiculous.
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wrote on 19 Nov 2022, 02:42 last edited by
Sure.
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wrote on 20 Nov 2022, 22:07 last edited by
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wrote on 21 Nov 2022, 14:42 last edited by taiwan_girl
@George-K I was reading that Caroline Ellison's father is the dept head of economics at MIT and her mother is a eon comics professor there. When she (Caroline) was 8 years old, she wrote a economics paper on toy pricing at Toys are Us.
She is probably alot of fun at parties!!
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wrote on 21 Nov 2022, 14:44 last edited by
The new CEO is getting paid $1300/hr.
(But, it is quite a specialized skill set, so he is probably worth it if he can figure out the USD billions that are floating around).
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wrote on 22 Nov 2022, 17:38 last edited by