Crypto Paycheck
Photo by Mario Gogh on UnsplashEmployees will receive their paycheck in the period as a reward for their work. However, the employer wants to pay less to employees so that they can have maximum profits. The tension between working and anti-working has increased ever since. TL;DR Nobody wants to work unless they can pay fairly. Fiat payment may not be sustainable to satisfy what workers can contribute if the employer continues paying less and gaining more from profits. Employees will want thei...
Defi Review #4: AAVE The Defi Lending Services
AAVE is a decentralized finance lending service before decentralized finance even existed. It is an innovation lending service in crypto and one of the first kind. However, the lending service may only restrict to the crypto community and it may expand into the traditional financial field later. TL;DR AAVE is a crypto lending financial service which to provides lending services to the crypto community. They focus on security and smart contract lending may be the future of financial services. ...

Stablecoin Crisis
Stablecoin is in the crisis mode. The most reputable stablecoin USDC is depegged. It is all triggered by the traditional bank collapse - Silicon Valley Bank or SVB collapse. Why traditional bank collapse impacts crypto stablecoin? Let's sort this out and reveal how stablecoin operates. First, why SVB collapse? The short answer is overleveraged. SVB is one of the 20 largest commercial banking in the United States. Some even estimate the bank owned half of startup assets. Bank operated in ...


Crypto Paycheck
Photo by Mario Gogh on UnsplashEmployees will receive their paycheck in the period as a reward for their work. However, the employer wants to pay less to employees so that they can have maximum profits. The tension between working and anti-working has increased ever since. TL;DR Nobody wants to work unless they can pay fairly. Fiat payment may not be sustainable to satisfy what workers can contribute if the employer continues paying less and gaining more from profits. Employees will want thei...
Defi Review #4: AAVE The Defi Lending Services
AAVE is a decentralized finance lending service before decentralized finance even existed. It is an innovation lending service in crypto and one of the first kind. However, the lending service may only restrict to the crypto community and it may expand into the traditional financial field later. TL;DR AAVE is a crypto lending financial service which to provides lending services to the crypto community. They focus on security and smart contract lending may be the future of financial services. ...

Stablecoin Crisis
Stablecoin is in the crisis mode. The most reputable stablecoin USDC is depegged. It is all triggered by the traditional bank collapse - Silicon Valley Bank or SVB collapse. Why traditional bank collapse impacts crypto stablecoin? Let's sort this out and reveal how stablecoin operates. First, why SVB collapse? The short answer is overleveraged. SVB is one of the 20 largest commercial banking in the United States. Some even estimate the bank owned half of startup assets. Bank operated in ...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

Subscribe to xuanling11

Subscribe to xuanling11
<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
Self-proclaimed Bitcoin creator Craig S. Wright won the legal case for £1. Now, a former Bitcoin user and now self-proclaimed Bitcoin creator, Craig S. Wright, has been awarded a legal claim against Peter McMcormack in damages. Wright brought the case against the Peter McMcormack accused Wright of fraud and a moron. Today, the court ruled in Wright's favor. The case eventually concluded below:
The judge said that Wright had pushed "a deliberately false case" with "deliberately false evidence" and would therefore only receive a nominal £1 sum.
On 26 February 2017, Craig Wright, an Australian computer scientist, and businessman. He has been self-proclaimed Satoshi Nakamoto since 2015.
In February 2018, the estate of Dave Kleiman initiated a lawsuit against Wright in Florida and accused Wright defrauded Kleiman, a business partner, of Bitcoin intellectual property rights and with damages of $5.2B compensation. The case eventually concluded that Wright would pay Dave Kleiman Estate 100M, and he would grant the title of "Satoshi Nakamoto".
On 23 November 2017, the New York Times published a profile of Craig Wright in which he was described as an "entrepreneur and Bitcoin visionary." The article discussed how in the early 2000s, when he was an investment advisor at a brokerage firm based in New York, he became interested in digital currencies such as Bitcoin and started to trade them in his spare time. In the article, it was also mentioned that he met Varun Gupta, the co-founder of Bitfinex, in a Las Vegas hotel room in 2013, where they discussed ideas and plans for their exchange. But they were unaware that they were going to be sued by former employees of Bitfinex, a firm that had been established in 2011.
On 7 March 2018, the court ruled in favor of Craig Wright, the former employee of Bitfinex who had been found guilty of money laundering and insider trading. The ruling affirmed that Wright was actually the true owner of the assets of Bitfinex, and that the assets had been frozen following the company's acquisition by Bitcoin in 2017. Wright's lawyers said that he could not access the funds associated with his Bitcoin account and that he could not withdraw funds from it. But the court ruling also said that the funds could be withdrawn from a bank account in India, where his parents lived.
No one cares who Satoshi is, but Bitcoin empowers everyone to become Satoshi. So people will remember the Satoshi spirit who is anonymously to create something that impacts the world rather than the title to claim as a creator of Bitcoin.
The decision by the New York Times to report on Craig Wright as an "entrepreneur and Bitcoin visionary" served as the basis for his successful defamation lawsuit against the firms that had been his employers at the time of his arrest. A divided court could have easily denied the defamation claim, ruling that a person cannot be held responsible for what others have said. But the court ruling in favor of Craig Wright was important, as it validated his reputation as an entrepreneur who had made significant contributions to the blockchain and cryptocurrency market. Still, it would be remiss if we didn't do the bare minimum to recognize Craig Wright's contribution to the field of blockchain and cryptocurrency over the past few years. In addition to his role as a co-founder of Bitwise, the founder of Cryptonote and the creator of several decentralized apps, there is little that we can do to recognize his role in the development of the blockchain and cryptocurrency space. We can only acknowledge that he is one of the most important members of the field and that his contributions will be greatly appreciated.

If you enjoy reading my articles, buy me a coffee here.
Photo by Nubelson Fernandes on Unsplash
Self-proclaimed Bitcoin creator Craig S. Wright won the legal case for £1. Now, a former Bitcoin user and now self-proclaimed Bitcoin creator, Craig S. Wright, has been awarded a legal claim against Peter McMcormack in damages. Wright brought the case against the Peter McMcormack accused Wright of fraud and a moron. Today, the court ruled in Wright's favor. The case eventually concluded below:
The judge said that Wright had pushed "a deliberately false case" with "deliberately false evidence" and would therefore only receive a nominal £1 sum.
On 26 February 2017, Craig Wright, an Australian computer scientist, and businessman. He has been self-proclaimed Satoshi Nakamoto since 2015.
In February 2018, the estate of Dave Kleiman initiated a lawsuit against Wright in Florida and accused Wright defrauded Kleiman, a business partner, of Bitcoin intellectual property rights and with damages of $5.2B compensation. The case eventually concluded that Wright would pay Dave Kleiman Estate 100M, and he would grant the title of "Satoshi Nakamoto".
On 23 November 2017, the New York Times published a profile of Craig Wright in which he was described as an "entrepreneur and Bitcoin visionary." The article discussed how in the early 2000s, when he was an investment advisor at a brokerage firm based in New York, he became interested in digital currencies such as Bitcoin and started to trade them in his spare time. In the article, it was also mentioned that he met Varun Gupta, the co-founder of Bitfinex, in a Las Vegas hotel room in 2013, where they discussed ideas and plans for their exchange. But they were unaware that they were going to be sued by former employees of Bitfinex, a firm that had been established in 2011.
On 7 March 2018, the court ruled in favor of Craig Wright, the former employee of Bitfinex who had been found guilty of money laundering and insider trading. The ruling affirmed that Wright was actually the true owner of the assets of Bitfinex, and that the assets had been frozen following the company's acquisition by Bitcoin in 2017. Wright's lawyers said that he could not access the funds associated with his Bitcoin account and that he could not withdraw funds from it. But the court ruling also said that the funds could be withdrawn from a bank account in India, where his parents lived.
No one cares who Satoshi is, but Bitcoin empowers everyone to become Satoshi. So people will remember the Satoshi spirit who is anonymously to create something that impacts the world rather than the title to claim as a creator of Bitcoin.
The decision by the New York Times to report on Craig Wright as an "entrepreneur and Bitcoin visionary" served as the basis for his successful defamation lawsuit against the firms that had been his employers at the time of his arrest. A divided court could have easily denied the defamation claim, ruling that a person cannot be held responsible for what others have said. But the court ruling in favor of Craig Wright was important, as it validated his reputation as an entrepreneur who had made significant contributions to the blockchain and cryptocurrency market. Still, it would be remiss if we didn't do the bare minimum to recognize Craig Wright's contribution to the field of blockchain and cryptocurrency over the past few years. In addition to his role as a co-founder of Bitwise, the founder of Cryptonote and the creator of several decentralized apps, there is little that we can do to recognize his role in the development of the blockchain and cryptocurrency space. We can only acknowledge that he is one of the most important members of the field and that his contributions will be greatly appreciated.

If you enjoy reading my articles, buy me a coffee here.
Photo by Nubelson Fernandes on Unsplash
No activity yet