The Week (US)

Hype machine: Selling the crypto future

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Cryptocurr­ency companies executed an allout blitz of the airwaves during this year’s Super Bowl, said Misyrlena Egkolfopou­lou in Bloomberg, leaving many viewers dazed and confused. “Don’t be like Larry,” was one of the messages from the digital currency exchange FTX, after an amusing montage of the famous curmudgeon Larry David expressing “skepticism about everything from the moon landing to the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.” In other words, “Ignore the haters and start buying.” Playing on “the consumer’s fears of missing out,” the ads seemed to work. A commercial for Coinbase featured “a bouncing QR code” that led to an offer of $15 in free Bitcoin for new users, and demand was so high that Coinbase’s website crashed within minutes. But while “Americans are used to hearing a long list of risks rattled off at the end of drug commercial­s,” there were no such disclaimer­s. Nobody was eager to tell viewers that the price of Bitcoin has been tumbling since November.

This felt like a rerun of the Dotcom Bowl, said Angela Watercutte­r in Wired. In January 2000, “some 20 percent of the advertisin­g real estate for the Big Game” was bought by tech firms riding the wave of euphoria. Then the bubble burst. This year, commercial­s from crypto companies bumped up against ads from older brands, like Turbotax, trying hard to catch the reflected crypto glow. All the “celebrity-studded attempts to get new buyers into the blockchain hype wheel” felt entirely cynical, said Chaim Gartenberg in The Verge. None of the ads selling this “towering pyramid scheme” explained “what cryptocurr­ency technology will actually do or how it will improve things in users’ lives.” All they pushed was that “not getting on board would mean missing out.”

The great crypto boom has at least brought out a big cast of colorful characters in “the murky fringes of crypto culture,” said Ali Watkins and Benjamin Weiser in The New York Times. Few are weirder than “the Bonnie and Clyde of Bitcoin,” Ilya Lichtenste­in and Heather Morgan. Their public digital trail made them “familiar characters in a realm where the flashiest personalit­ies got rich fast.” But federal prosecutor­s say they were “highly sophistica­ted criminals” engaged in a complex scheme of laundering 119,000 Bitcoins that had been stolen from a Hong Kong exchange in 2016. Authoritie­s traced bits of the money “into accounts the couple controlled.” The investigat­ive work represents “a watershed moment in the evolving regulation of digital currency,” and perhaps “a step forward in the government’s ability to trace its illegal laundering.”

That’s good, said Ryan Cooper in TheWeek.com, because crypto exchanges are getting hacked all the time, often because they

“lack elementary security features.” But the entreprene­urs running the exchanges don’t seem to care. They have gotten “rich beyond the dreams of avarice” by figuring out “the way to profit is by passing off the hot potato to the next sucker.” Just don’t let celebrity crypto endorsers like Matt Damon bully you into thinking “you’re a sissy girly-man for not buying some crypto.” If you’d bought in when his Crypto.com ad first aired at the end of October, “you’d have lost nearly half your money.”

 ?? ?? Larry David: Unlikely crypto pitchman
Larry David: Unlikely crypto pitchman

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