Ever wonder what it's like to navigate the spotlight as the world's biggest BTC treasury company?
Then don't miss tonight's all-star @Strategy panel featuring:
- CJ (@CJ_Bitcoin)
- Ella Hough (@21MMforthe21st)
- moderator John Balkan (CMO @SovreignBTC)
https://t.co/i7E60hGSUZ
Ever wonder what it's like to navigate the spotlight as the world's biggest BTC treasury company?
Then don't miss tonight's all-star @Strategy panel featuring:
- CJ (@CJ_Bitcoin)
- Ella Hough (@21MMforthe21st)
- moderator John Balkan (CMO @SovreignBTC)
https://t.co/i7E60hGSUZ
Boys, sometimes it's okay to leave the ski mask at home.
"I understand where @brian_trollz,@callebtc, and privacy-concerned Bitcoiners are coming from." @tpacchia
"I support that! But if it's performative... I'm less interested." -Alec Harris (CEO @the_havenx)
๐ PUBKEY, NYC
What's the most cowardly way to take someone else's Bitcoin?
Don't steal it. Don't hack it. Sue them under an old lost and found statute, behind a Wyoming shell company, so you never have to put your name on the filing.
That's the actual play in New York right now.
$293 billion in dormant coins, Satoshi's included, and an anonymous plaintiff wants a court to declare them lost property and hand him title. He says being a known large holder paints a target on your back.
He's got a point.
On the flip, to defend their coins, the people he's suing have to do exactly that. Walk into court, surface, prove ownership, get named. He's asking the court to strip the privacy he's protecting for himself.
So: can silence still be ownership? Or is dormancy now an invitation?
COIN BASED is back at PubKey NYC this week. Pull up.
๐งก๐ป๐
RSVP in comment below.
What's the most cowardly way to take someone else's Bitcoin?
Don't steal it. Don't hack it. Sue them under an old lost and found statute, behind a Wyoming shell company, so you never have to put your name on the filing.
That's the actual play in New York right now.
$293 billion in dormant coins, Satoshi's included, and an anonymous plaintiff wants a court to declare them lost property and hand him title. He says being a known large holder paints a target on your back.
He's got a point.
On the flip, to defend their coins, the people he's suing have to do exactly that. Walk into court, surface, prove ownership, get named. He's asking the court to strip the privacy he's protecting for himself.
So: can silence still be ownership? Or is dormancy now an invitation?
COIN BASED is back at PubKey NYC this week. Pull up.
๐งก๐ป๐
RSVP in comment below.