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- đ„ Meet the token backed by "God's word" đ
đ„ Meet the token backed by "God's word" đ
PLUS: where's all the Bitcoin? đ§
Todayâs edition is brought to you by PayPal - who is charting a new course in the digital landscape with the launch of PYUSD, a stablecoin designed for payments.
GM. This is Milk Road, the newsletter that's like a Nerf gun battle â fast, fun, and action-packed.
Hereâs what we got for you today:
Meet the token backed by Godâs word âȘïž
Whereâs all the Bitcoin? đ§
This fund 3xâd investorsâ money, but itâs run by convicts đȘ
MEET THE TOKEN BACKED BY GODâS WORD
Scams and rug pulls happen in crypto all the time. By now, youâd think there were no more rugs to pullâŠ
Turns out cryptoâs more stocked up than your local Persian rug shop.
And another rug pull was recently exposed. Itâs the craziest one yet:
A church pastor launched a cryptocurrency called INDXcoin. The twist? The token wasnât backed by anything. No money. No assets. Nada. Just the âword of God.â
The tokens were sold to fellow churchgoers. The pastor promised 10x returns that were âguaranteed by God.â
The funds were promised to be used for good causes like helping widows and orphans. Instead, the pastor and his wife pocketed $1.3M, bought a Range Rover, and spent a couple hundred thousand dollars on a home remodel âthe Lordâ told them to do. (I guess God has an expensive taste in feng shui?)
The pastor also created an exchange called âKingdom Wealth Exchange.â This was the only way for investors to buy/sell INDXcoins. But then it shut down last year, making it impossible to cash out.
When investors questioned the lack of returns, the pastor answered by telling everyone that God wanted them to HODL. According to him, âGod is going to bring a miracle into INDXcoin.â (Source: trust me, bro).
Thereâs still no miracle. But there is a lawsuitâŠ
The pastor and his wife are being sued by Colorado regulators for fraudulently deceiving investors and illegally selling securities.
(Btw, the couple is arguing the token isnât a security because âGod saysâ itâs a utility token).
P.S. - the only thing crazier than the story itself, is the pastor talking about itâŠ
Itâs worth the 2-minute watch. Trust me.
Volatility can make crypto payments unpredictable. While stablecoins help address this concern, not all issuers are the same.
Well, in the world of payments, there are few names more well known than PayPal.
PayPal partnered with Paxos to become a pioneer in blockchain-based payments, launching the PYUSD stablecoin.
Hereâs what you need to know:
PYUSD leverages blockchain to bring users faster and more accessible payments than traditional methods.
PayPal educated the public on their Web3 roadmap and the future of crypto payments through an exciting Open Letter.
Available today, you can send crypto to your US PayPal account, convert it to PYUSD, and use PYUSD to checkout at millions of online stores.
Every once in a while⊠a weird, funky question pops into my head.
Stuff like:
If you try to fail and succeed, which one did you actually do?
Why do we park in driveways and drive in parkways?
Sometimes people respond with âWhoa, good question.â
Most of the time, people look at me like Iâm high.
Well over the weekend, one of these weird, funky questions popped into my head againâŠ
The question: where is all the Bitcoin? (Like who owns them? People? Companies? Satoshi?)
After a quick search, this visual came up:
A few quick thoughts:
1/ Governments say they hate Bitcoin, but they own A LOT of itâŠ
The U.S. owns 215,000 BTC.
China owns 190,000 BTC.
Ukraine owns 46,350 BTC.
2/ Thereâs 2x as much âlostâ BTC as there is BTC held by governments and companies. Ouch.
3/ Satoshi is one rich mfer. Itâs estimated that the Bitcoin creator holds ~1,100,000 BTC (worth $44B+ at todayâs prices).
That alone would make Satoshi the 28th richest person in the world...
Wild.
This crypto fund says it tripled investorsâ money. The catch? Itâs owned by a convicted fraudster. âDL News
A U.S. federal court has ordered an independent investigation into the FTX collapse. The bankrupt exchange will now face an independent investigation by a court-appointed examiner.
A sophisticated crypto scam operation has stolen $32M since April. The scammers create a token with misleading permissions, pump it with fake volume, rug the token once enough outside funds enter, and then repeat the process.
Bloomberg analysts believe thereâs a 70% chance Coinbase wins its case against the SEC. Milk Road Rule #48: Analyst predictions are like weather forecasts⊠even if they say itâll be sunny, bring an umbrella.
Arbitrum proposed an $85M grant program. The crypto project has a whopping $7B in its treasury, up from $3B in October.
Crypto crime was down 29% last year. According to the Chainalysis report, illicit revenue was also down 54%.
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Put it up in the Louvre.
â Milk Road Images (@MilkRoadImages)
4:17 PM âą Jan 22, 2024
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DISCLAIMER: None of this is financial advice. This newsletter is strictly educational and is not investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets or to make any financial decisions. Please be careful and do your own research.
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