Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

Ripple CTO Says One Important Lesson From FTX Meltdown ‘Will Not Be Learned’

A Ripple executive says there is one important lesson from the meltdown of crypto exchange FTX that he “can say with total confidence will not be learned.” The executive added: “Regulation that punishes after the fact won’t catch it. Investor due diligence won’t either.”

One Lesson From FTX Collapse That Won’t Be Learned

The CTO of Ripple Labs, David Schwartz, shared his thoughts on the collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX in a series of tweets Monday. FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Nov. 11.

While noting that several lessons should be learned from the FTX fiasco, the Ripple executive said:

There’s one important lesson that is really pretty obvious in retrospect and that I can say with total confidence will not be learned.

He explained: “If you hold billions of dollars of other people’s money for indefinite time periods, the temptation to speculate with those funds is irresistible if there aren’t verifiable checks that make such risk-taking virtually impossible, nothing else will be sufficient.”

Schwartz emphasized:

Regulation that punishes after the fact won’t catch it. Investor due diligence won’t either. Of course, many people will say that it could be, and likely is, happening, but they’ll be shouted down by accusations of sowing FUD or upsetting a system that is making people money.

“This kind of thing will always happen unless it cannot happen,” he stressed. “The temptation is irresistible. That is one of the most important lessons of FTX. But most people will actively choose not to learn this lesson because of, among other things, the elephant in the room.”

FTX is currently being investigated by a number of authorities worldwide. In the U.S., the Department of Justice (DOJ), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) are investigating the exchange for allegedly mishandling customer funds, among other charges. Turkey‘s financial intelligence unit has also launched an investigation into FTX and the Bahamas securities regulator has been trying to seize FTX’s cryptocurrencies.

Ripple Labs is currently engaged in a lengthy lawsuit with the SEC. The securities regulator sued the company, its CEO Brad Garlinghouse, and co-founder Chris Larsen over the sale of XRP, claiming that the crypto token is a security. Garlinghouse expects an answer in the first half of 2023. The Ripple CEO recently said that the crypto industry will be stronger after the FTX fiasco if we keep focusing on transparency and trust.

FTX
Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Scammers use Google to promote fake Whales Market website to steal cryptocurrency

    According to a report from BleepingComputer, threat actors have discovered a method where scammers use Google's platform to promote phishing websites impersonating Whales Market in order to steal cryptocurrency. These fraudulent websites are placed as sponsored links (i.e. advertisements) at the top of Google search result pages, and despite the domain address displayed on the search result page appearing to be real, users will be redirected to the fake website upon clicking.

  • Cyvers: Hedgey suffered the same vulnerability on Arbitrum and lost about $42.8 million

    Cyvers Alerts on X platform stated that the system detected that the financial derivative agreement Hedgey Finance executed the same vulnerability on the ARB chain and gained approximately 42.8 million US dollars in profit.

  • Tether issues 1 billion USDT on Ethereum (authorized but not yet issued)

    Whale Alert has monitored Tether Treasury's addition of 1 billion USDT on Ethereum. Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino stated that this 1 billion USDT is a supplement to Ethereum inventory. This is an authorized but unissued transaction, which means that this issuance will be used for the next issuance request and cross-chain exchange inventory.

  • CertiK: Hedgey vulnerability was exploited and $1.9 million was stolen

    CertiK Alert posted on social media that it has detected that the on-chain token infrastructure protocol Hedgey has been exploited and stolen approximately 1.9 million US dollars.The attacker abused the createLockedCampaign function in flash loans to obtain approval for the use of tokens on the victim's contract. The USDC, NOBL, and MASA tokens in the victim's contract have been depleted.

  • Binance executives' bail application postponed again, still in custody

    The bail hearing for Binance executive Tigran Gambaryan has been postponed again by a Nigerian court, and he remains detained at the Kuje Correctional Center. The hearing is now scheduled for April 22, with the EFCC requesting time to respond to new arguments from the defense. Gambaryan's lawyer criticized the prosecution for failing to respond promptly. Binance has been accused of concealing the source of its income, while Gambaryan is accused of money laundering. In addition, he has also filed a lawsuit against the government for violating his human rights.

  • BTC breaks through $64,000

    The market shows BTC breaking through $64,000, now reporting at $64,012.44, with an intraday increase of 4.95%. The market fluctuates greatly, so please be prepared for risk control.

  • SEC accuses Justin Sun of frequent trips to the U.S. to sell tokens

    The US SEC has amended its lawsuit against Tron founder Sun Yuchen, stating that his frequent travel to multiple locations in the US allows the court to have corresponding jurisdiction. The SEC accuses Sun Yuchen and his company of selling unregistered securities through Tron and BitTorrent (BTT) tokens and engaging in manipulative money laundering transactions. The SEC claims that Sun Yuchen spent more than 380 days in the US from 2017 to 2019, with travel destinations including New York, Boston, and San Francisco. Sun Yuchen argues that the token sales were conducted entirely overseas, avoiding the US market, and therefore the SEC has no jurisdiction over him and the Tron Foundation, which is headquartered in Singapore. (Cointelegraph)

  • Cyvers Alerts: Multiple phishing transactions detected this morning

    Cyvers Alerts reported on X platform that multiple phishing transactions were discovered by the system this morning. The victims have approved the external owned accounts (EOA) of the phishers. We strongly recommend revoking the relevant approvals.

  • BTC breaks through $63,000

    The market shows BTC has broken through $63,000 and is currently trading at $63,062.48, with an intraday increase of 3.53%. The market is volatile, so please be prepared for risk control.

  • CZ: Bitcoin halving is different from stock split, happy halving

    CZ wrote on X platform that Bitcoin halving is different from stock splitting. The fact that people are asking such questions shows that we are still in the early stages. He then attached a picture to explain his views on what might happen before and after the Bitcoin halving in 2023, and said "happy halving!"