MobileCoin Archives | Protos https://protos.com/tag/mobilecoin/ Informed crypto news Tue, 28 Nov 2023 14:49:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6 https://protos-media.s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/30110137/cropped-protos-favicon-32x32.png MobileCoin Archives | Protos https://protos.com/tag/mobilecoin/ 32 32 MobileCoin founder Bob Lee’s murder was planned, prosecutors say https://protos.com/mobilecoin-founder-bob-lees-murder-was-planned-prosecutors-say/ Mon, 17 Apr 2023 15:13:03 +0000 https://protos.com/?p=37047 A court document says that the Cash App and MobileCoin founder was deliberately murdered by a friend's brother.

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The fatal stabbing of Bob Lee, the founder of Cash App and cryptocurrency project MobileCoin, was deliberate, according to prosecutors in a court document on Friday.

Suspect Nima Momeni is accused of stabbing Lee three times with a kitchen knife in early April over an argument about his sister, Khazar Elyassnia.

MobileCoin is an initial coin offering (ICO) that launched in April 2021. It’s associated with encrypted messenger Signal — its price soared from under $2 in December 2020 to over $71 and is now worth less than $2. As Protos previously reported, MobileCoin was likely the reason crypto exchange FTX was insolvent long before the collapse of the Terra/Luna ecosystem in May 2022.

Prosecutors say that Momeni murdered Lee in San Francisco in a “planned and deliberate attack.” The 38-year-old tech consultant brought Lee to a secluded spot before stabbing him repeatedly. According to the testimony of a longtime friend, Lee, Momeni’s sister, and the friend were drinking together the night before the attack.

Read more: MobileCoin exec Bob Lee stabbed to death in San Francisco attack

The friend claims to have witnessed a heated conversation in which Momeni questioned Lee’s friendship with his sister, and asked whether she “was doing drugs or anything inappropriate.” Lee denied this.

The friend left Lee around 12:30am. Then, Lee went to Momeni’s sister’s apartment, according to video surveillance. Lee and Momeni left the building together after 2am in Momeni’s car.

Momeni drove Lee to a secluded spot in San Francisco’s Rincon Hill neighbourhood and suddenly stabbed him, prosecutors say. An autopsy revealed Lee was stabbed once in the hip and twice, fatally, in the chest.

Momeni has denied his right to a speedy trial. The 38-year-old is currently detained without bail and faces 26 years to life in prison if found guilty. 

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MobileCoin exec Bob Lee stabbed to death in San Francisco attack https://protos.com/mobilecoin-exec-bob-lee-stabbed-to-death-in-san-francisco-attack/ Wed, 05 Apr 2023 11:09:50 +0000 https://protos.com/?p=36515 MobileCoin and Cash App founder Bob Lee was attacked near the city's Rincon Hill neighborhood in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

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Bob Lee, founder of cryptocurrency MobileCoin and payments service Cash App, and former chief technology officer of Square has died after being stabbed in San Francisco on Tuesday.

At around 2:35 am local time, police responded to reports of an incident near the city’s Rincon Hill neighborhood.

Upon arriving at the scene, officers discovered that Lee had suffered multiple stab wounds. Medics attempted to treat the 43-year-old tech mogul’s injuries and moved him to a nearby hospital but he tragically succumbed to his injuries.  

In a statement, MobileCoin’s Chief Executive Officer Joshua Goldbard said, “Bob was a force of nature. He helped to birth Android and Cash App into our world. Moby was his dream: a privacy-protecting wallet for the 21st century. I will miss him every day.”

Lee had reportedly recently moved to Miami and was in San Francisco on business.

Speculation about Lee’s death started almost immediately

Twitter being Twitter, just hours after the attack, rumors speculating on the circumstances surrounding Lee’s death were already making the rounds.

These range from the as-yet-completely-unfounded theory that Lee was the target of a calculated hit due to his involvement with Binance and Cash App (both have been linked to various illegal activity) to the idea that current policy has turned San Francisco into some sort of lawless Wild West.

Other social media users have also flagged that, despite the outlandish nature of some of these theories, Lee’s death does give him an unenviable place on the list of crypto big players who have sadly passed away in mysterious circumstances.

These include:

  • MakerDAO developer and crypto millionaire Nikolai Mushegian who drowned in Puerto Rico.
  • Tiantian Kullander, the founder of Hong Kong-based digital asset company Amber Group who died suddenly in his sleep.
  • Gerald Cotten, the QuadrigaCX founder who has been the subject of countless conspiracy theories since he passed away in India while on his honeymoon.

Read more: MobileCoin: The project that doomed FTX a year before Terra Luna

Police have not arrested anyone yet and the incident remains an active investigation. We’ll update this story if and when any new details emerge.

Quotes in bold are our emphasis. For more informed news, follow us on TwitterInstagram, and Google News or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

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MobileCoin: The project that doomed FTX a year before Terra Luna https://protos.com/mobilecoin-the-project-that-doomed-ftx-a-year-before-terra-luna/ Wed, 15 Feb 2023 12:49:13 +0000 https://protos.com/?p=34030 Despite erroneous reports about Terra LUNA bankrupting FTX, it might have actually been an incredibly disastrous trade in MobileCoin.

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The turmoil that hit digital assets markets last year plunged several prominent exchanges and hedge funds into bankruptcy. Among the most high-profile was the collapse of the gargantuan, once-$29 billion Terra LUNA ecosystem which, many will say, was the first domino that eventually destroyed Sam Bankman-Fried’s (SBF) FTX. However, this would be a misunderstanding of causality. In actual fact, it started with MobileCoin (MOB).

Indeed, FTX might have been insolvent for over a year by the time of the Terra LUNA implosion. In April 2021, MobileCoin, an ICO associated with the encrypted messenger Signal, had gone parabolic, pumping from under $2 in December 2020 to over $71 (MobileCoin is again worth less than $2 today).

That spectacular round-trip cost Alameda up to $1 billion — more than the $800 million it optimistically hoped to have made in profit since inception.

FTX raised $900 million in July 2021 — a curious coincidence when we consider both the timing and the dollar amount of its MobileCoin loss.

In addition, starting with that $900 million raise in July 2021, FTX and Alameda founder SBF began to cash out with personal “loans” that he would, of course, never repay. By the time FTX’s fundraisers of July 2021, October 2021, and January 2022 had closed, SBF had personally withdrawn hundreds of millions of dollars.

Read more: FTX probe has feds wondering if SBF brought down Terra

These disbursements occurred months before Terra LUNA collapsed. Indeed, it was more likely that MobileCoin — plus these dubious “loans” to FTX executives — caused the downfall of FTX than Terra LUNA, which didn’t collapse until May 2022.

Alameda lost everything on MobileCoin

In early 2021, a trader on FTX acquired a massive amount of MobileCoin and used it as collateral to borrow other assets. According to a source cited by the Financial Times (FT), this was “potentially a scheme to extract dollars from the exchange.” As that position went against the trader, Alameda overtook that suite of MobileCoin positions “to protect FTX.”

Although the Financial Times didn’t specify whether Alameda lost money on the long or short side of the squeeze to $71, it did report its losses peaking at $1 billion.

The MobileCoin pump coordinators could have been Signal insiders and a few outside co-conspirators. Signal had loans to pay back and a poor monetization model (more on these points later).

SBF’s fundraising abilities at FTX provided a rare opportunity to extract hundreds of millions worth of assets from an overconfident liquidity source who had an incentive to protect the reputation of his FTX brand. Indeed, with FTX and Binance as the only two major exchanges listing MobileCoin trading pairs of meaningful liquidity, MobileCoin provided an easy way for a China-connected trading group to extract money from Binance’s top competitor, FTX.

It’s also worth noting that SBF was a relative newcomer to the digital asset space. Early MobileCoin token purchasers enjoyed a cost basis of just a few cents — its official ICO price was $0.80 with pre-sale rounds at even cheaper prices — and with just two major exchange listings, MobileCoin was an opportunity to overwhelm SBF with a surprising short squeeze.

Read more: Bitfinex and unknown sources deposit $13M in Alameda Research crypto wallet

At the time, FTX touted a unique liquidation engine that incentivized large traders to absorb trades when it needed to liquidate margins. Advanced traders often posted margin, or collateral, to place bets on other assets. If they lost their combined bets, the exchange could sell their collateral.

However, sometimes the collateral cannot be sold for reasonable prices. In these cases, the exchange’s market-maker might assume the position and attempt to trade out of the position manually. This occurred when Alameda assumed the MobileCoin suite of positions to protect its sister exchange, FTX, from this rogue trader.

When the price of MobileCoin spiked, the trader posted a large amount of collateral in MobileCoin to access margin for other assets — likely an attempt to exploit FTX’s liquidity engine as well as its banking and fundraising relationships. As reported by FT, Bankman-Fried’s Alameda Research eventually absorbed losses from a suite of MobileCoin-associated positions from that trader to protect FTX from bankruptcy.

Two anonymous sources estimated Alameda’s losses at up to $1 billion on that bad margin. This wiped out any profits the company had hoped to have ever earned since inception.

Read more: Signal encrypted messenger testing Stellar-based crypto payments

Moxie Marlinspike was involved since the beginning

Signal founder Moxie Marlinspike (Matthew Rosenfeld’s pseudonym) also served as one of MobileCoin’s earliest technical advisors. MobileCoin raised $30 million in a seed round led by Binance Labs in 2018 and $66 million in a Series B round in 2021.

According to CoinDesk, early versions of MobileCoin’s technical documents listed Marlinspike as CTO, and before April 2018, MobileCoin’s website clearly referred to Marlinspike as part of its team.

However, MobileCoin denies that Marlinspike was ever more than an advisor despite a long list of evidence. CEO Joshua Goldbard claimed that the MobileCoin team never wrote the 2017 draft of the whitepaper which contained contributions from Marlinspike.

An ICO was an easy way to make money from an unprofitable app

By early 2021, Signal was struggling with debt and was generating minimal revenue. In April, it announced MobileCoin as its payment option for UK users. This was the major announcement used to justify MobileCoin’s rocketing price over $70 — a price it would never reclaim.

Of course, at the time, the Signal team had pressing debts payable to a WhatsApp founder. Despite Signal’s virtue signaling about private, peer-to-peer payment technology, it didn’t have any monetization strategy gaining meaningful traction with users. Encrypted messaging apps were and remain commonplace; vanishingly few users pay for this commoditized service.

As such, an ICO and price pump was a surefire way to raise capital.

Marlinspike touted the privacy features of Signal and MobileCoin, claiming that it could improve privacy for activities like accessing and paying for remote mental health services. MobileCoin provided lengthy documentation with claims about end-to-end encryption, yet Signal refuses to allow public access to its servers. Moreover, Signal could have integrated any number of other privacy-focused cryptocurrencies for free, including Monero, Zcash, Secret, Decred, Keep, and Dash.

Bitcoin Core developer Matt Corallo bluntly referred to Signal’s integration of MobileCoin as an attempt “to sell the future tokens to a captive audience.” He interpreted Marlinspike’s close involvement to mean that Signal was indeed behind MobileCoin’s creation.

Neither did Signal’s integration help MobileCoin gain meaningful use across the crypto industry. Today, MobileCoin has negligible use outside of Signal. The price of MobileCoin still languishes 98% lower than its all-time high.

Worse, MobileCoin refuses to verify its circulating and outstanding token supply, making it impossible for users to know its market capitalization and fully diluted value.

Final notes

More than a year and a half after the MobileCoin pump and dump, FTX froze withdrawals and then filed for bankruptcy in November 2022. John Ray III, a bankruptcy expert best known for presiding over Enron’s final days, took over. He confirmed that FTX’s finances were in complete disarray and he shockingly revealed billions of dollars worth of missing assets and the company’s Ponzi-like schemes.

Read more: FTX bankruptcy: A complete failure, worse than Enron

It’s public knowledge that the team behind MobileCoin comprised one of the wealthiest groups in crypto: Li Xiaolai, Moxie Marlinspike, Eric Meltzer, Dax Hansen, and Todd Huffman. The group was connected to a number of early Bitcoiners in China — especially Xiaolai and Meltzer, both of whom lived there. “China’s richest Bitcoin billionaire” Xiaolai was particularly wealthy due to his participation in Dan Larimer’s enormous ICOs of EOS and BitShares.

In addition, one of Meltzer’s partners at Primitive Ventures, Dovey Wan, is rumored to have had a romantic relationship with Binance chief Changpeng Zhao (CZ).

In any case, we now know the rest of the story. The FTX dominos had already been toppling for over 18 months — not due to Terra LUNA but because of MobileCoin. The minor altcoin with an unknown market cap extracted hundreds of millions of dollars from Alameda and wiped out any hope of FTX achieving profitability.

Obviously, the collapse of Do Kwon’s Terra LUNA and SBF’s shady financial practices didn’t help. Nevertheless, even SBF would have had a hard time brushing off a $1 billion loss on a bad margin takeover. He now awaits his day in court.

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