Protocol

Protocol

Winklevoss bought $100M of his own stock at 14 dollars. It's trading at 6.

9 min · 15 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Winklevoss bought $100M of his own stock at 14 dollars. It's trading at 6.

Descripción

The Winklevoss twins just invested $100 million in their own public company at $14 a share when the stock was trading at $4.92, paid entirely in bitcoin instead of cash, then quietly rewrote the rules to make it easier to sell those shares back later. Gemini lost $109 million last quarter while spending $144 million to make $50 million in revenue, but the stock still jumped 15% after hours because everyone called it a vote of confidence. Meanwhile nobody's talking about how the same-day registration rights amendment lowered the threshold for the founders to eventually dump those shares into the public market, or how Gemini's balance sheet now holds volatile bitcoin instead of the cash it's been burning through.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Protocol!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

50 episodios

episode Tether received a direct enforcement call three weeks before FinCEN told banks artwork

Tether received a direct enforcement call three weeks before FinCEN told banks

Tether froze 344 million dollars in USDT tied to Iran on April 23rd — nearly three weeks before U.S. banks were even officially told to watch for Iranian crypto activity. An offshore stablecoin company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands acted on direct communication from U.S. authorities we still can't fully read, which means Tether isn't operating outside American enforcement — it's functioning as an active sanctions node whether it's legally required to be or not. Now victims of Iranian attacks are in court trying to seize that frozen money directly, and if that works, it sets a precedent that stablecoin issuers aren't just compliance players but actual custodians of attachable assets in U.S. civil cases.

Ayer8 min
episode 26 malicious LLM routers stole credentials. DeFi has no defense for this. artwork

26 malicious LLM routers stole credentials. DeFi has no defense for this.

An AI agent with access to a live crypto wallet had its memory wiped in a crash, misread a random post on X as a transfer request, and autonomously sent a stranger up to four hundred fifty thousand dollars on-chain with zero human approval. Over one hundred thirty-seven million dollars has been drained from at least fifteen DeFi platforms since January through AI agent exploits, not smart contract bugs—attackers are poisoning the routers, plugins, and memory files that sit between the AI and the blockchain, and no major protocol has disclosed how they're securing that layer. The guy who co-founded OpenZeppelin, the firm that audited Aave and Uniswap, just told friends and family to exit all of DeFi because defenders have to protect every line of code while attackers only need one hole.

27 de may de 20269 min
episode Winklevoss bought $100M of his own stock at 14 dollars. It's trading at 6. artwork

Winklevoss bought $100M of his own stock at 14 dollars. It's trading at 6.

The Winklevoss twins just invested $100 million in their own public company at $14 a share when the stock was trading at $4.92, paid entirely in bitcoin instead of cash, then quietly rewrote the rules to make it easier to sell those shares back later. Gemini lost $109 million last quarter while spending $144 million to make $50 million in revenue, but the stock still jumped 15% after hours because everyone called it a vote of confidence. Meanwhile nobody's talking about how the same-day registration rights amendment lowered the threshold for the founders to eventually dump those shares into the public market, or how Gemini's balance sheet now holds volatile bitcoin instead of the cash it's been burning through.

15 de may de 20269 min