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The Protocol: 'Private Jet Brandization' Is One Way Polkadot Burnt Cash

Crypto twitterati showed no mercy as Polkadot published a transparency report detailing spending on $87 million of DOT tokens – a lot of it on marketing. PLUS blockchain tech news and project highlights from the past week.

Updated Jul 3, 2024, 6:15 p.m. Published Jul 3, 2024, 6:15 p.m.
Private Jet
Private Jet

June proved to be an incredibly ugly month in crypto markets (see our blood-red chart below), but wasn't completely devoid of decent blockchain tech stories. One obsession of crypto twitterati during the past week was poring over the line items in Polkadot's treasury transparency report. The $6.8 million to sponsor a "prestigious soccer club" was just one of many expenses held up to public scrutiny.

ALSO:

  • Handicapping Solana's ETF chances.
  • Crypto hacks in 1H doubled from a year earlier to $572M.
  • Top picks from the past week's Protocol Village column: Tezos, Igloo, Worldcoin, Alchemy, Obol Labs, Wavlake, ZBD.
  • Nearly $80 million of blockchain project fundraisings: Lombard, Prodia, RedStone, Pi Squared, Astria, Redacted, OpenLedger, Ethos.
  • Uniswap had the least-bad June returns among members of the CoinDesk 20.

Sui as a global coordination layer
Sui as a global coordination layer

Network news

2023 - H2 and 2024-H1
2023 - H2 and 2024-H1

Polkadot's spending more than doubled from the prior six months' clip. (Polkadot)

BURN RATE: At the very least one has to give Polkadot credit for transparency. On Tuesday the blockchain project released a lengthy report, including spreadsheets and copies of invoices, detailing its spending over the past six months. No good deed goes unpunished, however, and right on cue, twitterati tore into the project's multimillion-dollar spending on activities like marketing, advertising, sponsorships, events and influencers. At the highest level, the project spent $87 million worth of its own DOT tokens on various activities during the first half of 2024, a pace that would exhaust the $245 million currently in the treasury within roughly two years, as relayed by CoinDesk's Shaurya Malwa. But it was the green-eyeshade details that left the report's readers agog – $4.9 million for influencers, $1.9 million to sponsor the race car driver Conor Daly, $1 million for digital ads on CoinMarketCap, $490,000 to the press-release website Chainwire, $180,000 for "private jet brandization," $6.8 million for a "deal with a prestigious soccer club," as the report termed it. (Lionel Messi's team, Inter Miami?) Snarky posters on X remarked that, for all the spending, the influencers seemed strangely inactive – while others joked that the report was finally bringing Polkadot the publicity it coveted. Polkadot officials noted that the spending went further than expected, thanks to this year's mostly-up crypto markets: "We can observe a huge jump in spending, as proposals got more ambitious in scope and ask size recently," the report read. "The good news is that the average DOT price has gone up this half-year, resulting in more bang for the DOT, highlighted by the fact that DOT spending went up by 2.4x, but the USD-equivalent value is up 3.2x in the same timeframe."

NOT SOL FAST! Hey, Bitcoin got ETFs earlier this year, and now Ethereum appears headed in that direction, possibly bringing in billions of dollars within months, based on Galaxy Digital research. So what about an ETF for Solana, seen as one of the most promising blockchains? Probably not anytime soon, experts are saying. The speculation kicked off last week as the investment manager VanEck filed for a Solana ETF, sending the project's native token, SOL, up 8%. Another firm, 21Shares, put in a request a day later. But as reported by CoinDesk's Helene Braun, "Solana hasn't cleared a prerequisite for the Biden administration's Securities and Exchange Commission: a well-established regulated derivatives market. Both bitcoin and ether have had that, in the form of CME Group's cryptocurrency futures contracts." Another possible hurdle is that the SEC, in some of its legal cases, has alleged that SOL is an unregistered security – and that cloud might have to clear before an ETF sees any sunlight. "It is unlikely that there will be a decision on this in the near future," as Coinbase Institutional analysts put it in a weekly research report.

ALSO:

  • WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange received a donation of 8.07 bitcoins (worth roughly $500,000) from one entity, helping to cover the cost of a private jet that flew him out of the UK and ultimately to freedom in Australia after he reached a plea deal with the U.S. Department of Justice.
  • Jesse Powell, a co-founder of the crypto exchange Kraken, said he donated $1 million to Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump, most of which was in ether (ETH).
  • The family of Tigran Gambaryan, an executive of the crypto exchange Binance being detained in Nigeria in connection with money-laundering charges, said his health is deteriorating. He complained of numbness in his foot as well as back pain, and has double pneumonia and malaria, according to a statement from the family. A trial in the case was adjourned until July 5 following cross-examination Monday of the first witness from the country's Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • In a rare move, the predictions market Polymarket contradicted its decentralized oracle service UMA with regard to the resolution of a market betting on whether Barron Trump had a role in the DJT token – tweeting that there was "conclusive" evidence the former president's scion was involved "in some way." (For background, please see The Protocol's June 19 summary of the controversy, including the participation of "Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli.)
  • Crypto losses due to hacks and rug pulls in the second quarter more than doubled from a year earlier to $572 million, according to Immunefi."CeFi was the main target of successful exploits at 70% of the total losses in Q2, compared to DeFi at 30%."

Protocol Village

Top picks of the past week from our Protocol Village column, highlighting key blockchain tech upgrades and news.

Montage Ainsley Costello
Montage Ainsley Costello

Montage from the website singer-songwriter Ainsley Costello, whose music can be heard on the Bitcoin Lightning Network-friendly music platform Wavlake. (ainsleycostello.com)

1. Developer teams behind the Tezos blockchain unveiled "Tezos X," a set of technological upgrades they say could bring a "huge boost in performance, composability and interoperability." The roadmap, setting out a development plan for the next two years, calls for splitting off transaction execution into a separate "canonical rollup" that would support "atomic transactions across smart contracts written in different programming languages." The main Tezos blockchain would serve as a base layer for consensus and settlement.

2. Igloo Inc., Pudgy Penguins’ parent company, on Monday announced the acquisition of the Frame team. "Frame co-founders and notable blockchain developers Cygaar and Beans will contribute towards building a new Ethereum L2, Abstract, designed to take on the consumer crypto opportunity," according to the team.

3. Worldcoin has announced that it is partnering with Alchemy to provide reliable infrastructure for World Chain, a new blockchain designed for humans, according to the team.

4. Blockchain startup Obol Labs has formed a new industry group that aims to advance the growing field ofdistributed validator technology – at the heart of the latest push by developers to eradicate single points of failures within decentralized networks like Ethereum. The Obol Collective includes a consortium of Ethereum ecosystem players "dedicated to the security, resiliency and decentralization of Ethereum consensus," according to a blog post Wednesday from Obol Labs. Early participants in the collective include EigenLayer, Lido, Figment, Bitcoin Suisse, Nethermind, Blockdaemon, Chorus One, DappNode and ETH Stakers.

5. Wavlake, a music and podcast distribution platform, has partnered with ZBD to revolutionize creator payments. According to the team: "Unlike Spotify and Apple Music, which pay meager royalties, Wavlake empowers independent musicians and podcasters. Through Wavlake, creators can upload content distributed across platforms like Fountain.fm. Listeners can tip artists using the Bitcoin Lightning Network, enabling instant microtransactions. Ainsley Costello earned over $700 in Bitcoin for a single track, outperforming Spotify."


Money Center

Fundraisings

CEO of Pi Squared Grigore Rosu
CEO of Pi Squared Grigore Rosu

CEO of Pi Squared Grigore Rosu (Pi Squared)

  • Pi Squared, acompany setting out to enable verifiable computing through the use of zero-knowledge technology, announced Tuesday that it raised $12.5 million in a seed round led by Polychain Capital.
  • In partnership with Bitcoin staking protocol Babylon, the startup Lombard has raised $16 million to build out Bitcoin-based restaking.
  • Prodia, a distributed network of GPUs for AI inference solutions, raised $15 million, led by Dragonfly Capital, to build more scalable, affordable AI solutions powered by Web3, according to the team.
  • RedStone, a provider of oracle data feeds for blockchains, announced Tuesday that it raised $15 million in a series A round, led by Arrington Capital.
  • (PROTOCOL VILLAGE EXCLUSIVE):Astria, a shared sequencer network, announced a $12.5 million strategic fundraise led by dba and Placeholder VC, with RockawayX joining the round.
  • REDACTED, building an ecosystem of products to form an "entertainment datasphere," has raised $10 million in funding, co-led by Spartan Group with Saison Capital, Animoca Brands, Polygon Ventures Web3 founders, VCs, angel investors and whales like Dingaling and Grail, according to the team.
  • OpenLedger, the sovereign data blockchain for AI, raised $8 million in its seed round, led by Polychain Capital and Borderless Capital, according to the team.
  • Ethos Network, founded in 2023 as a "a credibility protocol that encourages users to stake their Ethereum in other people," announced the close of its $1.75 million funding round, led by a collective group of prominent Web3 angel investors including Bharat Krymo, James Hall, 0xQuit, Tre, Dingaling, Sighduck, Dragos, 0xMakesy and Zeneca.

Data and Tokens

Regulatory, Policy and Legal


Uniswap's UNI Lost the Least in Ugly Month for Crypto Markets

Leaders and laggards alike got crushed by crypto markets in June, with bellwether bitcoin (BTC) falling 8.5% – and this week dipping below $60,000, well off the all-time high above $73,000.

All members of the CoinDesk 20 Index were losers during the month. Uniswap's UNI turned in the least ugly performance, down 8.1%. XRP slid 8.8% and Ethereum's ETH lost 9.4%.

The dog-themed meme coin SHIB produced the biggest decline in the index, at 32.9%, barely edged out by the 32.7% loss for Internet Computer (ICP).

CoinDex 20 Index performance in June
CoinDex 20 Index performance in June

(Pallavi Chintam/CoinDesk Indices)


Calendar

July 8-11: EthCC, Brussels.

July 11: TezDev 2024, Brussels.

July 25-27: Bitcoin 2024, Nashville.

Aug. 19-21: Web3 Summit, Berlin.

Sept. 19-21: Solana Breakpoint, Singapore.

Sept. 1-7: Korea Blockchain Week, Seoul.

Sept. 12-13: Global Blockchain Congress, Southeast Asia Edition, Singapore

Sept. 30-Oct. 2: Messari Mainnet, New York.

Oct. 9-11: Permissionless, Salt Lake City.

Oct. 21-22: Cosmoverse, Dubai.

Oct. 23-24: Cardano Summit, Dubai.

Oct. 30-31: Chainlink SmartCon, Hong Kong.

Nov 12-14: Devcon 7, Bangkok.

Nov. 20-21: North American Blockchain Summit, Dallas.

Feb. 19-20, 2025: ConsensusHK, Hong Kong.

May 14-16: Consensus, Toronto.

Bradley Keoun

Bradley Keoun is CoinDesk's managing editor of tech & protocols, where he oversees a team of reporters covering blockchain technology, and previously ran the global crypto markets team. A two-time Loeb Awards finalist, he previously was chief global finance and economic correspondent for TheStreet and before that worked as an editor and reporter for Bloomberg News in New York and Mexico City, reporting on Wall Street, emerging markets and the energy industry. He started out as a police-beat reporter for the Gainesville Sun in Florida and later worked as a general-assignment reporter for the Chicago Tribune. Originally from Fort Wayne, Indiana, he double-majored in electrical engineering and classical studies as an undergraduate at Duke University and later obtained a master's in journalism from the University of Florida. He is currently based in Austin, Texas, and in his spare time plays guitar, sings in a choir and hikes in the Texas Hill Country. He owns less than $1,000 each of several cryptocurrencies.

picture of Bradley Keoun