Reality Intrudes on a Utopian Crypto Vision

WASHINGTON — American CryptoFed is a new kind of company spawned by the advent of cryptocurrency — one that claims, in a way, not to be a company at all.

There are no owners, officers or employees, according to its stated plan. Instead, American CryptoFed is a “decentralized autonomous organization” that is supposed to be steered automatically by computer code and governed by a community of users who vote on proposals with crypto tokens.

To their proponents, these types of ventures, known as DAOs, are a new model for commerce, one that could democratize business enterprises and break the hold that big tech and other entrenched middlemen have over innovation in the information age. Already, a rapidly growing number of these upstart organizations have emerged online, including financial services operations, news hubs and social clubs.

But they are also coming under fire from multiple angles, reflecting both the disruptive force of the crypto phenomenon and its struggle to prove its practical use beyond financial speculation.

Members of DAOs are clashing with one another about how to balance the need for skilled and experienced managers against the idealistic vision of communal decision-making. In some cases, crypto investors and regulators say, the ventures amount to Ponzi schemes intended to do little more than bolster the value of the digital tokens they sell.

And regulators are swooping in amid concern about how to protect investors in organizations that do not adopt traditional business and accounting practices.

Just four months after the launch of American CryptoFed DAO, which planned to create a crypto payments system, the Securities and Exchange Commission in November effectively shut it down, saying that the enterprise was “materially misleading” the public with contradictory filings that failed to disclose key information such as audited financial statements.

Hester Peirce, a commissioner on the Securities and Exchange Commission, called the surge in DAO activity somewhat overwhelming.

“The last year or so has been a big period for DAOs and people are doing a lot of experimentation,” said Ms. Peirce. “Just trying to even grapple with what this actually means is hard because everything’s moving so fast.”

But the reality of setting up and running these DAOs has often been complicated.

Olympus DAO, born a year ago, drew international attention and skepticism for boasting extraordinarily high rates of return to crypto holders who commit tokens to the system for a specific time. At one point it offered up to nearly 8,000 percent annual yield.

The platform holds regular online votes on proposals like one in January weighing an alliance with JonesDAO, a start up that allows users to invest in higher-risk crypto derivatives and futures.

But Olympus is largely controlled by its pseudonymous founder, Zeus, whose statements about the business model have baffled industry insiders. The result has been to leave even crypto enthusiasts musing publicly that the operation is probably a Ponzi scheme entirely reliant on participants’ continual faith and inflows of crypto to stay afloat.

Without the traditional disclosures required from a public company or even a private one raising public funds, little is known about OlympusDAO, said Jordi Alexander, an executive at the digital asset trading firm Selini Capital.

“No one is ultimately auditing it to make sure that the statements are true,” Mr. Alexander said from his base in Singapore, elaborating on a Medium post he wrote raising questions about Olympus’s strategy,

Having reached a high of about $1,400, an Olympus token is now worth only about $30, a loss of nearly $4 billion in value. (An individual representing himself as Zeus defended the project in an interview, saying “I just always tried to act authentically and honestly.”)

Community strife has prompted a price crash at Wonderland DAO, whose founder was recently forced to disclose that the platform’s treasurer, known as Sifu, was actually a man going by the name Michael Patryn. Mr. Patryn was previously convicted of financial crimes in the United States and Canada and was a co-founder of the failed Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX, whose other founder’s mysterious death has left law enforcement suspicious and customers out about $135 million in crypto.

Among the topics debated since on the Wonderland governance forum are whether the DAO should dissolve, or transform into something more like a classic corporation, by hiring “a team of professionals that have background checks” including chief financial, legal and operating officers.

The problems that have emerged often stem from the anonymous nature of DAOs and cryptocurrency.

This anonymity can undermine accountability and facilitate what critics call abuses of power, like at SushiSwap, where its creator, dubbed Chef Nomi, left the project abruptly, cashing out on nearly $13 million worth of tokens amid infighting.

A developer who goes by OxMaki and who was involved in starting SushiSwap told The Times in a Telegram chat that the DAO’s strengths — diversity and decentralization — also turned out to be weaknesses.

“It was formed from a wild spectrum of people worldwide without relation between all the parties. The vision and direction being different for each group. It was never fully decided internally. Which was a mistake,” he wrote, adding that he never met other Sushi team members in person. (OxMaki, who called himself an “anarcho-capitalist,” declined to disclose his real name.)

American CryptoFed calls itself the first legally sanctioned DAO in the United States. It was registered in Wyoming, which passed the first state law formally recognizing DAOs and exempting crypto tokens from state securities laws.

In September, it notified the S.E.C. that it would create two new cryptocurrencies for payments and governance in its internal economy, both of which would first be distributed to the public and then later bought, sold and traded.

But the S.E.C. in November quickly moved to block the issuance, asserting in a complaint that this was an illegal securities offering, a move that the DAO is now fighting.

Fearing S.E.C. enforcement, start-ups aiming for decentralization have increasingly turned to private equity funds for capital, giving big investors a large chunk of tokens.

Venture capitalists like Andreessen Horowitz, as a result, have ended up in some cases playing a disproportionate role in decision-making.

Venture funds, founders, core team members and other insiders controlled nearly 50 percent of the Solana platform’s token, SOL, upon its initial release, giving them a large governance stake in the DAO, said Ryan Watkins, a crypto industry analyst.

This insider problem is exacerbated by the often low voter turnouts of individual token holders, making it easy for big players to influence outcomes.

“The more concentrated the token supply is, the more problematic it will be,” said Mr. Watkins, who recently left the crypto data firm Messari, which tracks these trends. “It raises the question, is this really a DAO or is it just like some rich guys deciding what to do?”

Some DAOs are realizing that running a truly decentralized entity can be hard and are moving to form leadership committees that oversee certain key operations, again resembling a more traditional corporate structure, Mr. Watkins said.



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