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Empire Newsletter: Worldcoin is still more UBI than AI

Empire Newsletter: Worldcoin is still more UBI than AI WikiBit 2024-05-23 23:00

Universal based incomeWorldcoin cops a lot of flak for its absurdly high fully-diluted value: nearly

Universal based income

Worldcoin cops a lot of flak for its absurdly high fully-diluted value: nearly $49 billion compared to a market cap of $1 billion.

That makes for just 2% of the total WLD supply currently circulating, with the rest to be released over the coming years. In December, only 1% of the WLD supply was liquid.

Whats often lost is that for all of its gadgetry and tangential ties to the AI movement, Worldcoin is a universal basic income scheme.

The iris-scanning Orb is something of a red herring. A means to an end.

Every two weeks, anyone (in a whitelisted jurisdiction) who has sold biometrics to verified their identities with Tools for Humanity (not in the US) can receive a small grant from Worldcoin sent directly to their wallets.

Grants, on average, are each currently 5 WLD ($24.20) but in the early days last June, recipients received on average 20 WLD ($45.60 then, $96.80 now), mostly due to the larger “genesis grant” payments just after launch.

Feeding your eyeball to the Orb was only a method of signing up for UBI dSam Altman. World App is your way of receiving and spending the UBI payments.

And any unspent UBI could eventually be used to help govern the World Chain, a layer-2 that will presumably do all the other wacky things layer-2s do, like DEXs, lending and launchpads.

It‘s tempting to already treat WLD like any other low-float governance token airdropped in the past year. But at this point, it’s still purely a currency within the UBI context.

Here‘s how it’s going:

Weekly UBI payments topped out at $85 million about a month after WLDs all-time high

Worldcoin has so far distributed about $752 million through its UBI system, valued at the rough time of each grant. If everyone had held their WLD until today, it would be worth $790 million.

About three quarters of the circulating WLD supply was sent via user grants since last July, equal to 163 million WLD, per an official Dune dashboard. Another 3.8 million WLD was paid to Orb operators, but that crypto shouldnt be considered UBI, as it was worked for.

According to Worldcoins data, 3.93 million unique wallets have claimed at least one grant — which confirms their minimum participation in the UBI scheme.

Those wallets have altogether received 35 million individual grants. So, enrollees have so far received (almost) nine grants each, on average. Quick math suggests a $200 average lifetime UBI payment for each recipient.

UBI recipients have more than tripled since January

Not bad, considering the number of humans in Worldcoins scheme is 10 times the population of Iceland, home to Auroracoin, arguably the original UBI cryptocurrency that launched and failed in 2014.

— David Canellis

Data Center

  • Bitcoinis inching back toward $70K, trading just under that floor ahead of the US market open.

  • Coinbaseis set to open 2.5% above yesterdays stock close, according to Yahoo data.

  • A new Federal Reserve survey included some crypto data. The top-line number: 7% of adults held or used crypto last year.

  • Thats compared to 10% and 12% in 2022 and 2021, respectively.

  • Yeah, but:just 1% of respondents said they used crypto to send money last year.

Unwrapping the tin foil

How did we get here?

The question for the ages. As we covered earlier this week, the ETH ETFs are no longer a fever dream. As potential issuers update their filings, there are a slew of questions to ask.

Here‘s one: Should we have known? Well, there’s no doubt that everyone‘s been a little surprised by how everything’s unfolded.

Earlier this year, analysts Eric Balchunas and James Seyffart lowered their odds of a May approval after radio silence from the SEC. Heck, the issuers even added staking language to their drafts and still nothing from Gary Genslers agency.

There‘s the possibility that SEC officials suddenly changed their minds and realized that they need to prep ETH ETFs for the market ASAP. There’s also the chance that, as Seyffart told us earlier this week, a political play is unfolding.

But theres also the chance that the SEC planned this all along.

I know this sounds like a conspiracy theory unto itself, but hear me out. Or, rather, hear out Nate Geraci, president of The ETF Store.

Earlier this week, Geraci told me he thought that the SEC could have been ready for this. That, of course, sparked my curiosity, and so I asked him to expand.

“My sense is the SEC wanted to avoid the circus atmosphere around spot ether ETFs like we witnessed with the spot bitcoin ETF approval process. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce used this exact phrase — ‘circus atmosphere’ — in her public statement following spot bitcoin ETF approval,” he said.

According to Geraci, the SEC may have “decided to approach spot ether ETF approval in a manner that didnt draw so much attention.”

Last week, Coinbases David Han also said he believed there was room for surprises during decision week.

But Balchunas later pushed back on Geraci‘s claims and said the two would “agree to disagree” because his sources were very surprised about the SEC’s sudden uptick in communication — and assessment that tracked with multiple media reports.

I guess anyone could have anticipated that the week of a potential crypto ETF decision would be…spicy, to say the least.

— Katherine Ross

The Works

  • Sam Bankman-Fried, currently incarcerated in New York as he seeks appeal, is being transferred to a new prison, according to the Wall Street Journal.

  • Speaking of FTX: Government lawyers are seeking a 5-7 year prison sentence for former FTX exec Ryan Salame.

  • Seven percent ofAmerican adults“held or used crypto” last year, according to a newly released Fed survey.

  • Sign of the times? CoinDesk reports that MetaMaskwill add native support for bitcoin.

  • Last but not least: Our friends over at the Lightspeednewsletter went live this week. Subscribe now to get their latest edition this afternoon.

The Morning Riff

Some might be wary of privacy-protecting tools in light of the US governments war on crypto mixers and CoinJoin wallets.

Not Vitalik. Hes using Railgun, an Ethereum zero-knowledge protocol for keeping transactions private, apparently once a month.

Railgun presents itself as a tool for “using DeFi without leaking your data or alpha.” And OK, it‘s not a mixer, so it’s not the same thing as Tornado Cash.

And it‘s possible to prove funds that have interacted with Railgun are legitimate in the eyes of OFAC sanction lists, without divulging any sensitive information (that’s the point).

The effect is still similar — it hides the origin of funds, which is some of what Tornado Cash did wrong, according to the Department of Justice. Vitalik has also spoken publicly about using Tornado Cash to protect identities when donating to causes in Ukraine.

Crypto faces a political war with multiple fronts, and privacy is a key one. Cult of personality tends to be a centralizing force, but blockchain needs figures like Buterin fighting for it — onchain.

— David Canellis

Disclaimer:

The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.

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