.@Loopierr total PnL on $STORM is $15.5K.
Bought $3.7K four days ago, already sold $14.77K and still holding $4.48K.
Nice. https://t.co/63vmAzFn3n
.@Loopierr total PnL on $STORM is $15.5K.
Bought $3.7K four days ago, already sold $14.77K and still holding $4.48K.
Nice. https://t.co/63vmAzFn3n
What is the most incisive 30 second pitch I could make to a powerful friend regarding the @rstormsf case? A no fluff one-shot to get this resolved in 30 seconds.
Might have one last shot on goal. https://t.co/6fur6bneGH
As of Thursday, in their Rule 29 response, the DOJ is still pushing this theory that Storm, by publishing TC software, provided a "valuable service" to a sanctioned entity because DPRK used the protocol. This flawed principle is limitless: if I make a hammer with no particular end user in mind and somehow that hammer ends up being used by DPRK, I provided them a "valuable service."
But you don't see them going after Apple for the iPhone, Google for its tech suite, etc., even though these tech tools are used by the DPRK. That's because this is a gross distortion of the law.
Back when we @fund_defi @jchervinsky wrote our amicus brief in support of @rstormsf's MTD, we reviewed over 100 sanctions cases and provided the court with a table of them - in every single case there was nexus between the sanctioned entity and the defendant, some evidence the defendant directly connected with the SDN or created a tool *for* the SDN specifically. There was no case - none - where a defendant made a tool with no particular