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The Block CEO Resigns After Failure To Disclose Loans From Bankman-Fried's Alameda (theblock.co) 25

The Block Chief Executive Officer Michael McCaffrey resigned after failing to disclose a series of loans from disgraced former FTX head Sam Bankman-Fried's Alameda Research. He was the only person with knowledge of the funding at the company. The Block reports: Bobby Moran, The Block's chief revenue officer, will step into the role of CEO, effective immediately, according to a company statement. "No one at The Block had any knowledge of this financial arrangement besides Mike," Moran said in a statement. "From our own experience, we have seen no evidence that Mike ever sought to improperly influence the newsroom or research teams, particularly in their coverage of SBF, FTX and Alameda Research."

McCaffrey received three loans in total, the first of which was in the amount of $12 million and was used in 2021 to buy out other investors in the crypto news, data and research provider. He took over day-to-day operations as the CEO at that time. A second $15 million loan in January was used to help fund day-to-day operations, while another $16 million earlier this year was used to purchase personal real estate in the Bahamas. In addition to stepping down as CEO, McCaffrey will step down from the company's board, which is set to expand to three people.

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The Block CEO Resigns After Failure To Disclose Loans From Bankman-Fried's Alameda

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  • Crypto Clusterfuck (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @06:47PM (#63117952) Journal

    I think we all kind of knew that the crypto "industry" (as if they produce anything of tangible value) was an incestuous pit toilet, but I guess I didn't realize just how much of one until FTX caked it's pants.

    Kind of hoping each and every one of these guys takes it up the tailpipe for thinking that accounting rules and regulations don't apply to them.

  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @07:07PM (#63118026)
    You have posted a story about the criminal CEO of a company I have never heard of.

    And the story is what THAT COMPANY have to say about what happened ?!

    WTF for journalism is this shit ?
  • Seems like there is a lot of Crypto Transmitted Disease out there. SBF sure spread a lot of it around.

    Gotta be careful which wallet you put your coins into, and you wouldn't want any dirty coins in your own wallet either.

  • Crypto is just hackerspeak for "I am going to rob you, give me your cash"

  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @07:55PM (#63118130) Homepage
    Now they are funding the crypto crash.

    "He was the only person with knowledge of the funding at the company."

    So they don't have an accounting department? Their entire business model is moving money around. Seems like there is no internal accountability. Use square at your own risk.
    • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @08:02PM (#63118140) Homepage
      Ok they got me with the click-bait, I thought this was "Block", formerly "Square" - so Who is "The Block"? Why should I care? And why isn't "Block/Square" Suing them for using a similar name, or visa-versa?
      • "why isn't "Block/Square" Suing them for using a similar name, or visa-versa?"

        Trademarks apply to specific fields, to wit:
        a) Square which was a game comany, one of the progenitors of Square Enix, vs.
        b) Square which is a payment processor developed by
        c) Block, an financial services company, vs.
        d) The Block, which seems to be in the field of racketeering.

  • To buy personal property in the Bahamas. A “loan”. Um, yeah, sure.

    And they’re expanding their board to ummm.3 people? So, in other words, they had no board. A board of directors is a COMMITTEE, not one or two people.

    “Bad corporate governance” would be a massive understatement. That anyone put their money into these vehicles is amazing.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      To buy personal property in the Bahamas. A “loan”. Um, yeah, sure.

      Well. Seems the issue here is News Agencies have to disclose financial relationships with those they're reporting on... This is unethical that they did not and could cause legal troubles.

      People get mortgages all the time. $16 Million loans are a bit less often... that must be some seriously nice property they financed, and maybe it was just that for some reason the bank wasn't willing to write the loan.

  • You know what a loan is? It's a bribe. A loan is a non-taxable event, and a company can choose not to collect.

  • No one has even heard of this supposed 'The Block'. Check the financials, but who cares really. Anyway I wouldn't be surprised if there were ties between someone at Slashdot and this thing, and they're just trying to give it some advertising in the form of some cheap astroturf.

  • Block is a fairly large payments processing company. They are on the NASDAQ. They are fiat money, in USD (real money).

    FTX is a terrible contagion. No one want to be associated with them. It wasn't even a complex scheme, just fraud against too much available money.

    Anyway, the Block CEO exposed the company to this contagion. So he's out.

    Now then, why don't we hear other impacted parties coming out of the wood work with claims against FTX?

    I believe it's avoiding "cake on face" and the contagion and just w

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