The Steaker asset management platform was affected by the collapse of FTX, resulting in heavy losses for many users. The prosecutor therefore interviewed relevant people of Steaker, and the founder was detained on suspicion of committing a felony violation of the banking law.
As a regular person, "paying $500 for a 0.0001% chance of influencing the outcome of some votes" is not a good deal. Only multi-millionaires and hedge funds (including the attackers) think this is a good deal.
Reprinted from V God’s Twitter, about the significance of talking about governance tokens
If you have stored an FTX address in the address book for withdrawing coins, it is recommended to remove it to avoid accidentally withdrawing money there, which will not be able to be transferred back.
FTX exchange issued a statement on Twitter: SBF has said some things recently, but he has already resigned from FTX on 11/11, so SBF’s statement does not represent FTX.
Some people liken the bankruptcy of FTX to a bank run, and also believe that FTX is not at fault, but the problem of the whistleblower.
There is a mistake here. FTX should be compared to a securities firm. It is outrageous for a securities firm to misappropriate your money. What is even more outrageous is that you can never get it back after misappropriation. So where does the money go?
The strategic financial management platform Steaker has caused some financial management plans to be outsourced due to the FTX incident. Currently, some of the plan funds are trapped in the FTX exchange.
It is worth noting that Steaker sold quickly when UST was decoupled, allowing investors to successfully escape. However, it is easy to hide from open guns and difficult to prevent from hidden arrows. It is believed that the cost of large exchanges has caused funds to be trapped.
Officials are currently considering using legal means to retrieve the funds, but the specific follow-up development is still unclear.