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Forbes Releases Rich List for Crypto and Blockchain Billionaires

Forbes’ crypto billionaires list has grown by seven this year, increasing to 19 members, though these new additions have not knocked Binance founder and CEO Changpeng ‘CZ’ Zhao off the top spot.

Recent DLT News Review: New Launches by Forbes and Visa ...
Forbes releases its crypto billionaires list this week.

The Forbes list expanded by 58 percent this year. When it was first compiled in 2018, the bar to qualify was set at US$350 million. However, as the industry has since expanded exponentially, only billionaires qualify in 2022.

Binance founder and CEO ‘CZ’ Zhao is holding tight to his top position on the list for another year. Despite Forbes downgrading CZ’s wealth estimate from US$96 billion to $65 billion, he is still several lengths out in front:

In second place is FTX founder and CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, with a current estimated worth of US$24 billion. Bankman-Fried has grand intentions to donate much of his wealth to charities, keeping only 1 percent of his annual earnings each year, stating “I don’t want a yacht”. Brian Armstrong, CEO and founder of CoinBase, took third place with a net worth of US$6.6 billion.

Among the handful of newcomers are FTX’s co-founder Gary Wang, OpenSea co-founders Alex Atallah and Devin Finzer, Song Chi-Hyung (founder of Upbit), Kim Hyoung-nyon (Upbit’s EVP), and Nikil Viswanathan and Joseph Lau, co-founders of Alchemy.

Crypto Billionaires Line Their Pockets

For a select few, crypto investments have paid off immensely. Aussie billionaire Alex Waislitz bought crypto investments that reportedly increased in value by 400 percent. Nicknamed “Australia’s Warren Buffett”, Waislitz invested through a pre-IPO (initial public offering), which turned out to be a very smart move.

Billionaire PayPal founder Peter Thiel, on the other hand, has stated that he is disappointed he didn’t invest more before the boom.

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Binance

Leading Exchange, Binance Files Defamation Lawsuit Against Forbes Media

On October 29, Forbes published a viral report, “Leaked ‘Tai Chi’ Document Reveals Binance’s Elaborate Scheme To Evade Bitcoin Regulators,” asserting that the leading cryptocurrency exchange, Binance planned to evade US regulations by establishing an exchange in the country. Shortly after the publication, the CEO of Binance, Changpeng Zhao (CZ), took to his Twitter handle to refute the claims. He argued that the statements and accusations in the report were incorrect.

Today, the exchange took things a little further by opening a defamation lawsuit against the American business magazine, Forbes.

All Statements are “Highly Defamatory,” Says Binance

According to the information, Binance filed the complaints with the United States District Court in News Jersey, seeking compensatory and punitive damages. The crypto exchange hired a popular media litigation attorney, Charles J. Harder of HARDER LLP in New York, to represent them in the ongoing case. Binance also wants the article to be taken down because it has tarnished the exchange’s reputation.

Charles J. Harder, the attorney for Binance, commented:

“Forbes’ misleading story has done great harm to Binance’s reputation. Binance demanded Forbes’ retraction or correction, but it has refused. This lawsuit therefore became necessary. Binance intends to see this lawsuit through to the end, to ensure the truth and protect its reputation.”

Forbes Stands on its Report

Basically, the statements and claims in the Forbes document were drawn from a document which is assumed to have been created by a senior executive in Binance. The document was more like an outline of how Binance allegedly planned to evade regulations in the US by establishing a subsidiary in the country. 

As Forbes staff writer Michael del Castillo reported, Binance allegedly plotted to “distract regulators” with such a strategy in order to “move revenue in the form of licensing fees and more to the parent company, Binance.”

Although Binance flagged the statement as defamatory, Forbes is holding ground on the report. “We stand by our reporting,” said Forbes Chief Communications Officer Matthew Hutchison.