"This Guy" is everywhere. People fall for scams all the time, and as a society, we are failing to educate them with the sense to sniff them out. That, and a regulatory environment where everything goes, means that people of all walks of life are getting suckered every day. Only a matter of time that one of those people happened to be a small local bank manager with access to millions.
If it wasn't a crypto scam, it would be a lottery scam, or a job offer scam, or romance/pigbutchering scam, or a tech support phone scam, or a meatspace MLM scam like Amway and Herbalife. There is no shortage of ways gullible, financially-illiterate people can be separated from their money.
> People fall for scams all the time, and as a society, we are failing to educate them with the sense to sniff them out.
IDK. It's one thing to fall for a scam and lose all your money. It's another thing to, after all that, go to your board of directors, ask permission to invest bank money in the scam, and when they say "We don't feel comfortable with this" tell them "Too late, I already invested the company's money in this for you." This is not a financially illiterate person, but someone who seemingly knew he needed board approval for an investment at scale, yet simultaneously ignored it and assumed he would be given it when asking retroactively.
There's a great many other failures of control here, like staff disobeying policy when he told them to. And perhaps it's my family history speaking here, but I suspect this guy has an undiagnosed mental illness (bipolar?).
Agree with your points. But I think we're unlikely to see tens of millions of dollars in an Amway, Herbalife hustle.
> People fall for scams all the time, and as a society, we are failing to educate them with the sense to sniff them out.
One of the companies I work with recently started looking at partnering with this company: https://scamnetic.com/
I like the idea of providing better education about scams to consumers, but this company gives me some pretty weird vibes. I wonder if we're on the cusp of another security theater boom similar to the plethora of companies that sprung up around identity theft and mostly seemed to exist to allow companies to mitigate any responsibility for their poor data and security practices.
This exactly. And Crypto's biggest "innovation" by far was giving us an entirely new unregulated financial market with zero consumer protections that included, as a bonus, the trappings and added complexity of software and let con men the world over dust off every money scheme from the last hundred years and do a fresh round.
Edit: Further, "education" shouldn't even be a factor here. You should not need to protect yourself from being scammed. Taking advantage of people's trust and stealing their money should be illegal, the offenders should be punished, and the victims made whole. There is no reason in a civilized society to permit financial crimes, which is what this shit is. Stealing is fucking stealing, whether you take something from a store, whether a bank issues bullshit fees, whether an employer doesn't pay fair wages, whether a con man tricks you into buying ape pictures.
A recent post from a crypto reporter gave a good write up of how he almost got himself scammed [1]. It sounds like it followed the exact same script, even down to the Aunt with a crypto trading firm. The lengths that the scammers went to in order to prepare him for the scam was impressive. It gives some personal insight into how even those who should know better find themselves involved.
[1] https://unchainedcrypto.com/how-i-almost-got-slaughtered-in-...