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Unchained

How Much Money Are Terrorists Actually Raising in Crypto? - Ep. 570

Unchained

Laura Shin

News, Tech News, Business News

4.6 • 1.3K Ratings

🗓️ 14 November 2023

⏱️ 70 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The recent Wall Street Journal article that claimed Hamas raised $130 million via cryptocurrency has sparked considerable debate, especially after Sen. Elizabeth Warren used it as her sole source to ask for tighter regulations around crypto. However, the veracity of this claim has come under scrutiny.  Yaya Fanusie, Jessi Brooks, and Andrew Fierman delve into the veracity of reported figures, the methodology behind them, and the subsequent industry responses that sought to correct the public record. They examine the political implications of cryptocurrency, its use in funding organizations, and the nuanced role of stablecoins in this digital economy. Additionally, they address the broader challenges in regulating crypto to prevent illicit funding, emphasizing the need for factual accuracy and a comprehensive approach to understanding and tackling such complex issues.  Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Podcast Addict, Pocket Casts, Stitcher, Castbox, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, or on your favorite podcast platform. Show highlights: how the Wall Street Journal article claimed that Hamas and other militant groups in Palestine raised $130 million via crypto why Yaya, who spent some time in his career doing research on terrorist financing, found those numbers odd why Jessi believes that there's been a loss of focus on facts and accuracy Andrew's explanation of the post by Chainalysis that corrected the record why it's so difficult to make a confident assessment of how much money is being funneled to terrorist groups whether crypto has become politicized  why is it so important to focus not only on the crypto fundraising but also the other avenues, according to Jessi the role of USDT and other stablecoins in fundraising terrorist organizations how North Korea is a much more sophisticated actor than Hamas in its know-how about crypto how the government has tried to respond to the illicit usage of crypto, such as the OFAC sanctions on Tornado cash the challenges to creating regulations to prevent the use of illicit activity in crypto Thank you to our sponsors! Crypto.com LayerZero Popcorn Network Guests: Yaya Fanusie, Director of anti-money laundering and cyber risk at the Crypto Council for Innovation Previous appearance on Unchained: How Widespread Is Money Laundering in Crypto? Hamas has been experimenting with crypto for years: Yaya Fanusie, appearance on FOX Business Jessi Brooks, CCO and Legal Officer at Ribbit Capital Previous appearance on Unchained: How This DOJ Strike Force Hunts Down Cryptocurrency Criminals Andrew Fierman, Head of Sanctions Strategy at Chainalysis  Links Fundraising report and corrections: WSJ:  Hamas Militants Behind Israel Attack Raised Millions in Crypto Cryptocurrency Feeds Hamas’s Terrorism Questioning Two Senators on Crypto Terrorism Washington Post:  U.S. to warn crypto firms against financing Hamas, terror groups  U.S. Cyber Command helps prosecutors seize stolen cryptocurrency traced to illicit N. Korea nuclear weapons program FT: Israel orders freeze on crypto accounts in bid to block funding for Hamas Fortune: Stricter verification laws in the U.S. won’t stop international terrorists from using crypto DOJ: Global Disruption of Three Terror Finance Cyber-Enabled Campaigns Elliptic:  Setting the record straight on crypto crowdfunding by Hamas How Hamas has utilized crypto, and what may be coming Chainalysis:  Cryptocurrency and Terrorism Financing: Correcting the Record DOJ Takedowns Terrorism Financing with Blockchain Analysis Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

What the Israeli government was able to do here and in prior actions was work with finance and

0:05.8

tether to freeze the funds. Now what does that mean tether has and USDC and Circle have it as well, they have something written into their smart

0:17.9

contract that allows them to freeze the funds from getting to the end user or to make sure that the end user, a bad actor,

0:25.3

potentially does not get access to the tether.

0:28.6

Now think about how that does not work in traditional finance.

0:33.1

Think about the opportunities there

0:35.6

for industry and regulators to leverage this technology

0:40.5

to actually stop crypto from getting into the hands of bad people through some sort of

0:46.1

automated compliance tool or a smart contract.

0:49.7

Hi everyone, welcome to Unchained, your no-hype resource for all things

0:56.8

crypto. I'm your host Laura Shin, author of the cryptopians. I started covering

1:01.7

crypto eight years ago and as a senior editor at Forbes was the first

1:05.0

main tree meter reporter to cover cryptocurrency full-time. This is the November 13th,

1:09.0

2023 episode of Unchained.

1:11.8

Defy just got away easier with Walt Crafts. Popcorn's no-code

1:15.3

Defy Toolkit for building, deploying, and monetizing automated yield strategies.

1:19.9

From institutional service providers to Defidegens,

1:22.8

anyone can use valtcraft to supercharge their crypto

1:25.4

with custom cross-chain yield strategies.

1:27.4

Learn more on valtcraft.io.

1:30.1

Unchained is about a lot more than just podcasts.

1:33.0

On our website unchained crypto.com,

...

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