# Wealth İlgili Makaleler

HTX Haber Merkezi, kripto endüstrisindeki piyasa trendleri, proje güncellemeleri, teknoloji gelişmeleri ve düzenleyici politikaları kapsayan "Wealth" hakkında en son makaleleri ve derinlemesine analizleri sunmaktadır.

From a $70 Million Sky-High Transaction to a First-Day Crash: The "Amateur" Debut of ai.com

An article titled "From a $70 Million Record-Bomain Deal to Launch Day Downtime: The Rocky Debut of AI.com" reports that the highly sought-after domain AI.com, which had been at the center of speculation and bidding among AI giants, was acquired for $70 million in April 2025 by Kris Marszalek, co-founder and CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Crypto.com. The transaction, paid for in cryptocurrency, set a new public record for domain sales. The domain, first registered in 1993, had previously been linked to OpenAI and later to Elon Musk’s xAI in what was seen as a marketing tactic to drive up its value. Marszalek stated that he received even higher offers after the purchase but chose to retain the domain, believing it would be crucial for future business credibility. Over Super Bowl weekend, Marszalek launched AI.com, promoting it as a platform where users could deploy AI agents for tasks like stock trading and workflow automation. However, within 48 hours of going live, the site experienced significant downtime, drawing criticism and mockery online, particularly from an Nvidia engineer who highlighted the irony of such a high-value domain failing under load. The article also touches on how other crypto executives are diversifying their investments—from buying real estate and power plants to expanding business operations—signaling a broader trend of cryptocurrency leaders integrating into mainstream economic and technological landscapes.

Odaily星球日报02/09 10:12

From a $70 Million Sky-High Transaction to a First-Day Crash: The "Amateur" Debut of ai.com

Odaily星球日报02/09 10:12

Finally, Aave Founder Also Buys a $30 Million Mansion

Aave founder Stani Kulechov has purchased a $30 million Victorian-style mansion in London's Notting Hill, as crypto wealth increasingly flows into real estate. The deal, completed in November 2025 amid Bitcoin's surge past $120,000, reflects a broader trend of crypto entrepreneurs diversifying digital gains into tangible assets during market peaks. Other notable transactions include Block.one CEO Brendan Blumer’s $170 million Italian villa, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong’s $133 million Los Angeles property, and multiple high-profile acquisitions by Stake.com founders and NFT collectors. Some purchases, like FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried’s $240 million property spree, were later exposed as misappropriated funds. The shift isn’t limited to real estate. Tether, issuer of USDT, has accumulated approximately 140 tons of physical gold—worth about $24 billion—making it one of the largest non-governmental gold holders globally. The company continues buying 1-2 tons weekly, backing its gold-pegged token XAUT and signaling a strategic move toward stable, physical reserves. According to Sotheby’s 2026 Luxury Outlook Report, cryptocurrency is increasingly influencing luxury purchases in markets like Dubai, New York, and California. Regulatory developments may soon allow crypto assets to qualify for mortgage collateral, further integrating digital wealth into traditional finance. This trend underscores a lasting convergence between crypto wealth and conventional asset classes.

marsbit02/04 08:12

Finally, Aave Founder Also Buys a $30 Million Mansion

marsbit02/04 08:12

Escape the Leviathan: Epstein, Silicon Valley, and the Sovereign Individual

For over a century, the ultra-wealthy have sought to place their wealth beyond the reach of sovereign nations. This pursuit has evolved from Swiss bank accounts, which offered secrecy for 70 years, to Caribbean offshore havens, which lasted about 50 years before increased transparency eroded their appeal. The article uses the case of Jeffrey Epstein as a lens to examine the latest iteration of this quest: cryptocurrency. It details how Epstein, a convicted sex offender, strategically funded key players in the crypto space to gain influence. He donated to the MIT Media Lab, which used his money to hire core Bitcoin developers, effectively buying control over the technology's direction. He also invested in Bitcoin infrastructure company Blockstream. This financial influence helped morph Bitcoin's narrative from a purely technical, decentralized innovation into a radical ideological tool for challenging state power, an idea championed by Silicon Valley figures like Peter Thiel. Thiel, a vocal adherent of the book "The Sovereign Individual," views crypto as a means for a cognitive elite to escape the constraints of nation-states and democratic accountability. The piece argues that this pursuit of "freedom" is not for the common good but for the absolute liberation of a tiny elite from social responsibility and wealth redistribution. It describes a powerful network of tech elites, connected through organizations like the Edge Foundation, who operate in private to align interests and positions. Ultimately, the attempt to create a permanent digital haven is meeting a regulatory wall. The recent implementation of the global Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) represents a coordinated international effort to impose transparency on crypto transactions, closing another loophole. The article concludes that the underlying ideology of escape persists, now manifesting in even more ambitious projects like life-extension technology and Mars colonization, funded by the same elite. It leaves the reader with a critical question: when a small, unaccountable group defines the future of money, society, and life itself in private, what does that mean for the rest of us?

marsbit02/03 04:50

Escape the Leviathan: Epstein, Silicon Valley, and the Sovereign Individual

marsbit02/03 04:50

The Glamour Belongs to the 'Epsteins', Saylor Just Wants to Hoard Bitcoin

Summary: The recently unsealed Epstein files revealed an unexpected connection to Michael Saylor, CEO of MicroStrategy (now Strategy). In a 2010 email, Epstein's PR coordinator, Peggy Siegal, complained about Saylor's presence at a high-society dinner, describing him as a "zombie on drugs" who was impossible to engage socially and had no personality or understanding of social etiquette. This social awkwardness, however, may have been his saving grace, as it from deeper involvement in the scandal. This perceived personal flaw is presented as a professional strength in his role as a Bitcoin maximalist. Saylor’s company is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, with 712,647 BTC purchased at an average cost of $76,037. Despite recent market volatility pushing the price down and his company's stock falling 60%, Saylor remains committed to his strategy of buying Bitcoin weekly, famously tweeting "More Orange" to signal his intent to continue accumulating. The article argues that the traits that made him a social outcast—being闷 (boring), uninteresting, and unresponsive to external noise—are the exact same traits that make him a successful "Bitcoin zombie." His strategy is simple and requires no complex decision-making: buy and never sell. While his approach is not advisable for the average investor without his corporate financial tools, the core lesson is that in investing, "interesting" strategies like frequent trading and chasing hype often lead to losses. The most profitable strategies are often boring. The piece concludes that both in investing and in life, the spotlight of "热闹" (excitement/hot spots) is often fleeting and dangerous, while long-term value is found in committed, "boring" work.

marsbit02/02 10:06

The Glamour Belongs to the 'Epsteins', Saylor Just Wants to Hoard Bitcoin

marsbit02/02 10:06

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