Old Case Resurfaces: The 1011 Crash Sparks a Mixed Battle of Public Opinion Between Exchanges and Ecosystems

Odaily星球日报发布于2026-02-02更新于2026-02-02

文章摘要

A wave of criticism targeting Binance resurfaced on social media, reignited by ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood's comments blaming a past "system glitch" at the exchange for the crypto market's prolonged stagnation. She referred to the October 11th ("1011") event, a major market crash that saw over $190B in liquidations, as a key reason crypto wasn't rallying with other assets. Binance co-founder He Yi quickly countered, suggesting Wood, a Coinbase investor, was not a user and misinformed. The 1011 event itself was a "black swan" where a sharp market downturn was exacerbated by a liquidity anomaly on Binance, triggering its Auto-Deleveraging (ADL) mechanism and causing massive, cascading liquidations. Binance later paid $283M in compensation but maintained the sell-off was market-driven. The criticism evolved into a broader industry debate. Key figures leading the charge included Leonidas, a Bitcoin Ordinals proponent, who accused Binance of extracting value from the ecosystem via high token listing fees. OKX founder Star (Xu Mingxing) presented a more technical critique, arguing Binance's high-yield USDe promotion allowed systemic risk to accumulate, fundamentally altering the market's microstructure post-1011. Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko indirectly supported critics, leading CZ to unfollow him—highlighting underlying competition between the BSC and Solana ecosystems. In Binance's defense, some analysts like Dragonfly's Haseeb Qureshi argued the crash lacked a single ca...

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | Ding Dang (@XiaMiPP)

Last weekend, a wave of concentrated criticism against Binance erupted again on X. This time, it was the settling of old scores reignited.

The fuse of the storm was lit on January 26th when ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood (nicknamed "Cathie Wood") stated in an interview with Fox Business that while gold, silver, and US stocks have been surging recently, the reason cryptocurrencies aren't rising is the lingering aftershocks of the system failure at Binance on October 11th last year (referred to as the "1011 Incident"), which caused $28 billion in leveraged positions to be liquidated.

As an early investor in Coinbase and one of the first Wall Street fund managers to incorporate Bitcoin into institutional investment narratives, Cathie Wood holds a natural cross-industry voice between traditional finance and the crypto industry. Therefore, these remarks quickly revived the market's collective memory of the 1011 Incident. Moreover, it happened at a time when the market sentiment was low, and everyone was in the mood for gossip, allowing the matter to continue fermenting.

Binance quickly responded. Co-CEO He Yi stated that Cathie Wood is not a Binance user, and Binance does not serve US entities. The implication seemed to suggest that Cathie Wood did not understand the real situation, or that there was some kind of conspiracy theory behind it.

The Cause and Effect of the 1011 Incident: The Butterfly Effect Triggered by a "System Failure"

To understand this crusade, one must first clarify the sequence of events of the 1011 Incident. Simply put, it was a "black swan" event in the crypto market: that day, the market suddenly experienced violent fluctuations, with the total global crypto market capitalization evaporating over $500 billion, and the scale of leveraged position liquidations exceeding $19 billion, making it one of the largest leveraged liquidation events in the history of the crypto industry. Everyone from a large number of ordinary users to many well-known market makers and VCs suffered significant losses in this event.

The reason Binance is accused of being the "culprit" is that at the critical juncture of the sharp market fluctuations, there was a noticeable liquidity anomaly within its platform. Whether officially described as a "software issue" or a "brief malfunction of the trading module," the result seen by the market was extremely brutal: the Auto-Deleveraging (ADL) mechanism was triggered, cross-account chain liquidations started, and some market maker accounts suffered devastating losses in a short period, even being forced to exit the market.(For details, read: "Detailed Explanation of the ADL Mechanism for Perpetual Contracts, Why Your Profitable God Trade Gets Automatically Closed?".)

Another clue that has been repeatedly brought up points to Binance's USDe incentive activity at the time. This activity promoted a 12% annualized yield, and some users also used revolving loan methods to collateralize assets like USDe, amplifying both returns and risks. When USDe "depegged" (more accurately, the price difference between platforms, on-chain and off-chain), it triggered large-scale liquidations.

After the event, Binance issued statements repeatedly emphasizing that the sell-off at the time was mainly driven by broader market conditions, not a failure of the platform's own system. Subsequently, Binance paid approximately $283 million in compensation to users affected by the depegging and related issues. This compensation did quell the anger of some crypto users in the short term.

But the controversy did not disappear. Perhaps it was because Binance retrospectively modified the K-line trends of some tokens that had abnormal movements after the fact, or the long-standing doubts about the Binance Alpha listing mechanism—these accumulated grievances found a new outlet through the 1011 public opinion incident.

As public opinion heated up, it now seems to be gradually evolving into camp divisions. Odaily Planet Daily will introduce some of the main characters from both sides of the public opinion below.

One of the Accusing Camps: Leonidas's Long-Term Offensive

The earliest to intensively open fire was Leonidas, co-founder of ZapApp, an important figure in the Bitcoin inscription ecosystem and a core promoter of DOG (a popular dog Meme coin on Bitcoin).

He almost daily outputs criticism about Binance on X, becoming one of the most visible representatives of the current anti-Binance camp. However, looking closely at his expressions, one finds that what he is pursuing is not 1011 itself. For Leonidas, 1011 is more like "evidence": an example that can be used to prove that Binance is sucking the blood of the entire crypto industry.

His grudge with Binance originated from him publicly demanding Binance list the token, which was not approved. Leonidas blasted Binance for requiring projects to pay an extremely high proportion of the token supply (he claimed up to ~10%) as a listing "fee," which Binance or insiders then sold off in large quantities, causing the projects and retail investors to suffer heavy losses.

Leonidas directly called CZ the "biggest liar in crypto history" and the "biggest liar in human civilization history." He believes that although CZ has ostensibly stepped down as CEO, he still holds 90% of Binance's shares, making Binance his "proxy tool." Every post by CZ is interpreted by Leonidas as hypocritical because, in his view, CZ "extracts from the market" through Binance while preaching鸡汤 (chicken soup for the soul) to retail investors. In his opinion, the $283 million Binance later compensated users precisely proves its direct responsibility, stating, "Only guilty companies pay that much money."

From this perspective, there is a direct interest conflict between Leonidas and Binance at the project level, and his emotional expression is clearly mixed with personal grievances. At the same time, he also represents a group long dissatisfied with the power structure of CEXs.

"Friendly Business" Joins the Fray: Star's Systemic Risk Accusations

The one who truly pushed the conflict to its climax was OKX founder Star (Xu Mingxing). He pointed out that after 1011, the microstructure of the crypto market underwent fundamental changes, its destructiveness even exceeding the collapse of FTX. He believes the core trigger was Binance's user growth activity—offering a 12% annualized yield for USDe and allowing it to enjoy the same collateral treatment as USDT and USDC, but lacking sufficient restrictions.

In his view, USDe is essentially closer to a "tokenized hedge fund" rather than a low-risk money market product like BlackRock's BUIDL. Lured by yields, users swapped stablecoins for USDe, creating implied returns of 24%–70% through循环借贷 (revolving loans), causing systemic risk to accumulate rapidly in a short time. When volatility truly arrived, the depegging of USDe, coupled with risk management flaws in WETH and BNSOL,共同放大冲击 (collectively amplified the impact), with some asset prices once approaching zero.

Xu Mingxing emphasized that his intention was not to attack Binance but to希望行业面对真实问题 (hope the industry faces the real problems); as the world's largest platform, Binance should prioritize stability and transparency, not掩盖风险 (cover up risks) through high-leverage marketing.

But the reality is, as one of Binance's main competitors, OKX has long been suppressed by Binance. As the helmsman of OKX, it is reasonable for Xu Mingxing to highlight OKX's "compliant and user-oriented" image in his statements to weaken Binance's market monopoly.

Faced with Xu Mingxing's accusations, both sides naturally engaged in a war of words, with attacks and counterattacks. However, more interestingly, both CZ and He Yi were once employees under Xu Mingxing. Although online it is tense, offline they still maintain a微妙 (subtle) industry relationship. He Yi even threw out a "friendly" group photo with Xu Mingxing from December, stating they had privately discussed "poaching" matters (Binance poached a product manager from OKX) but had not discussed the 1011 incident, which was full of sarcasm.

CZ Unfollows Toly, Another Undercurrent of Public Chain Competition?

Another highlight of this crusade was CZ unfollowing Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko's X account. The reason was that Toly转发 (retweeted) Xu Mingxing's tweet criticizing Binance, adding a meaningful comment: "It only took 18 months after the accident to recover." This暗指 (implied) that Solana (SOL) took 18 months after the FTX crash to return to its 2021 bull market levels, and now Binance is being insinuated as a similar "accident" responsible party. Toly's move was equivalent to indirectly taking sides, supporting the criticism against Binance.

Some crypto users began to worry: Will it be harder for coins in the Solana ecosystem, especially Meme coins, to be listed on Binance in the future?

Behind this is the head-on competition between BSC and Solana for Meme liquidity. The former is going all out to compete for the new round of Meme narrative, while the latter was once the most important incubator for this wave. The game between public chains may be quietly emerging in this public opinion war.

Support Camp: Truth or PR?

Perhaps thanks to Binance's long-term maintenance of KOL relationships, the attitude towards Binance in the Chinese circle is relatively mild. However, in the face of these serious accusations, there are still few major KOLs who dare to publicly support Binance. Among them, EnHeng, nicknamed the "Binance Crown Prince," is one of them.(Supplementary reading: "Post-05 Crypto Madman EnHeng: 'Binance Crown Prince' Is Just My Camouflage".)

Currently, those who can support Binance come more from relatively neutral analysts. For example, trader Benson pointed out that Binance does have responsibility, but USDe was not the starting point of the crash. Looking at the timeline, when the market bottomed at 5:20, USDe was only slightly depegged; the real drop to 0.65 occurred after the rebound.

He believes that what was more abnormal was the large-scale price dislocation between Binance and other exchanges between 5:18—5:20: half of the tokens hit the lowest prices across the entire market on Binance, with some deviations as high as 100%, and the USDT pair was significantly lower than the USD pair. He believes that, reasoning from the result, it is more likely that there was a problem at Binance's system level, rather than simply caused by market makers withdrawing liquidity. He called for taking the opportunity of Binance's released review to allow the industry to have a more sufficient and public discussion of the event.

Dragonfly managing partner Haseeb Qureshi holds a similar view. He believes that the statement "Binance and Ethena caused the crash" is difficult to成立 (hold up) in terms of timeline, market transmission path, and evidence. He pointed out that the Bitcoin price bottomed about 30 minutes before the USDe appeared abnormal on Binance,明显因果倒置 (the causality is clearly reversed);同时 (at the same time), the USDe price deviation only occurred on Binance and did not spread to other trading platforms, unable to explain the large-scale liquidations across the entire market, which is fundamentally different from events like Terra that had a global balance sheet impact. In fact, regarding the USDe depegging, Haseeb had already interpreted it shortly after the 1011 incident. For details, refer to "Ethena Investor Dragonfly: USDe Did Not Depeg, It Was Just Binance's 'Local Price Dislocation'".

In his view, a more reasonable explanation is the叠加 (overlay) of multiple factors: Trump's tariff remarks disturbed the market on Friday evening, Binance API abnormalities caused market makers to be unable to hedge across platforms, liquidation and ADL mechanisms amplified fluctuations, and the crypto market's lack of traditional financial-style circuit breakers and self-stabilizing mechanisms ultimately caused the行情 (market trend) to evolve along an unfavorable path. He emphasized that there is no simple and conspiratorial "single mastermind" for 10/11. Although the market was severely damaged, in the long run, it was not permanently destroyed, only needing time to修复流动性 (repair liquidity) and信心 (confidence).

After Haseeb expressed his support for Binance, CZ转发 (retweeted) this tweet, captioning it, "Dragonfly was once one of OKX's largest investors." However, Xu Mingxing later denied this in his response, stating that Dragonfly never invested in OKX, neither small nor large investments.

SAFU Adjustment: Remedy or Signal?

Amid the spreading Binance FUD, on January 30th, Binance announced in "An Open Letter to the Crypto Community" that it would adjust the asset structure of the SAFU fund, gradually converting the original $1 billion规模的稳定币储备 (scale stablecoin reserve) into a Bitcoin reserve, and plans to complete the exchange within 30 days of this statement. Binance will conduct regular checks on the asset size of the SAFU fund. If the market value of the SAFU fund falls below $800 million due to Bitcoin price fluctuations, Binance will supplement Bitcoin to restore the fund size to $1 billion.

However, regarding the specific purchase method of this $1 billion in BTC, Binance did not specify in the announcement. Odaily Planet Daily has inquired with Binance on this matter and has not yet received a response.

Conclusion

Looking back at this debate, the reason Binance has once again become the focus is perhaps not just because it "did something wrong," but because it is already big enough—big enough that any structural problems will first manifest themselves on it.

This is not the first crusade Binance has experienced, and it probably won't be the last. What is truly important is not just how the event responsibility is divided, but whether, as an industry hub, the leading exchange is willing to take on a higher level of stabilizing responsibility.

In a market that still highly relies on leverage, sentiment, and narrative drive, this debate itself is perhaps more important than the outcome.

相关问答

QWhat was the '1011 incident' mentioned in the article, and why is Binance being blamed for it?

AThe '1011 incident' refers to the massive market crash on October 11th, where the global crypto market lost over $500 billion in value and over $19 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated. Binance is being blamed because, during the extreme market movements, its platform experienced a 'system glitch' or 'temporary trading module failure' that caused liquidity anomalies, triggered its Auto-Deleveraging (ADL) mechanism, and led to cascading liquidations across accounts, resulting in severe losses for many users and market makers.

QAccording to the article, what role did Cathie Wood ('Cathie Wood') play in reigniting discussions about the 1011 incident?

ACathie Wood, CEO of ARK Invest and an early investor in Coinbase, stated in a Fox Business interview that the reason cryptocurrencies were not rising while gold, silver, and US stocks were surging was due to the lingering effects of the October 11th system glitch at Binance, which caused $28 billion in leveraged positions to be liquidated. Her comments, given her influence in both traditional finance and crypto, revived market memory of the event and fueled its spread on social media.

QWho is Leonidas, and what is his main criticism against Binance beyond the 1011 incident?

ALeonidas is the co-founder of ZapApp and a key figure in the Bitcoin Ordinals ecosystem. His main criticism against Binance extends beyond the 1011 incident; he accuses Binance of 'sucking blood from the entire crypto industry' by demanding extremely high proportions of a project's token supply (claiming up to ~10%) as a listing 'fee,' which Binance or its insiders then allegedly dump on the market, causing significant losses for the projects and retail investors.

QWhat was OKX founder Star Xu's (徐明星) primary argument regarding the systemic risk highlighted by the 1011 incident?

AStar Xu argued that the 1011 incident caused a fundamental change in the crypto market's microstructure, with its destructive impact even exceeding that of the FTX collapse. He pointed to Binance's user growth campaign offering a 12% APY on USDe and treating it with the same collateral status as USDT and USDC, without sufficient restrictions, as the core诱因. He stated that USDe is more akin to a 'tokenized hedge fund' than a low-risk product, and users, enticed by high yields, used循环借贷 (recursive lending) to create implied returns of 24-70%, leading to a rapid buildup of systemic risk that amplified the market crash.

QWhat significant adjustment did Binance announce regarding its SAFU fund amidst the spreading FUD, and what was the stated reason for this change?

AAmidst the spreading FUD, Binance announced in an 'Open Letter to the Crypto Community' that it would adjust the asset structure of its SAFU (Secure Asset Fund for Users) fund. It planned to gradually convert the existing $1 billion in stablecoin reserves into Bitcoin reserves, completing the conversion within 30 days. The fund's size would be regularly reviewed, and if its value fell below $800 million due to Bitcoin price fluctuations, Binance would top it up with more Bitcoin to restore the fund to a $1 billion valuation. The stated reason was an adjustment in the fund's asset composition, though the specific method of acquiring the Bitcoin was not detailed in the announcement.

你可能也喜欢

从代码到认知:机器人大脑进化的万字指南

本文概述了机器人大脑从传统代码控制到现代人工智能模型驱动的演进历程。文章首先回顾了前大型语言模型(LLM)时代,机器人依赖手工编码的模块化技术栈(感知、状态估计、规划、控制)和行为树,虽稳定但泛化能力差。随后,深度学习改进了感知,强化学习和模仿学习进入了控制层,但策略仍较为狭窄。 ChatGPT的出现带来了转折。LLM最初被用作自然语言编译器,将指令转化为机器人可执行的原子技能序列(如谷歌的SayCan)。但更重要的突破是视觉-语言-动作模型(VLA),例如谷歌的RT-2和开源的OpenVLA,它能将视觉、语言信息融合,直接输出动作指令,实现了推理与行动的耦合。 目前最先进的系统采用“双脑”架构(如Figure AI的Helix、NVIDIA GR00T):一个慢速、参数多的“系统2”负责高层次推理和规划;一个快速、小巧的“系统1”负责高频动作生成。其下还可能有一个“系统0”反射层处理平衡等底层控制。出于延迟和可靠性考虑,安全关键的控制回路通常在机器人本地(如NVIDIA Jetson模块)运行,而对话界面和集群学习等任务可交由云端。 开源模型(如OpenVLA、GR00T、π0)降低了行业门槛,让初创公司能在其基础上用自有数据微调。然而,当前VLA机器人仍存在任务中途恢复能力弱、样本效率低、缺乏物理常识和长期规划能力等局限。 这催生了下一代方向:世界模型。这类模型(如NVIDIA Cosmos、Meta V-JEPA)能根据当前状态和动作预测未来结果,让机器人在行动前进行模拟和评估,从而改善恢复能力、泛化能力和长期规划。架构上主要分为像素级视频扩散、联合嵌入预测架构(JEPA)和潜在动作世界模型等流派。 文章最后指出,数据采集(特别是远程操作数据)是核心竞争力,仿真训练至关重要,机器人成本正在迅速下降。当前物理AI的发展阶段大约相当于“GPT-2时代”,虽未完全自主,但正通过架构的持续演进(从代码到感知、规划、策略,最终到世界模型),朝着更通用、更强大的方向稳步前进。

marsbit4分钟前

从代码到认知:机器人大脑进化的万字指南

marsbit4分钟前

AI 泡沫正在破裂

近期市场剧烈波动,“AI泡沫论”甚嚣尘上。桥水达利欧认为AI市场存在“相对较高”的泡沫,而英伟达黄仁勋则强调AI算力需求才刚刚开始。两者观点看似矛盾,实则揭示了技术革命初期的典型特征:市场因高估短期影响而产生泡沫,却往往低估其长期颠覆性力量。 回顾2000年互联网泡沫,纳指暴跌78%,超5万亿美元财富蒸发,大量公司破产。然而,泡沫破裂后留下的廉价电信基础设施(如海底光缆),却成为日后流媒体、云计算乃至移动互联网崛起的基石。这符合“阿玛拉定律”:人们高估技术的短期影响,低估其长期影响。泡沫是创新必须缴纳的“智商税”,其破裂能淘汰投机者,沉淀下坚固的基础设施,滋养真正伟大的公司。 当前AI行业同样呈现巨大的“投入-产出”不对称:2026年,五大云服务商的AI基础设施资本开支预计达6900亿美元,而头部纯AI厂商的总收入预计不超过400亿美元。但深层逻辑正在演变:AI推理成本在两年内暴跌超过99.7%,接近零的边际成本解锁了海量长尾需求,驱动企业AI支出翻倍增长。这印证了“杰文斯悖论”——效率提升导致总消耗量指数级上升。如今,各行业关心的已非“是否用AI”,而是如何更有效地整合AI。 市场已进入“幻灭的低谷”前夕,缺乏护城河的套壳公司正批量死亡,这是市场的自我净化。与此同时,价值转移正在发生:1. 从资本开支(CapEx,如硬件)向运营开支(OpEx,如解决垂直行业痛点的应用)转移;2. 高估值正被高速增长的业绩逐步消化。AI已深入制造业(缩短研发周期)、金融(微秒级定价)、法律、医疗等专业领域,成为实质性的生产力工具。 历史总在重演“创造性毁灭”。当下近7000亿美元的基建投资短期内无法全部转化为利润,市场洗牌不可避免。但洗牌之后,廉价的算力与高度优化的算法将赋能千行百业。正如互联网泡沫后我们迎来了数字时代,AI泡沫的喧嚣过后,我们将不可逆转地迈向一个所有行业都由AI深度赋能的智能全盛时代。泡沫终会破裂,但底层先进生产力的势能,没有水分。

链捕手14分钟前

AI 泡沫正在破裂

链捕手14分钟前

AI 泡沫正在破裂

近期市场对“AI泡沫论”讨论激烈。桥水基金创始人达利欧认为AI市场存在较高泡沫,而英伟达CEO黄仁勋则强调算力需求刚起步。两者观点看似矛盾,实则反映了技术革命初期的典型特征:短期存在投机泡沫,但长期看,AI是颠覆性的先进生产力。 文章以2000年互联网泡沫类比。当时大量.com公司破产,纳指暴跌,但泡沫破裂后留下的廉价基础设施(如光缆)滋养了后来的谷歌、亚马逊等巨头,推动了互联网时代的真正繁荣。这体现了“阿玛拉定律”——人们高估技术的短期影响,低估其长期影响。 当前AI领域同样存在巨大投入与收入不匹配的现象。2026年,主要云服务商的AI基础设施投资预计达6900亿美元,而头部AI公司的总收入仅约400亿美元。然而,这不能简单视为泡沫破裂的信号。关键变化在于AI推理成本急剧下降,两年内降幅超99.7%,这反而激发了海量的新应用需求,企业AI支出大幅增长。这符合“杰文斯悖论”:效率提升导致成本下降,进而刺激总需求上升。 如今,AI已深入各行各业,从生物医药到制造业,企业关注点已从“是否用AI”转向如何优化应用。市场正在进行自然净化,淘汰缺乏核心竞争力的套壳公司,价值将从基础设施层(CapEx)向解决实际问题的应用层(OpEx)转移。 尽管资本市场可能出现波动和估值调整,但AI技术本身正在扎实地提升各行业效率,例如缩短研发周期、优化金融服务等。如同互联网泡沫后开启了数字时代,当前AI领域的调整是为未来智能时代铺路。泡沫终会消退,但AI驱动的生产力革命已不可逆转。

marsbit15分钟前

AI 泡沫正在破裂

marsbit15分钟前

下一个比特币ETF热潮可能来自日本——原因如下

美国现货比特币ETF近期表现持续低迷,随着加密货币市场再次进入调整,数据显示这些ETF在5月中旬至6月初连续13个交易日出现净流出,投资者撤资约43.3亿美元。不过,其净资产规模仍达751.2亿美元。 与此同时,市场开始关注下一个可能推出重要比特币ETF的国家,日本被视为有力候选者。分析师指出,日本监管机构正推动将加密资产从《支付服务法》框架转向《金融工具与交易法》管辖,使其被认可为投资产品。这一改革正将讨论焦点从“是否”批准转向“何时”批准。 若改革成功,日本庞大的家庭金融资产(约2,350万亿日元)和投资基金(约300万亿日元)可能为比特币ETF提供巨大潜力。分析预测,在保守情景下,日本现货比特币ETF可能吸引约9,000亿日元(约56.1亿美元)资金;在基准情景下,规模可能达1.4万亿日元(约87.3亿美元),相当于需求约14万枚比特币;在乐观情景下,首年资金流入可能高达3.1万亿日元(约193.4亿美元)。 分析师强调,日本比特币ETF的推出不仅可能推动价格上涨,更能降低投资者参与门槛,使财富管理机构更容易推荐比特币配置,提升机构投资者的信心,并增强比特币在传统金融中的合法性。 当前比特币价格约为61,038美元,24小时内下跌2.81%。

bitcoinist35分钟前

下一个比特币ETF热潮可能来自日本——原因如下

bitcoinist35分钟前

交易

现货
合约
活动图片