What started out as a friendly wager between cryptocurrency celebs has ended in a nasty Twitter dispute.
During the 2018 World Crypto Con conference in Las Vegas, a $28,000 Bitcoin price prediction resulted in a bet between Civic cofounder Vinny Lingham and Standpoint Research founder Ronnie Moas.
Bitcoin did not hit the $28,000 as predicted by @RonnieMoas when we made the bet in Vegas in 2018. Ronnie - please post proof of payment of the donation and thanks for being a good sport! Happy New Year! Cc:@WorldCryptoCon@joelcommhttps://t.co/J0AWRHUN1F
Lingham won the bet that the price of Bitcoin would not reach $28,000 by the start of 2020.
The loser of the bet was supposed to donate $20,000 towards a charity dedicated to free the imprisoned Silk Road darknet market creator, Ross Ulbricht. Moas, however, has apparently backed out of the original agreement—while he said he’s still willing to pay up, Moas no longer wishes to contribute to the “Free Ross” campaign.
“Attempts at misdirection aside, just to confirm, Ronnie, publicly, that you refuse to honor the bet as we agreed upon on-stage and captured on video…” Lingham tweeted at Moas.
“You fucking bastard,” Moas sniped back. “I did not refuse to honor the bet. Maybe you need to get some reading glasses ... and return money to investors in your scam ... Now down 99% since December 2017. How much did you make off of Civic?”
Lingham, a crypto entrepreneur whose work with crypto startup Civic focuses on controlling your online identity data, is no stranger to such criticism regarding the Civic token and its drop in price. Moas’s dig at Lingham, however, was met with accusations of hypocrisy from onlookers who claimed that Moas had also lost investors money with his past bullish predictions on controversial gold-backed coin Dignity (DIG) and other cryptocurrencies.
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Hey @VinnyLingham look what just happened. The loser here is the Free Ross campaign which relies on donations.
Nevertheless, Moas clarified that he is willing to pay the $20,000 he owes as a result of the bet to a different charity, since “new information” has come to his attention regarding Ulbricht that now makes him uncomfortable supporting his cause. “I have issues [with] Free Ross, so the $20K will go elsewhere,” he said.
Lyn is traveling. She'll be in touch with you later today. We'd be grateful if you were willing to wait until you can talk to her.
• First-time offender • Non-violent counts • Case rife with corruption, misconduct & violations • Egregious sentence • Widespread Support pic.twitter.com/1Xtp80OjGT
Moas added, however, that he is still willing to speak with Ross’s mother, Lyn Ulbricht—who is leading a campaign to try and convince President Donald Trump to pardon her son, to help determine if he will reconsider the original arrangement.
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