🎉 #Gate Post# Hits 50,000 Followers!
✨ To celebrate this amazing milestone, we're giving back to our incredible community!
🎁 4 Lucky Winners Will Each Receive $10 Points!
Join:
1️⃣ Follow Gate_Post
2️⃣ Like this post
3️⃣ Drop your congratulations in the comments!
End at 18:00, May 25 (UTC)
Cardano Founder: Crypto’s Crisis Is Cultural, Not Just Technical
Cardano Founder Delivers Fiery Broadside Against Crypto Media
Hoskinson’s monologue began with a travelogue—Wyoming, Consensus 2025 in Toronto, and finally Argentina—but quickly shifted into a frontal assault on what he called “cesspool journalism.” He accused outlets such as CoinMarketCap and Cointelegraph of circulating a $600 million ADA-theft allegation “without a victim, without a lawsuit, without a regulator, and without even asking us for comment.” In a line that ricocheted across social media within minutes, he declared, “Crypto media is absolutely unredeemable and it has to be burned to the ground.” He proposed a market-based remedy: veracity bonds that would force publishers to stake meaningful sums against the accuracy of their reporting.
Related Reading: Cardano Founder Reflects On Betrayal, Plans To Step BackThe comments arrive amid real legal and reputational pressure. Earlier this week, IOG’s chief legal and policy officer Joel Telpner confirmed that audit giant BDO and the law firm McDermott Will & Emery will investigate claims that Input Output diverted unredeemed ADA during the network’s 2021 “Allegra” hard fork—a charge Hoskinson dismissed as “false” and “deeply offensive.”
Momentum, in his view, is also legislative. Hoskinson praised the US Senate’s bipartisan advance of the GENIUS act—stablecoin legislation that cleared a 66–32 procedural vote on 20 May. He argued that a year ago Washington’s mood was “every cryptocurrency is illegal,” whereas today Congress is on the cusp of market-structure rules that could legitimize the entire sector.
Related Reading: Cardano Founder Teases ‘Several Dozen Deals’ This Summer And FallYet the address was anything but triumphalist. Hoskinson lamented that social-media virality has reduced public discourse to “a storm in a teacup,” eroding the incentive to verify allegations before branding rivals as criminals. “When I was growing up,” he recalled, “you had to have some momentum before you accuse someone of being a criminal.” Now, he said, accusations spread “like breathing air,” and when they prove unfounded “there’s no consequences—you just move on.”
Personal fatigue permeated the address—he spoke of torn tendons, hair loss, and sleepless travel—but not resignation. Citing his own bullet-ant initiation ritual in the Amazon, Hoskinson framed suffering as a test of resilience and rallied listeners to “keep the faith despite all of this.” The industry, he concluded, must outgrow “hyper-transactional late-stage capitalism” and rediscover a moral project equal to its technological ambition. “We deserve it,” he said, insisting that Cardano’s best days “are not behind us; they are in front of us.”
At press time, ADA traded at $0.7635.