They used my identity to flog a doomed cryptocurrency – and then things got 
weird

When I was sent DMs asking for advice about Tsuka, a new coin I was supposedly 
involved in, I could never have expected what happened next

Forward Email: The Guardian “TechScape” By Alex Hern  1/06/2022 9:05 PM  
(@alexhern)


On Monday morning I woke up to a pair of odd DMs on Twitter. “Sir, Greetings, 
Do you have any information about Dejitaru Tsuka token,” asked one “Dr. Joker”; 
another had a similar question: “Yo dude what do you know about Tsuka.”

I’d not heard about the cryptocurrency, and a quick scan suggested it wasn’t 
worth my time: it was a classic “shitcoin”, a newly created token with no 
reason for existence beyond buying low and selling high.

Gambling on shitcoins takes the subtext of much of the crypto space and turns 
it into the entire purpose.

There is no pretence, here, of anyone banking on widespread use, or of the 
coins having a purpose. The game is to find one that will go up, buy it cheap, 
push it as hard as you can to others, and then cash out at the top. The 
community takes phrases usually associated with financial crime – “shilling”, 
“pump and dump”, and so on – and wears them like a badge of honour.

Tsuka was a classic of the form. The only explanation on the public web for the 
token was some mangled English describing a Japanese legend that destines “the 
dejitaru tsūka dragon to breathe vast flames of wisdom and prosperity to all 
who embrace its ferocity and strength” linking, of course, to some exchanges 
where you could buy the coin.

So I assumed the DMs were the “pump” phase of pump and dump, and ignored them. 
But then I got a follow-up message, asking me if I was behind an email address 
“[email protected]”, that the developer of the Tsuka coin had posted on to the 
blockchain, with the note “encrypted Guardian contact”. One buyer had emailed 
the address, and, thinking they were speaking to me, asked if they knew 
anything about the coin. A one-word reply, “Yes”, helped push a buying frenzy – 
of sorts.

The numbers are low: before my name was used to promote the coin, it was 
trading at eight thousandths of a cent (that’s $.000008), and after a massive 
rally it had reached the dizzying high of almost twice that, $.00015. But that 
still represented around $100,000 of notional value built on a lie.

But I had to try to correct the falsehood. I managed to find the main community 
channel for Tsuka, on Telegram, and joined its membership of 150 or so users 
before posting a quick message: “I’ve got nothing to do with this project. 
Someone is pretending to be me.” But I wasn’t able to see the response – I was 
swiftly kicked from the group, and my post was deleted.

The damage had been done, though. I’d also changed my Twitter bio to warn 
people that “if someone says I backed their shitcoin, they’re scamming you,” 
and – I later learned – that was being re-shared into the group faster than it 
could be removed.

The coin went into freefall as people rushed to sell, dropping half its value 
in a matter of minutes. It felt strangely terrible to watch: even though the 
whole sector is a giant game of trying to find someone else holding the bag 
when all is said and done, it was my actions that had wiped more than $60k from 
the total “market cap” of the coin.

One user DM’d me to confirm my story, and told me he’d lost his “life savings” 
in the crash – $400, a fairly substantial chunk for a Turkish man like him, 
around a month’s salary on the median wage. When he suggested I reimburse $200 
to everyone who’d lost money, though, I had to demur; there may be an income 
disparity between the UK and Turkey, but I don’t have $200,000 to hand.

My guilt was assuaged a bit once I started asking people why they’d bought in 
to Tsuka in the first place. “I blind aped it on Dextools,” one told me. That 
is: a coin they’d never heard of showed up on the new coin list on a crypto 
exchange, and they invested in it – or bet on it – sight unseen. The Turk had 
the same explanation; when I asked him if he was really telling me that a 
random currency showed up and he just put his life savings in it, his response 
was “true bro. it is crypto talk”.

Dev speaks

Shortly after the collapse, I got an email I wasn’t expecting – from the 
ProtonMail account that had pretended to be me. I’d emailed over some 
questions, but wasn’t expecting a reply. What do you say to the person whose 
identity you stole?

The answer, it seems, is “a marketing pitch”. The developer told me that “the 
community has passed a critical part of this experiment … We follow your work 
and writings and are sorry if anyone took that as you were behind the coin. The 
main thing is you were reached through the block chain only. It’s not in anyway 
a scam.”

I asked how they could deny trying to scam people into thinking I was involved. 
They said they’d intended “Guardian” to be taken in the sense that they were 
the Guardians of the project. “I also follow your work closely so the names 
went well together … I never said you were involved. I guess it’s like 
[email protected] vs Mickey@protonmail. Is mickey@protonmail a scammer if 
he builds a theme park? We don’t know.”

I thought the impasse was just the natural result of me speaking to a brazen 
huckster, but the more I asked around, the more it became clear that this was 
more like two people speaking at cross purposes. The still anonymous devs are 
sincere that they aren’t scamming anyone, because the meaning of “scam” in the 
world of shitcoins is necessarily narrow. When the base expectation is that 
every coin will crash at some point, and none of them have any real value 
beyond marketing puff and community momentum, how can simply lying about who 
backs a coin really be a meaningful scam?

To the dev, my accusation that they were scamming people was a serious charge. 
It implied that they had hidden code in the coin that would allow them to take 
people’s money in a way outside the rules of the game – perhaps by suddenly 
printing millions of tokens to flood the market, or locking it up to prevent 
anyone else from selling. By contrast, spreading falsehoods about who’s backing 
the token is well within the rules of the game. “DYOR”, do your own research, 
is a catchphrase in the sector; if you’re caught out by such an 
easily-disprovable claim, then you clearly failed to DYOR, and the losses are 
your fault.

Act three

I thought that was where this newsletter would end – someone pretended to be 
me, I burst their bubble, and learned something valuable about the world of 
crypto. And then I checked the value of Tsuka one more time, expecting to find 
it hovering around zero. Instead, I was surprised to find it had gone up.

I asked a few of the investors in the coin, and was alarmed to find that not 
only had people started buying back in, but there was a growing theory that I 
was in fact the developer myself, and my claim to have been imitated was some 
sort of genius double-bluff. A new telegram had been set up, with an 
experienced shitcoin influencer at the helm, and I asked for a link, preparing 
to do the same dance again.

What happened was unexpected. Upon proving that I was the real Alex Hern, I was 
greeted with a wall of glee. One user spammed the phrase 
“YOUNG_HERN_IN_THE_HOUSE”, another posted “ITS_FUCKING_ALEX”. “ALEX NEXT ELON”, 
“ALEX SAVE OUR BAGS”… before I could even post my first real message, someone 
had sent “ALEX TYPING” fifteen times. Where my first appearance had felt like a 
parent breaking up a illicit house party, this felt more like the second 
coming, with me unwillingly cast in the role of Jesus.

Things got worse when I said I wanted to speak to people for a story about it. 
No matter how explicit I was that I thought the entire thing was dumb as hell – 
dumber than I thought was possible for an already extremely-dumb sector – news 
of a forthcoming article spread like wildfire. “All publicity is good 
publicity” was spammed into the channel, with one user pointing out that Shiba 
Inu, a shitcoin worth an inexplicable $7bn, had had a very similar genesis, 
with the majority of its early press simply mocking it as a low-effort clone of 
the original shitcoin, Dogecoin.

Epitaph, the crypto influencer who was responsible for the rebirth of the coin, 
argued that the whole affair should be less alarming than it feels to me. 
“Right now it’s pretty common,” he said. In terms that were more fitting for a 
multiplayer video game than any sort of functional financial market, he 
explained that “a couple months ago, the meta shifted into ‘LARP tokens’, 
tokens where the team will go to extreme lengths to convince buyers that 
they’re connected to famous celebrities/musicians/larger tokens.”

When I asked if others had also tried to head off such “LARPs”, I didn’t get 
the answer I hoped: “It’s somewhat rare that someone with high-profile actually 
drops in, although not unheard of. Last week, Martin Shkreli participated in 
the Telegram communities of two tokens that were launched as homages to him.”

I’m not sure I want to be in a club with Martin Shkreli.

In the meantime, the Telegram channel was moving so fast that I could see 
history being corrupted in real-time. “I’d like to ask some questions for an 
article” had become “Alex Hern is going to be promoting Tsuka in an article”; 
others took that claim outwards to Twitter, and to other Telegram channels. 
Each time I tried to correct them, my reappearance in the chat was seen as yet 
more evidence that I was personally invested – literally so – in the success of 
the coin.

Given the end stage of Tsuka is almost certainly going to be “crashes and goes 
to zero” just like every other shitcoin, I started to get quite concerned. The 
bigger it grows, the harder everyone is hit when it collapses. I asked Epitaph 
if there’s any way I could have prevented this from happening: “The only way 
this wouldn’t have happened is if you actually had no involvement in the coin 
(I’m still uncertain what I believe) and you’d never set foot in the [telegram 
channel] at all. Then people would have known it was a LARP, and the token 
would be dead within a couple hours.”

But, he said, “you shouldn’t feel bad. Everyone here knows what they’re getting 
into, especially during LARP season. It’s no secret that everything we buy is a 
scam on some level. The question isn’t ‘is this token a scam,’ because they all 
are, the question is ‘is this scam done well enough to convince other people to 
buy?’”

If it isn’t clear by now: I do not think you should buy this shitcoin, nor any 
others. And if it also isn’t clear by now: people are going to carry on 
ignoring me here, and I’m sure they’ll have a lot of fun doing so.

The wider shitcoin Techscape

•         If the idea of shitcoins as a big multiplayer video game intrigues 
you, I’ve just finished reading Adrian Hon’s book You’ve Been Played, which 
goes into some detail on the same idea. Every major social trend takes on the 
characteristics of an “alternate reality game” these days, from QAnon to 
Crypto, and it’s having a deeply weird effect on our societal fabric.

•         My shitcoin adventure was mostly Telegram-led, but Discord is 
probably the more important social network for the crypto space, and guess 
what: it’s full of scammers.

•         A deep dive into DYOR

•         Remember Terra, the “stablecoin” that was anything but? It 
relaunched, and immediately collapsed. Also, in case it wasn’t obvious, the 
initial failure wasn’t the outcome of a deliberate attack, but simply a bad 
idea that finally broke. But it still ruined lives.


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