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						Special Report: Little known to many investors, 
						cryptocurrency reviews are for sale
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		 [November 27, 2018]   
		By Anna Irrera and Elizabeth Dilts 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - When cryptocurrency 
		issuers want positive coverage for their virtual coins, they buy it.
 
 Self-proclaimed social media personalities charge thousands of dollars 
		for video reviews. Research houses accept payments in the 
		cryptocurrencies they are analyzing. Rating "experts" will grade 
		anything positively, for a price.
 
 All this is common, according to more than two dozen people in the 
		cryptocurrency market and documents reviewed by Reuters.
 
 Earlier this year, Ukrainian start-up Hacken was looking to promote its 
		new coin after raising $3 million online in late 2017. Chief Executive 
		Dmytro Budorin and his team identified a list of almost 200 
		cryptocurrency social media personalities they thought could help them, 
		he said.
 
 Hacken paid $7,500 for Christopher Greene, host of Alternative Media 
		Television - a YouTube channel with more than 500,000 subscribers - to 
		review its coin in a video, Budorin told Reuters. In the 25-minute 
		video, published on June 22, Greene raved about Hacken's coin and 
		business, describing it as a "huge market opportunity" with "potential 
		1,000x returns."
 
 Nowhere in the video - which has more than 92,000 views - is Hacken's 
		payment to Greene mentioned. Greene, who used to work for wealth 
		management firm Merrill Lynch, directs viewers in the first minute of 
		the video to a disclaimer on his website that states he "may receive 
		compensation for products and services" that he recommends. There is no 
		specific mention of Hacken, or any specific cryptocurrency issuers, 
		paying him.
 
 Greene did not respond to emails and phone messages from Reuters asking 
		about his work for Hacken.
 
 Four days after the YouTube review was published, Greene turned to 
		Twitter to brag that Hacken's coin was up 14 percent on the day to $1.54 
		per coin.
 
		
		 
		
 Some people paid attention. Carter Zurawel, a yoga instructor in 
		Calgary, Canada, replied to Greene's tweet: "That Hacken video was great 
		man! Made me buy a couple hundred."
 
 The token's price has since fallen by more than 75 percent to 36 cents. 
		Zurawel told Reuters in Twitter messages that he lost much of his 
		initial investment, worth several hundred dollars. He said he was not 
		aware that Greene was paid for his Hacken video, but he shrugged off the 
		poor performance of the currency. "I will probably hold onto it because 
		I strongly believe that the cryptocurrency market will rally in the 
		future," he told Reuters.
 
 Budorin told Reuters he recognized that the company’s payment to Greene 
		and other YouTube reviewers were “unethical.” Video reviews “should be 
		either done with (a) sponsored tag or only for projects that (the) 
		reviewer personally supports,” he said.
 
 Hacken’s approach exemplifies a pay-for-play hype machine that churns 
		out recommendations viewed by hundreds of thousands of hungry investors. 
		Few researchers or experts disclose their own holdings of the digital 
		assets, which so far have existed in a regulatory gray area.
 
 The crypto bubble peaked last December: bitcoin, the largest 
		cryptocurrency, is down more than 80 percent from its high just above 
		$20,000. The total value of all virtual coins is now about $121 billion, 
		down from about $830 billion at the start of the year. (GRAPHIC https://tmsnrt.rs/2PpIqrY-Cryptocurrencies: 
		growing in number but falling in value)
 
 That has not stopped the hype machine humming.
 
 REGULATORY GRAY AREA
 
 So-called “influencer marketing” is common on social media, where 
		celebrities and others tout anything from shoes to cars. Also common in 
		these plugs is a lack of disclosure, which may mean the buyer is unaware 
		of a conflict of interest. When it comes to cryptocurrencies however, 
		stricter rules may apply.
 
 In July 2017, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 
		published a report on its investigation into digital currencies and 
		warned participants in the market that “virtual coins or tokens may be 
		securities and subject to the federal securities laws.”
 
 The SEC issued a more specific warning about promotion of online 
		fundraisers known as initial coin offerings (ICOs) on Nov. 1 last year. 
		“Any celebrity or other individual who promotes a virtual token or coin 
		that is a security must disclose the nature, scope, and amount of 
		compensation received in exchange for the promotion,” the SEC said in a 
		public statement posted on its website.
 
 Failure to do so is a violation of anti-touting provisions of federal 
		securities laws, and may also be fraud, the SEC said.
 
		
		 
		
 The SEC has not issued determinations on which cryptocurrencies it 
		regards as securities. But the agency has brought enforcement actions 
		against a dozen or so companies connected to ICOs, some of which the 
		agency has identified as unregistered securities offerings, and 
		therefore subject to its regulation.
 
 The SEC has not targeted outside promoters of currency offerings. Its 
		warning in November of 2017 - near the height of the crypto frenzy - 
		alone has led to a "dramatic decline" in celebrity endorsements of ICOs, 
		the SEC's co-director of enforcement, Stephanie Avakian, said in 
		September. The SEC declined comment to Reuters for this story.
 
 Nevertheless, hundreds of self-styled cryptocurrency experts have 
		emerged over the past 18 months, and their activity has declined only 
		slightly. There are now more than 2,000 cryptocurrencies vying for 
		attention, all promising riches to investors. The vacuum of hard facts 
		on new currencies has left investors vulnerable to hype and bad advice.
 
 "The main reason why so many inexperienced individuals invest in bad 
		crypto projects is because they listen to advice from a so-called 
		expert," said Larry Cermak, head of analysis at cryptocurrency research 
		and news website The Block. Cermak said he does not own any 
		cryptocurrencies and has never promoted any. "They believe they can take 
		this advice at face value even though it is often fraudulent, 
		intentionally misleading or conflicted."
 
 'EXPERT' REVIEWS
 
 ICObench is one of the most popular websites listing and rating ICOs. 
		Its pages are among the top hits in any Google search for a specific 
		crypto project and the word ICO, making it a key site for currency 
		operators to appear on.
 
 Ratings on the roughly 15-month-old website are generated by unpaid 
		"experts" who passed the website's background check process, ICObench 
		chief executive Maxim Sharatsky told Reuters.
 
 As of Nov. 14, ICObench had 361 experts whose ratings are overseen by 
		the site's 34 employees based in Moscow, London and across Asia, he 
		said. ICObench had 1.7 million visits to its website between mid-October 
		and mid-November, Sharatsky told Reuters.
 
 The website itself makes money through advertising and a premium model 
		which lets cryptocurrency companies pay between 1 and 40 bitcoin to be 
		featured in newsletters, at the top of search results and elsewhere.
 
 Seven ICObench experts told Reuters they have been approached by 
		cryptocurrency companies or their public relations agents and offered 
		money in exchange for a rating, although none said they accepted any 
		such offers.
 
		 
		
 Tim Glaus, a co-founder of Alethena, a Swiss-based startup, told Reuters 
		his firm was approached by multiple individuals who said they could 
		arrange paid-for ratings from ICObench experts after Alethena listed its 
		coin offering on ICObench. Markus Hartmann, another of Alethena's 
		co-founders, wrote about the experience on the blog Medium in June, in 
		what he said was an effort to expose "de facto investor fraud." Alethena 
		runs a cryptocurrency ratings platform that competes in some areas with 
		ICObench.
 
 Sharatsky told Reuters that ICObench does not sell ratings. When 
		ICObench is informed that experts may have been paid for ratings, he 
		said, it investigates and takes the reviews down if they are tainted.
 
 "We have more than 16,000 ratings on our platform," Sharatsky said. 
		"Unfortunately, we have (had) accidents with sales (of) ratings, and 
		it's very bad. It's a problem for me, for our platform and for all 
		interested."
 
 FIVE-STAR REVIEWS
 
 Hartmann was contacted in late May on the encrypted Telegram messaging 
		app from a user with the handle "Vagiz," who offered to get Alethena 
		five-star ratings on ICObench for $500 each, taking a 10 percent cut, 
		according to Telegram messages Alethena showed to Reuters.
 
		
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			Co-founder and CFO Alexander Thoma of Swiss Blockchain-Asset Rating 
			Company Alethena, co-founder and President Pascal Marco Caversaccio, 
			co-founder and CEO Markus Hartmann, CSO Benjamin Rickenbacher and 
			co-founder and COO Tim Glaus pose for a photograph in their office 
			in Bern, Switzerland November 12, 2018. Picture taken November 12, 
			2018. Ruben Sprich/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
He negotiated to pay $800 for two ICObench reviews and asked for the service to 
be delivered as quickly as possible, according to the messages. Less than 30 
minutes later Vagiz messaged Hartmann on Telegram: "Done. There are two 5* :)"
 Vagiz was referring to two five-star ratings from ICObench experts Daniil 
Morozov and Anatoly Bordyugov, according to Alethena. These were the only new 
five-star ratings that appeared after Vagiz messaged that he was done, leading 
Alethena to believe those were the reviews that had been arranged, Glaus said.
 
Alethena said it paid Vagiz 1.16 ether - another cryptocurrency - for the 
service, worth about the agreed price at the time. Alethena sent Reuters 
screenshots of the reviews which have been removed.
 A few days later Hartmann paid Vagiz an additional 0.56 ether for a third rating 
from a reviewer named Jason Hung, according to the messages. "1 rate is done. 
Hung is from me," Vagiz wrote, providing screenshots of Hung's ratings.
 
 Morozov, the ICObench expert, told Reuters he did not take payment for the 
rating and did not know Vagiz. Bordyugov, the other ICObench expert, did not 
respond to requests for comment made through his website and sent on LinkedIn. 
Hung, whose rating still appears on ICObench, also told Reuters he did not take 
payment for the rating on Alethena and said he did not know Vagiz.
 
 ICObench CEO Sharatsky told Reuters that after Hartmann wrote about his 
experiences on Medium, he and his staff investigated Alethena’s claims against 
Morozov and Bordyugov and found that both reviewers did accept money for 
positive ratings. As a result, ICObench stripped Morozov and Bordyugov of their 
expert status and took all of their ratings off the site, Sharatsky said. He 
said the investigation found no proof that Hung's rating was paid for.
 
WALL STREET-STYLE RESEARCH
 As cryptocurrencies move into the mainstream, some companies have started 
offering research in formats mimicking the style of traditional Wall Street 
firms.
 
 Spero Research, based in Sydney, Australia, publishes reports on cryptocurrency 
projects which are "very impartial" and "very independent," according to Henry 
Sit, one of Spero's co-founders. He compares the reviews to those written by 
traditional stock analysts.
 
 Nevertheless, the research is commissioned and paid for directly by the projects 
that are being reviewed, Sit told Reuters. The company accepts payments in ether 
but will also accept half of the total fee in the project's currency, depending 
on "how good the project (is) and how much we like it personally," Sit said. 
"There is definitely a conflict there," he acknowledged. He added that Spero 
would not change its opinion just because the cryptocurrency project that has 
been reviewed disagrees with Spero’s conclusions.
 
 Spero’s reports do have general disclosures. But they are not specific about 
whether a payment was made by the client whose project is being assessed, and if 
so, how much.
 
 
 "Spero may be paid to publish research reports - depending on the circumstances, 
this may be from clients of Spero on the buy-side, or from providers of assets 
and currencies on the sell-side," said the disclosure on a cryptocurrency report 
published in August. "Spero members may hold cryptocurrency that are the subject 
of research and publication."
 
 Sit would not say which of Spero’s reports had been financed by their subjects.
 
 Some investors cry foul at such quid-pro-quo research. "Paid reviews should not 
only be disclosed, they should be outlawed," said Ric Edelman, head of the 
wealth management firm Edelman Financial Services and an investor in bitcoin and 
ether. "Until they're outlawed, the disclosure should be as prominent as the 
headline."
 
 PROFESSIONAL COPYWRITERS
 
 An array of "ICO agencies" has sprung up, as well. These promoters offer crypto 
issuers active followers and posts on social media platforms such as Telegram, 
Reddit and Bitcointalk. Online chatter can attract investors, given the lack of 
conventional financial information available on cryptocurrencies.
 
 Reuters contacted one such agency, TGE.company, to inquire about the services 
advertised on its website. An email received in response to the inquiry directed 
Reuters to a Telegram messaging account under the name of "Papa Karlo." That 
user sent a Reuters a price list which said the agency could arrange to provide 
630 comments in a Telegram group at a rate of 45 comments a day for $800, 
payable in the digital currency tether. Reuters was not able to confirm the 
identity of Papa Karlo. The services he offered were in line with a price list 
on the firm’s website, under the words: “We create hype through complex 
solutions which increase community activity.”
 
 "All messages will be relevant to the project and written by professional 
copywriters with extensive experience in ICO," according to the price list Papa 
Karlo shared with Reuters. The list offered comments from "dozens of high-level" 
accounts on Bitcointalk, as well as posts on Reddit, at prices ranging from $950 
to $2,900.
 
 Reddit told Reuters its policies prohibit users from engaging in manipulation or 
creating multiple accounts to avoid restrictions, and any users detected 
breaking those policies are “actioned appropriately." Telegram and Bitcointalk 
did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.
 
 Richard Foster, the UK-based co-founder of cryptocurrency startup Security Token 
Network, said that in September he paid an individual $50 on the freelancer 
network Fiverr to help grow his company's Telegram followership. The seller, 
going by the handle "heroic_anthony," assured Foster that the users would not be 
fake, according to messages seen by Reuters.
 
 "And then within one minute there were like 1,000 people added," Foster told 
Reuters. "I went mad."
 
 
 Foster said he complained to Fiverr and had the freelancer delete all the fake 
followers. Fiverr refunded Foster’s money and told him it would investigate the 
user, according to an email seen by Reuters.
 
 "The circumstances you've described violate our terms of service," Sam Katzen, a 
spokesman for Fiverr, told Reuters. "When violations are reported, we take swift 
action to investigate and handle the situation appropriately." Katzen declined 
to disclose whether "heroic_anthony" had been banned from the site, or what 
exact terms of service had been violated. Fiverr’s terms of service, posted on 
its website, forbid the sale of “illegal or fraudulent services.”
 
 PAY FOR ARTICLES
 
 Another service on offer from ICO agencies is paying writers to publish stories 
mentioning their clients, or linking back to their clients’ websites, according 
to interviews with four agencies and six email offers seen by Reuters. Prices 
range from as little as $100 to as much $10,000, according to interviews and 
messages.
 
 A cryptocurrency data company showed Reuters an email it had received from an 
individual offering an article on business website Forbes.com for $2,500. The 
post, which would feature a company's name and website, could be delivered in 
six to eight weeks, the email promised. The email included a coupon for a $500 
discount.
 
 Forbes.com said in a written statement to Reuters that its editorial guidelines 
explicitly forbid contributors from receiving payments in exchange for stories. 
Forbes did not share its editorial guidelines with Reuters.
 
 Earlier this month, Forbes removed a post under the byline of Harold Stark, 
originally published late last year, which referenced a cryptocurrency issuer, 
after Reuters inquired about it. In a statement to Reuters this month, Forbes 
said it had discovered in early 2018 that Stark violated its editorial 
guidelines. It is not clear if Stark accepted payments for his Forbes post. 
Stark did not respond to a request for comment on LinkedIn.
 
 "We terminated our relationship with him and removed all of his content from our 
site at that time," the statement said. "Due to a technical glitch, his prior 
content reappeared, but we have removed the content once again."
 
 (For a graphic on 'Cryptocurrencies: growing in number but falling in value' 
click https://tmsnrt.rs/2PpIqrY)
 
 (Reporting By Anna Irrera and Elizabeth Dilts in New York; Editing by Neal 
Templin and Bill Rigby)
 
				 
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