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I have some ill-formed memory of The Block employees being unfair to FTX. But I have to say, that's two consecutive articles that were remarkably fair.
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I was not consulted on the second piece, which was released yesterday. But, like the first, it was totally reasonable. A quote: "Pro tip — a lawsuit has to contain actual factual allegations about specific wrongs that the defendants committed."
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Both experiences left me with the distinct feeling that, in addition to trying to be fair, the authors, you know....... actually thought about the subject. Like considered arguments and evidence and reason and used those to come to conclusions.
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My weak memory is that the person who was unreasonably anti-FTX was . But recently he's also been totally fair! So maybe I'm misremembering (in which case--sorry!); or maybe he's updated (in which case--thanks!).
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Maybe I shouldn't be so surprised by all of this. But the standards of journalism in crypto are really, _really_ low. One part secretly paid shilling, one part "not financial advice", one part random hit pieces on unsuspecting people trying to do something hard.
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So I'm always a bit thrown off when I see reporting that seems good--and not just accidentally, "a broken clock is right twice a day" good, like actually "used a good process to systematically come to a good conclusion" good.
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