{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/63e26a946b77a10011ea5094/69dcfac2f24ed7c15fae5f46?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"April 13: World Liberty Financial Scam","description":"<p>Matt opens by cutting through the noise. Bitcoin is still sitting in the $70K range, Ethereum around $2,100, and the total market cap hovering near $2.4 trillion. In his view, the market itself hasn’t meaningfully changed, despite the constant swings in sentiment between fear and hype. What&nbsp;<em>has</em>&nbsp;changed is the underlying behavior around the space — and that’s where the real story is.</p><p>He highlights a major security failure involving a fake Ledger app on Apple’s App Store, where a user lost roughly $500,000 after entering their seed phrase into a malicious interface. Matt is blunt: this should not happen, and platforms like Apple should bear responsibility if fraudulent financial apps pass their review systems. For him, this is a core reminder of the risks still present in crypto — not in price action, but in user behavior and infrastructure failures.</p><p>From there, he shifts into what he sees as a much bigger issue:&nbsp;<strong>World Liberty Financial</strong>. The project, tied to President Trump’s family, is raising serious red flags. Matt walks through the mechanics — locked investor tokens, governance controlled by a handful of wallets, treasury buybacks at a loss, undisclosed conflicts, and frozen holdings — painting a picture of a system where retail participants are stuck while insiders benefit. His takeaway is clear: this is exactly the kind of structure that demands scrutiny, not blind participation.</p><p>That leads directly into his skepticism around the push for the&nbsp;<strong>Clarity Act</strong>. With Treasury officials urging Congress to move quickly on crypto regulation, Matt questions whether the timing is coincidental or connected to projects like World Liberty Financial. He doesn’t claim definitive proof, but he makes it clear he sees a pattern worth paying attention to.</p><p>Beyond that, the market remains mixed. Altcoins are still capable of explosive speculative runs, institutional flows are uneven but supportive at times, and macro pressures — like oil surging past $100 — continue to influence crypto as a risk asset. But again, Matt’s core message doesn’t change: the price is stable, the structure is not.</p><p>He closes by pointing listeners toward deeper research — specifically the Ledger app incident and commentary around World Liberty Financial — urging critical thinking over passive consumption. The numbers may look the same, but the behavior behind them is shifting, and that’s where the real signal is.</p>","author_name":"Matt Diemer"}