Forbes - Witnesses in Washington 👁️‍🗨️

Good Wednesday morning. This is Billy Bambrough with what's driving the day in the world of bitcoin and crypto.
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24-hour crypto market snapshot
Bitcoin (-4%) $49,299
Knocked back 🙅
Cryptocurrency bulls took a run at regaining control of the market yesterday and failed. The bitcoin price rose to almost $52,000 per bitcoin before falling back and is now back under the closely-watched $50,000 level, dropping almost 5% since this time yesterday, even after the Nasdaq recorded its best day since March.

The rest of the crypto top ten, as measured by CoinMarketCap, is also trading lower. Ethereum is down 3% with its rivals Binance's BNB, solana, cardano, polkadot and terra's luna all down between 4% and 10%.

Outside of the top ten, some smaller cryptocurrencies have bucked the trend with polygon's matic rising 1% and chainlink soaring over 10% after Chainlink Labs announced former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt has joined the company as a "strategic advisor"—see below for details.

Now read this: New York City casino pitch includes cryptocurrency trading floor
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Crypto execs go to Washington 🎆
Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA) chairs the House Committee on Financial Services and will lead the hearing
Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA) chairs the House Committee on Financial Services and will lead the hearing Getty Images
Showdown: Some of the biggest names from the cryptocurrency sector will appear before U.S. lawmakers today following calls for regulators to impose stricter rules on the rapidly-growing market. Time has a comprehensive primer and you can watch the fireworks here from 10am ET.

Taking the temperature: The hearing comes after some serious volatility on crypto markets rattled traders and investors over the weekend. This year, the huge rise in cryptocurrency value along with a whole host of new ways to trade has triggered a wave of speculation from the public and amateur traders hoping to get in early on the next viral cryptocurrency. Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chairman Gary Gensler once again called for greater regulation of crypto markets, calling it an asset class "rife with fraud, scams, and abuse."

What will happen next? This hearing won't directly result in any new legislation but will likely generate some big headlines and is an opportunity for some high-profile political point scoring on both sides. Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA), who chairs the House Committee on Financial Services and will lead the hearing, is likely to call upon the executives to do more to protect their users.

Safety in numbers: There are six witnesses appearing before the committee today. They are:
- Jeremy Allaire, the co-founder, chairman and CEO of Circle, issuer of the USDC stablecoin.

- Sam Bankman-Fried, founder and CEO of the FTX crypto exchange and big solana backer.

- Brian Brooks, CEO of blockchain technology company Bitfury and former acting Comptroller of the Currency and CEO of Binance.US.

- Charles Cascarilla, co-founder and CEO of stablecoin issuer Paxos, a blockchain infrastructure platform and financial services company.

- Denelle Dixon, CEO and executive director of the Stellar Development Foundation, a non-profit organization that supports the development and growth of the stellar blockchain and cryptocurrency.

- Alesia Jeanne Haas, the chief financial officer of Coinbase, filing in for CEO Brian Armstrong, who's been a vocal critic of crypto laws and regulations.

Meanwhile... One of crypto's biggest advocate's on Capitol Hill, senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) has reportedly told Coindesk in an interview that she's working on a comprehensive digital asset bill with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, saying: "You will see a major piece of legislation in the next days and weeks." The bill, according to a report by The Information, will "address crypto-related banking, consumer protection and anti-crime measures," as well as a "correction" to the recently passed infrastructure bill that included a controversial crypto tax provision that will significantly broaden the definition of a cryptocurrency broker.

Now read this: Crypto lobbying is going ballistic

Chainlink's big hire 🤝
🔗 Eric Schmidt, Google's former chief executive that guided the search giant from Silicon Valley start-up to global internet titan, has joined Chainlink Labs as a strategic advisor as the project develops ways to connect real-world data with smart contracts built on blockchains.

🗣️ "The launch of blockchains and smart contracts has demonstrated tremendous potential for the building of new business models, but it has become clear that one of blockchain’s greatest advantages — a lack of connection to the world outside itself—is also its biggest challenge," Schmidt said in an announcement statement. "Chainlink is a secret ingredient to unlocking the potential of smart contract platforms and revolutionizing business and society."

📈 Chainlink's link cryptocurrency, after soaring through 2020 but struggling to ride the 2021 bull run, leaped following the news, adding more than 10% over the last 24 hours.

Good to know: BitMart resumes ether withdrawals and deposits, three days after $200 million hack
Ghosts in the machine 👌
⛓️ Censorship-resistant bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have obvious attractions to extremists and blockchain analysis company Elliptic has found far-right groups are using bitcoin's public blockchain to send coded messages that are "like leaving a swastika on the blockchain," Elliptic co-founder Tom Robinson told Coindesk.

✍️ Wallets found to be associated with "far-right extremist activity" commonly used the number 14—a reference to the white supremacist slogan the "14 Words"—and 88—referring to the eighth letter of the alphabet, H, signaling "Heil Hitler"—Elliptic wrote in a blog post.

🪙 In 2017, Richard Spencer, a prominent American white nationalist, declared bitcoin "the currency of the alt-right" and in 2018 bitcoin donations to neo-Nazis spiked ahead of the Charlottesville Unite The Right rally.

Make a note: Visa has formed a global crypto advisory practice to help financial institutions develop their cryptocurrency businesses
hello world
Billy Bambrough
Forbes Senior Contributor
I am a journalist with significant experience covering technology, finance, economics, and business. I write about how bitcoin, crypto and blockchain can change the world.
Follow me on Twitter or email me.
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