Tremors from FTX's collapse reverberate through the scientific community

Published at: Nov. 17, 2022

The fall of crypto exchange FTX appears to have already begun to impact the hundreds of grant recipients across a variety of philanthropic organizations backed by the exchange. 

During the COVID-19 pandemic, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried became known for backing a number of causes aimed at "humanity’s long-term prospects.”

One of these was the FTX Foundation and its FTX Future Fund, which publicly launched on Feb. 28 and reported on Jun. 30 that it had made 262 grants and investments totaling $132 million in projects — many of these involved in pandemic preparedness, among other scientific pursuits.

However, the leadership team of the Future Fund announced their resignation on Nov. 11 in a group post noting:

“We are devastated to say that it looks likely that there are many committed grants that the Future Fund will be unable to honor.”

According to a Nov. 14 report from Science.org, there have been a number of grant recipients now concerned about their future following the FTX collapse, with SecureBio’s co-founder Kevin Esvelt suggesting that the firm is seeking emergency backup funding, stating:

“We don’t think it is right that anyone should lose their jobs over a financial calamity totally unrelated to the excellent work they are doing”

Other recipients of the Future Fund’s money include Biotechnology firm Sherlock Biosciences which was awarded $2 million to study infectious diseases, biotechnology firm HelixNano which was awarded $10 million for vaccine research, SecureBio which was awarded $1.2 to develop better pandemic defenses, and Our World in Data which was awarded $7.5 million to track trends relevant to humanity’s long term prospects.

Related: What can blockchain do for increasing human longevity?

Another foundation funded by Bankman-Fried — Building a Stronger Future — has given the first tranche of a $5 million grant to the non-profit investigative reporting organization ProPublica, with more funds initially planned to be distributed in 2023 and 2024.

According to an email shared with the business magazine Fortune, the remaining funds are on hold while Building a Stronger Future assesses its finances.

Meanwhile, lawyer and member of the Effective Altruism group Molly Kovite has warned in a Nov. 14 post that organizations which received money from an FTX entity in the 90 days prior to the Chapter 11 filing on Nov. 11 may even be subject to a “clawback” and be required to pay all or some of the money back.

Open Philanthropy, the philanthropic funder which Kovite represents, later shared in a Nov. 16 post that it was seeking applications from grantees affected by the collapse of the Future Fund, and will evaluate the applications and provide funding at their discretion.

Tags
Ftx
Related Posts
Binance CEO CZ on FTX crash: “We’ve been set back a few years”
Crypto exchange FTX joined many other fallen projects — including Terra (LUNA), 3AC, Celsius and Voyager — in filing for bankruptcy in 2022. Owing to the devastation caused by multi-billion dollar losses suffered by businesses and investors, the man running the biggest crypto exchange, Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, envisions an era of greater regulatory scrutiny in the near future. With one of the biggest crypto businesses falling overnight, CZ believed the episode was devastating for the industry, which took away a lot of consumer confidence. Speaking at Indonesia Fintech Summit 2022, he said: “I think basically we've been set …
Regulation / Nov. 12, 2022
FTX warns it will claw back political donations and contributions
Bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX says it is considering using legal avenues to recover all payments and contributions handed out by its associated entities and former executives, which could include the millions in political donations made from its former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. In a Dec. 19 press statement, FTX said it had already “been approached by a number of recipients of contributions or other payments” that were made by, or at the direction of Sam Bankman-Fried or other officers, adding those entities have sought “directions for the return of such funds.” Sharing our press release just issued: FTX Debtors Announce Process …
United States / Dec. 20, 2022
Google invests $300M in AI firm previously funded by Sam Bankman-Fried
Google Cloud has reportedly invested $300 million into artificial intelligence (AI) startup firm Anthropic, which also happened to receive over $500 million in funds from former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried about six months before FTX catastrophically collapsed. While the $300 million figure was reported by Financial Times on Feb. 4, Anthropic confirmed the investment partnership with Google Cloud on the same day despite not disclosing any figures: We're excited to use Google Cloud to train our AI systems, including Claude! https://t.co/IaqQ5lpJrP https://t.co/vOn5Cj4sPt — Anthropic (@AnthropicAI) February 3, 2023 In the same announcement, Anthropic also confirmed that they previously raised capital …
Adoption / Feb. 5, 2023
Sequoia Capital, Paradigm among VCs facing "tricky" FTX investor lawsuit
Users of bankrupt crypto exchange FTX have reportedly taken aim at financiers who promoted the platform suggesting their efforts added an “air of legitimacy” to the now-defunct exchange, a case labeled as "tricky" by a crypto lawyer. A Feb. 15 Bloomberg report revealed a class-action suit filed Feb. 14 by FTX investors against venture capital firm Sequoia Capital and private equity firms Thoma Bravo and Paradigm. The firms were accused by the investors of touting “their own investments” of hundreds of millions of dollars in FTX. It was alleged the firms were involved in a promotional marketing campaign in 2021 …
Regulation / Feb. 15, 2023
Sam Bankman-Fried denies rumors that he fled to Argentina
FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has denied speculation that he’s fled to Argentina as the saga surrounding his collapsed cryptocurrency exchange continued to unfold in near-real time on Twitter. In a text message to Reuters on Nov. 12, Bankman-Fried, who also goes by SBF, said he was still in the Bahamas. When Reuters asked him specifically whether he had flown to Argentina, as the rumors suggest, he responded: “Nope.” Users took to Twitter over the weekend to speculate whether SBF was on the run after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for FTX Group, which includes a slew of companies such as …
Business / Nov. 12, 2022