Aaron Stanley

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Aaron Stanley

Aaron Stanley

@AaronWStanley

Strategic advisor | USA House | @Forbes Digital Assets columnist | Ex-@CoinDesk | Ex-FinancialTimes

Brazil Katılım Nisan 2009
5K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
Forgot the part about trading telegram selfies to show how committed you are to "collaborating" in the future
binji@binji_x

(1/2): I have met this person at nearly every crypto conference I have ever attended, and by now I can usually identify him before he even reaches the registration desk, because he arrives wearing the unmistakable expression of a man who has crossed three time zones, answered forty-seven Telegram messages from people he does not like, and paid twelve euros for airport water in order to be physically present at a gathering devoted to the future, only to discover, almost immediately, that the future appears to consist largely of men standing beneath purple lighting and discussing distribution. He checks into the hotel, opens the conference app, scrolls through a schedule containing panels called things like “Reimagining Coordination at Scale” and “The New Institutional Frontier,” and feels, for one brief and embarrassing moment, the stirring of hope, because perhaps this will be the one, perhaps this will be the conference where somebody says something real, where a conversation escapes the gravitational pull of fundraising announcements, ecosystem grants, and whatever the phrase “go-to-market motion” is currently being asked to conceal. By ten in the morning he has received a tote bag made from allegedly regenerative fabric, a metal water bottle that leaks from the lid, a lanyard large enough to function as a municipal permit, and three invitations to side events taking place simultaneously in different parts of the city, each one described as “intimate,” despite having eight hundred RSVPs and a DJ flown in from Berlin. He goes to the first panel. A founder says we are still early and venture capitalist says the next billion users are coming. Eventually a moderator, with the glazed composure of somebody who has already moderated this exact conversation in Singapore, Dubai, Paris, Denver, and a yacht off Mykonos, asks what needs to happen for mass adoption. Everyone agrees that UX must improve and the audience nods with the solemnity of a parliamentary vote. Nothing has technically been said, but the applause is loud. By lunch he has participated in six conversations, all of which begin with “What are you working on?” and end with “We should definitely find a way to collaborate,” which in conference language means that both parties will add one another on Telegram, exchange a fire emoji beneath a future announcement post, and never again occupy the same emotional universe. He meets a man building infrastructure for autonomous agents, although the infrastructure is not yet built and the agents are not yet autonomous. He meets another man launching a protocol for decentralized reputation, who spends most of the conversation explaining which well-known investors already trust him. He meets a founder who says he is obsessed with user sovereignty, then glances every twenty seconds toward the entrance in case someone more important has arrived. By the evening he is standing in a cavernous venue once used to manufacture turbines, now filled with dry ice, ornamental lasers, and several thousand people discussing credible neutrality while trying to get past a velvet rope. There is free food, technically, although it consists of two miniature tacos placed on a slate tile by a person wearing black gloves, and there is free alcohol, abundantly, which may explain why the revolution against extractive intermediaries has temporarily organized itself around a sponsored bar requiring three wristbands and a QR code.

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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@binji_x you forgot to include the telegram selfie as a way to cement the commitment to collaboration
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binji
binji@binji_x·
(1/2): I have met this person at nearly every crypto conference I have ever attended, and by now I can usually identify him before he even reaches the registration desk, because he arrives wearing the unmistakable expression of a man who has crossed three time zones, answered forty-seven Telegram messages from people he does not like, and paid twelve euros for airport water in order to be physically present at a gathering devoted to the future, only to discover, almost immediately, that the future appears to consist largely of men standing beneath purple lighting and discussing distribution. He checks into the hotel, opens the conference app, scrolls through a schedule containing panels called things like “Reimagining Coordination at Scale” and “The New Institutional Frontier,” and feels, for one brief and embarrassing moment, the stirring of hope, because perhaps this will be the one, perhaps this will be the conference where somebody says something real, where a conversation escapes the gravitational pull of fundraising announcements, ecosystem grants, and whatever the phrase “go-to-market motion” is currently being asked to conceal. By ten in the morning he has received a tote bag made from allegedly regenerative fabric, a metal water bottle that leaks from the lid, a lanyard large enough to function as a municipal permit, and three invitations to side events taking place simultaneously in different parts of the city, each one described as “intimate,” despite having eight hundred RSVPs and a DJ flown in from Berlin. He goes to the first panel. A founder says we are still early and venture capitalist says the next billion users are coming. Eventually a moderator, with the glazed composure of somebody who has already moderated this exact conversation in Singapore, Dubai, Paris, Denver, and a yacht off Mykonos, asks what needs to happen for mass adoption. Everyone agrees that UX must improve and the audience nods with the solemnity of a parliamentary vote. Nothing has technically been said, but the applause is loud. By lunch he has participated in six conversations, all of which begin with “What are you working on?” and end with “We should definitely find a way to collaborate,” which in conference language means that both parties will add one another on Telegram, exchange a fire emoji beneath a future announcement post, and never again occupy the same emotional universe. He meets a man building infrastructure for autonomous agents, although the infrastructure is not yet built and the agents are not yet autonomous. He meets another man launching a protocol for decentralized reputation, who spends most of the conversation explaining which well-known investors already trust him. He meets a founder who says he is obsessed with user sovereignty, then glances every twenty seconds toward the entrance in case someone more important has arrived. By the evening he is standing in a cavernous venue once used to manufacture turbines, now filled with dry ice, ornamental lasers, and several thousand people discussing credible neutrality while trying to get past a velvet rope. There is free food, technically, although it consists of two miniature tacos placed on a slate tile by a person wearing black gloves, and there is free alcohol, abundantly, which may explain why the revolution against extractive intermediaries has temporarily organized itself around a sponsored bar requiring three wristbands and a QR code.
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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@bold_perception pretty accurate overall...you're missing the bro who is dragged to Brazil by his Brazilian wife/gf but who comes to awkwardly embraces the lifestyle while speaking A1 level PT
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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@cioffi_victor @cioffi_victor sir - with all due respect you are crushin the hopes and dreams of gringos who fetishize stablecoin adoption in Latin america
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Victor Cioffi 🇧🇷 (Neobanks/acc arc)
Unpopular (but obvious) opinion: Most Brazilians do not need to hold dollars for their daily lives. - Only around 4–6% of Brazil’s population has a global account or multi-currency card today. - Less than 1% travels internationally in a given year. The other 90%+ earn in BRL, spend in BRL, and use Pix in BRL. Automatically turning every Pix deposit into USDT is not financial freedom. It is forcing FX exposure on people who do not need it. Dollar access matters for savings, global investments and international spending. But money should be local money. Brazilians need BRL onchain, with the same liquidity, composability and yield that made dollar stablecoins useful.
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eric
eric@defyneric·
after a few days of research i realized most stablecoin orchestration companies are just wrappers around the same 2-3 sponsor banks
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Drew Crawford
Drew Crawford@drewcrawford_·
Imagine a Brazil where you board a train in São Paulo and step off in Rio 105 minutes later. Imagine every coastal capital linked, from Porto Alegre to Belém. Imagine Brasília as the hub with 5 bullet train lines reaching across the country. Even Manaus, the biggest city in the Amazon, on the grid. That is the map I see. 16,600 km of track. A real grid for a country of ~213 million people. The São Paulo to Rio train has been on paper since the 1980s. Almost 40 years of plans. Zero track in the ground. The drive between those two cities still takes 5 to 6 hours (depending on traffic). 50 million people live in that corridor. About the size of South Korea. China built 50,000 km of bullet trains in 17 years. Brazil built 0 in 40. At China's pace, the Brazilian network gets built in 20 years. At Brazil's pace, 50. The price tag is about $500 billion in today's dollars. Closer to $1 trillion by the time the last track is laid. Every dollar spent comes back as $2 to $3 in growth. That is $2 to $3 trillion added to Brazil's GDP. Land prices jump the moment the project becomes real. Cities along the route gain value 20 years before the train arrives. The corridor leads. The train follows. The biggest infrastructure project of the 21st century is not in China. It is in Brazil. It just has not been built yet.
Drew Crawford tweet mediaDrew Crawford tweet media
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BuildingDrew
BuildingDrew@AndrewStarts·
@AaronWStanley I was literally saying this the other day. You have the port of Santos that could be the leading port infrastructure of Latin America and it's almost a tier 3 port. The highway from RJ to Argentina it's a disaster ( try to get to the airport in Florianopolis)
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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@wsfoxley "new media" now is just video podcasts with random ticker scrolls in the lower third
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Will Foxley
Will Foxley@wsfoxley·
@AaronWStanley Hm, I mean they are 6+ yrs old I would say “new media” is 2-3 yrs with the live-streaming focus?
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Jess
Jess@theweb3jess·
Buddy, that’s his job. When you’re the CEO, PR is your job. You’re not “too important” to not care. Like I recognized, it’s a small line item compared to overall corp budget, which is why you should hire and promote women and good people to run the budget to avoid these things - bad PR. Bloomberg called me to talk about it. It’s 1000% a CEO problem. Stop covering his ass for free. Men helping men at its finest. Where were you when I was getting cyberbullied by the manosphere. Are you gonna be the guy when the slightest wrongdoing is done by a female CEO you’re gonna tweet about it first as an engaged spectator? That’s all my life’s problems. Thanks for coming to my ted talk.
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Jess
Jess@theweb3jess·
So @consensus2026 is run by @coindesk; coindesk is owned by @bullish; bullish CEO is the former CEO of @NYSE who invested 10m into @coinbase at series A/B. It’s not a nobody platform or defi protocol. That’s what makes this not ok. 1/ In terms of how it happened, I’m sure it wasn’t an intentional planned snub towards women. Most likely, Thomas Farley’s marketing team said “we’re gonna have a 200k budget for afterparty, we found these 2 white dudes who charge a big fee ($50k a month 3 month minimum) but had a good pitch and past experience, what do you think?” 2/ Thomas went “ok, budget sounds on par, go ahead, I trust your judgement, team.” But here comes the problem. 3/ Up and down the chain of command at that co, nobody saw an issue hosting the OFFICIAL afterparty at a female stripper only club. No male strippers, and not clearly indicated as a strip club. Countless amazing women run PR + Marketing agencies like @LunaPRofficial - they didn’t get that easy money w that contract. 4/ 20k people paid thousands for a conference pass and 2000 got turned away, couldn’t participate in the official closing party. The marketing agency who run it boasted about it as a “win”. What a brainfart retard. If you had 6000 people who signed up and E11even capacity is 1000, that is mathematically the retarded choice. Just sheer incompetence. 5/ Thomas seems like a great guy. He talks about mental health awareness. He has kids and a wife. Even a small time visionary - investing in Coinbase pre series D. He’s prob the hired in face CEO, for the true owners of Bullish - 3 anon Eastern European dudes with pet lions at home. That - it is what it is. 6/ The problem is, when you don’t have women at the table, stuff like this gets through. Nobody batted an eye. And that’s the problem. ✍️ Women are the fastest growing segment in consumer finance, consumer gaming and even porn consumption. If you want to make our money, you need to at least get the basics right.
Jess@theweb3jess

1/ This year’s official @consensus2026 closing party by @CoinDesk was a massive step backward. Hosting the flagship event at E11even — a strip club — wasn't just inappropriate; it was incredibly low-brow for an industry trying to grow up. 2/ Let’s be clear: I’m all for alcohol, music, and a good time. Hire a world-class DJ. Throw a massive rave. Go to Club Space. But choosing a strip club as the official venue for a global conference is a choice that reflects poorly on all of us. 3/ Just because this happened in 2021 doesn't mean it should happen in 2026. Back then, Coinbase, FTX and Binance execs were there, but the industry has evolved. We are supposed to be moving toward institutional maturity, not leaning into "bro-culture" clichés. 4/ I’ve always been an advocate for sex work. I have zero issue with women making $40k–$80k on their own terms. The issue is the context. 5/ When an official event for a top-tier conference — filled with institutional partners and people of all genders and religions — centres on women shaking for dollars, it diminishes women to sexual objects and enforces a stale, exclusionary culture. 6/ It’s honestly boring. I guarantee brands like @MetaMask and CoinDesk will one day look back at their logos plastered on those walls with genuine embarrassment. 7/ We had international attendees flying in from across the globe. Is this really the best US crypto has to offer? Working the pole is a skill, but watching it in a professional context just left most people looking dazed and awkward. 8/ The vibe was off. I ran into my banker and some mid-tier hedge fund guys there. We can talk millions on Wall Street or over steak, but meeting at a strip club is unnecessary. We could’ve hit a polo club, a baseball box, or played padel. 9/ Even the economics were a "bear market" vibe. Most people were just watching with a mix of shock and intrigue. The girls weren't making much. They used to take crypto; now they don't. The floor was dry. No fiat moving. Why were we even there? 10/ Seeing a banker film the stage (until security stepped in) while seeing my bankers logos walk around in a strip club is the peak of industry cognitive dissonance. 11/ This industry is capable of so much more, yet we keep tripping over our own feet. We want to be taken seriously on the world stage, but we’re still acting like we’re in a basement. We must do better. Special shoutout to @SolanaFndn, @amystreet, and @SuperteamUSA. Your Accelerate vibe was immaculate, paired with the best Mario Kart-themed afterparty. 🏎️💨 It was the perfect illustration that "crypto culture" doesn’t have to mean "bro culture." You can have high-energy, high-intelligence fun without… whatever E11even was. Let’s talk economics: A single sponsorship for that E11even event costed roughly $90k. The entire Mario Kart event? Maybe $50k. Using a massive brand budget to alienate half your audience is a spectacular waste of capital. 📣📣📣 Conference organizers and sponsors: we have to do better. If we want to move millions on Wall Street, we need to stop acting like we belong in a basement. ✌️

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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@awerner @CoinDesk Yeah it's missing some important nuance sadly. The bank is basically saying that entities currently regulated by the eFX regime who want to engage in cross border stablecoin activity need to apply for a VASP license
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CoinDesk
CoinDesk@CoinDesk·
🇧🇷 LATEST: Brazil's central bank bans stablecoin and crypto settlement in cross-border payments, effective October 1.
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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@AriEiberman You mean like the people who were terrified of the World Orb but had no problem letting random airport security operators scan their eyeballs with zero presumption of data integrity?
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Ari Eiberman 🇦🇷 Stablecards
Honest question: Why is onchain privacy important for individuals? I grew up in a place where ID number is public information. I am still surprised how Americans are afraid of sharing their SSN.
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Aaron Stanley
Aaron Stanley@AaronWStanley·
@micu_rra You're not out of the woods yet! There's no shortage of Pix scams either! Perhaps moreso than regular credit card scams
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Micu
Micu@micu_rra·
MARKED SAFE FROM SCAMS IN BRAZIL 🇧🇷 just got to florianopolis and yes we all know what happens to tourists and their credit cards here they have tiny devices that clone your card WHILE you're paying!!! you don't feel a thing. the charge shows up days later. but they can't scam me anymore because i pay with PIX like a local and they get nothing!!!!! PIX is brazil's instant payment system. instead of sharing your card data, you just scan a QR. money transfers in seconds, zero card info involved, nothing to clone i use @takenosapp an argentinian wallet that lets you pay with PIX directly, convert your pesos, and even receive payments if you're a freelancer (which i am!!!) no brazilian bank account needed. just download and gooooo
Micu tweet mediaMicu tweet mediaMicu tweet mediaMicu tweet media
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