
Tyler Meade
30 posts








PRINCIPLES OF BITCOIN: Technology, Economics, Politics and Philosophy Published by Columbia University Press, foreword by Alex Gladstein Available for delivery in the US starting March 31, 2025 What is the book about? And what makes this #Bitcoin book different? 🧵👇

I’m thrilled to announce that I’ve joined @Gemini as its Chief Financial Officer. I will be working alongside @cameron and @tyler and the incredible team at Gemini to unlock the next era of personal, financial, and creative freedom. Crypto is the most dynamic sector in finance and Gemini is at the forefront of this revolution — making it simple and secure to engage on the digital asset frontier. Previously, I spent the last 2+ years at @Affirm as the VP of its Capital Markets and Bank Partnerships teams, growing access to secured funding to over $20 billion. I’m looking forward to helping Gemini scale by driving financial strategy as the company enters its next phase of growth. Let’s build! 🏗️🚀





JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Fed Chair Powell says he is "struck" at the growing number of cases of Bitcoin and crypto firms that were debanked and he is "determined to take a fresh look at that."

In case you missed it, Judge Bibas of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit recently encapsulated the reason for my industry’s fury against the Gensler-led SEC in three concise sentences. The opening paragraphs of Coinbase Inc. v. Securities and Exchange Commission, No. 23-3202 (3d Cir. Jan 13, 2025), frame the issue in the case: “Coinbase … petitioned the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to promulgate rules clarifying how and when the federal securities laws apply to digital assets like cryptocurrencies and tokens. Coinbase argued in its petition that the existing securities-law framework does not account for certain unique attributes of digital assets, which make compliance economically and even technically infeasible…. [¶] The SEC denied Coinbase’s rulemaking petition. In a single paragraph, it explained that it disagreed with the petition’s concerns; that it had higher-priority agenda items—namely, everything else it was doing….” The Court held that the SEC’s terse response was not sufficiently reasoned and, thus, was arbitrary and capricious. That holding is not at all surprising. More significant is Judge Bibas’ concurring opinion in which he outlines “a constitutional issue that … lurks beneath” this holding. In Judge Bibas view, the SEC’s “haphazard enforcement strategy” targeting “entities that are trying to follow the law” (his words, not mine) raises due process concerns, which he summarized as follows: “The SEC repeatedly [sued] crypto companies for not complying with the law, yet it [did] not tell them how to comply. That caginess creates a serious constitutional problem; due process guarantees fair notice. “[R]egulated parties should know what is required of them so they may act accordingly ….”


Founder Mode: paulgraham.com/foundermode.ht…

A year ago today, Read Write Own was released. So much has happened in crypto since then. The past year, I spent a lot of time traveling and speaking at events—some crypto-focused, some not. Even as crypto faced regulatory uncertainty in Washington and sustained criticism from mainstream media, I kept hearing something different from the people I met: passion and optimism. There was a clear gap between the narrative out there and what I was seeing on the ground. So, while I’m excited to see the tides turn with growing bipartisan and institutional support, I’m not entirely surprised. Crypto was never going away. At some point, the value of what blockchains enable—stablecoins, DeFi, AI systems, games, social experiences, and more—had to be recognized. We’re still far from the full vision I described in Read Write Own, but we’re moving forward. Huge thanks to all the founders, builders, and supporters who tuned out the noise and kept building. Onward.


Our wall painting of the underwater scene is going live this week! If you’re in Williamsburg you can spot it on Kent and S 3rd.


Redundant agencies create inefficiency. Countless federal agencies cover the same “turf” which creates confusion (e.g. SEC/CFTC), many of them regulate activities that are *already regulated* by states (e.g. Nuclear Regulatory Commission), while others still take money from states only to give it back to states (e.g. Dept of Education). This is nonsensical. Restructuring isn’t an option, it’s a necessity.


