Nvidia Fined Over Cryptomining Disclosures. This Week’s Bitcoin and Crypto News – CNET

Our lead story this week is a Friday ruling from the SEC that ordered Nvidia to pay a $5.5 million fine for inadequately disclosing how much of the company’s GPU sales stemmed from cryptocurrency mining back in 2018. 

We’ll also cover an NFT sale that rocked the ethereum network last Saturday, the expansion of the SEC’s crypto enforcement unit, Wikipedia ending cryptocurrency donations and Square Enix selling the Tomb Raider franchise to invest in blockchain and other technologies.


Nvidia fined $5.5M over cryptomining disclosures

A cryptocurrency mining operation.A cryptocurrency mining operation.

A cryptocurrency mining operation.

Getty Images

The SEC said Friday that Nvidia, a US technology company, failed to adequately disclose how cryptocurrency mining impacted its GPU sales. According to an SEC release, “during consecutive quarters in NVIDIA’s fiscal year 2018, the company failed to disclose that cryptomining was a significant element of its material revenue growth from the sale of its graphics processing units (GPUs) designed and marketed for gaming.”

According to the SEC, Nvidia didn’t effectively disclose to investors the extent to which cryptocurrency mining was driving the company’s GPU sales. As part of the settlement with the SEC, Nvidia didn’t admit to or deny the findings. Cryptocurrency mining often relies on higher-end graphics cards, like those used for video games, which some publications, like BBC, PCMag and Tech Radar, have reported may be partly responsible for a graphics card shortage.

Read CNET’s full story on Nvidia’s $5.5M fine over cryptocurrency mining disclosure here.


Ethereum transactions skyrocket after NFT sale of digital land plots

Ether Cryptocurrency CoinEther Cryptocurrency Coin

A physical mockup of a digital ether coin.

NurPhoto

Bored Ape Yacht Club, owned by parent company Yuga Labs, is one of the better-known NFT collections. The BAYC brand is expanding into an online video game and on Saturday, Yuga Labs released a collection of digital land grant NFTs to be used inside this game. Each NFT land grant sold for a little under $6k.

Like most NFTs, BAYC NFTs are built on the ethereum blockchain. Transactions on ethereum come with fees, called gas fees. As the number of people transacting at any given time grows, gas fees increase. The NFT land grants turned out to be so popular that gas fees skyrocketed and transactions became incredibly expensive. One person paid $44,000 in gas fees alone to buy two NFT land plots. In about 3 hours, Yuga Labs made around $320 million and sold 55,000 digital land plots. 

Read CNET’s full story on how Bored Ape Yacht Club broke the ethereum network here.


SEC bolsters crypto enforcement with new personnel

A smartphone on top of a laptop with the smartphone screen showing a key and a fingerprint.A smartphone on top of a laptop with the smartphone screen showing a key and a fingerprint.
Angela Lang/CNET

The Securities and Exchange Commission said Tuesday that the Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit would add 20 new positions to its unit, which protects crypto investors and safeguards against cyberthreats.. “As more investors access the crypto markets, it is increasingly important to dedicate more resources to protecting them,” said SEC Chair Gary Gensler. “By nearly doubling the size of this key unit, the SEC will be better equipped to police wrongdoing in the crypto markets while continuing to identify disclosure and controls issues with respect to cybersecurity.” 

Read CNET’s full story on the Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit expansion here. 


Wikipedia sunsets cryptocurrency donations

Wikipedia logoWikipedia logo

Wikipedia logo

The world’s seventh largest website is set to stop accepting cryptocurrency donations. The Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia, voted on the decision last month, citing environmental and ethical concerns. “We began our direct acceptance of cryptocurrency in 2014 based on requests from our volunteers and donor communities,” the foundation said on Sunday. “We are making this decision based on recent feedback from those same communities.” The website plans to close its Bitpay account, eliminating its ability to accept crypto donations going forward. The foundation further noted they’d continue to monitor the situation. 

Read CNET’s full story on The Wikimedia Foundation’s decision to end cryptocurrency donations here. 


Square Enix sells Tomb Raider to invest in blockchain, AI and cloud technologies

A glass building with a Square Enix sign.A glass building with a Square Enix sign.
Aaron P/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images/Getty Images

Video game giant Square Enix, the same company that makes the popular Final Fantasy series, sold the Tomb Raider franchise to free up cash for investments in fields including blockchain, AI and the cloud. Square Enix has previously expressed interest in NFTs. The company’s president, Yosuke Matsuda, said in a Jan 1 letter that ” the advent of NFTs using blockchain technology significantly increased the liquidity of digital goods, enabling the trading of a variety of such goods at high prices and sparking conversations the world over.” In the letter, Matsuda also noted that NFT trading seems overheated with “somewhat speculative overtones.”

Read CNET’s full story on Square Enix selling the Tomb Raider franchise here. 


Thanks for reading. We’ll be back with plenty more next week. In the meantime, check out this story by Scott Stein about how the metaverse is trying to figure out your comfort zone.

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