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Company Sues CryptoKitties Creator for Allegedly Stealing Trade Secrets

Company sues cryptokitties creator for allegedly stealing trade secrets

Company Sues CryptoKitties Creator for Allegedly Stealing Trade Secrets


Company sues cryptokitties creator for allegedly stealing trade secrets
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Axiom Zen, the company behind popular Ethereum DApp CryptoKitties, has been hit with a lawsuit for allegedly violating a non-disclosure agreement and stealing trade secrets.

The suit, filed last week in US District Court for the Southern District of California by San Diego-based company Starcoin (which operates under the name Tradestar) and reviewed by CCN, claims that Tradestar and Axiom Zen discussed confidential trade secrets during a series of email communications in February 2018. These discussions were allegedly protected by a non-disclosure agreement (NDA), a copy of which was included in the court documents.

The lawsuit alleges that Axiom Zen, after cutting off communications with Tradestar, stole the latter’s idea to produce a digital collectible modeled after the likeness of NBA superstar Stephen Curry, an idea that was put into production through CryptoKitties’ now-suspended “CurryKitties” campaign.

Tradestar, which describes itself as a marketplace for entertainer collectibles, says on its website that it provides customers with “exclusive content from…musicians, athletes, and creators.”

Tradestar claims that, after CryptoKitties allegedly stole its trade secrets, investors who had previously been interested in Starcoin instead invested in Axiom Zen.

From the suit, portions of which have been blacked out due to a court-approved seal:

“In fact, since Axiom received Starcoin’s confidential information, two investors who had previously expressed interest in Starcoin — such as CAA Ventures and Digital Currency Group — have now passed on investing opportunities offered by Starcoin, and instead they have both funded Axiom.”

As CCN reported, CryptoKitties recently suspended the CurryKitties promotion, stating that the company has “reason to believe Steph wasn’t as involved” in the promotion as it had been led to believe.

Stephen curry
Source: axiom zen

Tradestar CEO Jevon Feinblatt told CCN that this claim “doesn’t really make sense, since they publicly claimed before hand that a partnership was struck” with Moji, Curry’s app development company.

“Regardless, the damage has already been inflicted upon Tradestar, regarding the many reasons we are filing the case,” he added.

However, in a statement provided to CCN, a spokesperson for CryptoKitties and Axiom Zen said that the suit had “no merit.”

“We have been falsely accused of breaching an NDA and believe the lawsuit has no merit. Axiom Zen is a company that is committed to ethical and responsible work, including ownership and protection of data,” the statement read, adding in a follow up-email that “the two instances are unrelated. We suspended the CurryKitties auction for reasons prior to and separate from recent events.”

Featured Image from CryptoKitties

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Published at Fri, 25 May 2018 16:02:05 +0000

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U.S. Senate Mulls Reporting Requirements for Cryptocurrencies

USSenateBill

American bitcoin holders may soon have to report their holding to the United States government.

First introduced on May 25, 2015, by Sen. Chuck Grassley [R-IA], Senate Bill S.1241, the
“Combating Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing, and Counterfeiting Act of 2017,” can have serious implications for those involved in the cryptocurrency space. The hearing for S.1241 was held with virtually no public notice on November 28, 2017; the full two-hour hearing can be viewed here.

Currently, the definition of “financial institution” includes banks, trust companies, credit unions, currency exchanges and the like. But according to Section 5312(a) of title 31, the new bill would amend the definition of “financial institution” to include “an issuer, redeemer, or cashier of prepaid access devices, digital currency, or any digital exchanger or tumbler of digital currency.” 

This is most specifically embedded in Section 13:

senatebilltextscreen.png

Sen. Dianne Feinstein [D-CA] said in her opening remarks of the hearing, “The bill criminalizes intentionally concealing ownership or control of a bank account.” Although, during the hearing, no further clarifications were given as to the effects this would have on the cryptocurrency community, based on the amended definition of “financial institution,” it would seem that the bill would criminalize anyone intentionally concealing ownership or control of a digital currency or exchange account. While there is no finalized bill yet, the implication would be that cryptocurrency holders need to fill in federal registration forms for tax disclosure, quarterly reporting and more.

Notably, while the purpose of the bill and hearing had to do with adding digital currencies and exchanges to the definition of financial institutions, there was almost no discussion on the topic other than briefly in reference to drug cartels using them to launder money. For example, nowhere in the testimony by Coinbase board of directors member Kathryn Haun Rodriguez does she mention digital currencies or exchanges, and at no time was she asked any questions about them.

Unsurprisingly, the bill is receiving pushback from some cryptocurrency holders. Activists on Reddit have started a social media campaign in opposition to the bill, and are suggesting others to tweet: “@senjudiciary that #Bitcoiners are not #Crooks Remove #DigitalCurrencies from Section 13 of S1241.” Others are contacting their senators directly.

The post U.S. Senate Mulls Reporting Requirements for Cryptocurrencies appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.