To keep the content of the site, in case of deletion due to possible legal decisions, I've decided to post it here.QUOTE from Zeus Capital:The Fake Partnerships
Chapter I of V
Now we will take a closer look at the well-oiled Russian pump-and-dump fraud machine that made the record-breakingly high price of the otherwise useless LINK token possible in the first place.
They should be credited with the fact that the Chainlink team has developed a state-of-the-art, self-fulfilling system.
This allows them to keep full control over the price and give away as many tokens to the true believers as they want, making them happy and thus appeasing them.
The system works in the following way:
1.➡ Meaningless, paid, or grossly overstated partnerships between Chainlink and a number of blockchain and tech companies are constantly conjured up, aiming to give substance to the project.
2.➡ An army of paid “followers” (mostly kids btw) roams the social media.
They are promoting the project and hunting down everyone who dares to question the technological advantages, capabilities of the team, or the unsustainably high price.
3.➡ The predators reach unprecedented numbers of unsophisticated investors who fall for Chainlink’s mass marketing and buy the token hoping to get rich quickly, without understanding the flawed technology or tokenomics behind it.
4.➡ The steady demand for LINK from naive newcomers is met by Chainlink’s endless reserves sitting on the other end of the transaction.
The noise generated and disseminated translates into excellent liquidity, which allows Chainlink to divest as many worthless tokens as they like without affecting the price.
The proceedings are then used to generously reward Chainlink’s “partners” and “true” followers.
5.➡ The whole process is repeated again and again, and again, driving exponential price growth.
By using this seemingly simple scheme, Chainlink managed to turn its otherwise unpretentious 40-million ICO project into a multi-billion behemoth.
As more and more people become aware of the fraudulent scheme Chainlink is, we will reach a point where there are no more naive “investors” buying Chainlink’s bullshit, and the price of LINK will fall like a rock.
The "Partnerships"
Undeniably, Chainlink is among the most active crypto projects with more than 140 "partnerships" announced to date.
A more careful look, however, reveals that the majority of them are highly exaggerated or plain useless.
What’s more, there are outright lies about collaborations with leading technology companies or blockchain projects, which never took place.
The Game Changers
By far, the most effective trick in Chainlink’s arsenal is flashy announcements of “partnerships” with technology giants, such as Google, Oracle, and T-Systems.
How does it typically work?
A large company is showcasing some of their products (usually via a blog post) and casually mentions Chainlink as a theoretical intermediary in delivering the product to blockchain clients.
Remember, Chainlink’s core proposition is to connect APIs with blockchain, so a pretty good number of legacy players can easily be involved.
SmartContract and the people behind Chainlink are taking it from there, loudly announcing how #[insert a big tech company's name] is eager to do business with them.
It is the game-changer Chainlink’s community waited for so long!
In 2019, Chainlink proudly stated on its landing page that it would be partnering with companies like SWIFT and Google.
A few months later, there is no reference to either SWIFT or Google on the project’s
website.
Looking from hindsight, these “announcements” have been part of a cleverly crafted pump and dump scheme, serving as a tool to enrich Chainlink and corporate insiders at the expense of unsophisticated LINK investors.
Google
When Chainlink announced the “integration” with Google, the price was
$1.19 per LINK.
A few hours later, Google also tweeted, and the price skyrocketed to
$1.93, up by a staggering
62% in less than
24 hours.
Industry-leading outlets deliberately or unintentionally played their role in the process, too:
Taking a closer look at the actors, the author of Google’s blog post was Allen Day, Science Advocate at Google.
He simply posted an explanation of how Google’s products can interact with
decentralized applications using a combination of Ethereum, Google Cloud, and Chainlink — similar to how a client app can interact with a standard database server.
Knowing that the Chainlink community never got the time to critically review the news coming from the supreme master and their beloved project, we will dissect Allen Day’s blog post for them.
Right from the title,
Allen makes clear that the focus of the article is use cases of Google Cloud with Ethereum-based applications:
In the opening paragraph, Chainlink is simply mentioned as a necessary yet generic middleware.
No hints or statement of a partnership between Google and Chainlink is made:
Moving down, Allen talks about the history of smart contracts, how they work, and the freely available public blockchain data available throughout Google Cloud Public Database Program.
Chainlink comes into the light once again just to describe how the process works from a technical standpoint.
It is presented as a commodity, not a vital element of the infrastructure:
Next, Allen talks about three use cases. No mentions of Chainlink whatsoever.
Finally, the conclusion clearly states this is an example of using Google’s product via Chainlink, not the other way round.
A mention has never meant a partnership nor an endorsement.
Throughout Allen’s article, we are unable to find a single evidence of Google announcing any kind of official collaboration with Chainlink.
Two weeks later, the rally was further amplified when
Coinbase Pro disclosed it would be listing LINK on its platform, lifting the price another 23.3% within a few hours.
Then, on June 28, Coinbase added the coin to its core platform, inflating the LINK with yet another 104.49% in 24 hours.
Taking a look behind the curtain, AnChain.AI, a blockchain analytics firm, has been vocal about the manipulative nature of the trading activities surrounding LINK’s rapid price appreciation.
In their first post, the company argued that a small number of addresses (linked by a common source of ETH gas) have performed a coordinated pump and dump involving LINK 4.2M in the period April 1 to July 26, 2019.
The second post reviews the on-chain activities surrounding the Coinbase onramp.
AnChain found that a group of linked accounts purchased 11 million LINK via Binance between 27 and 29th June.
The relation between the accounts is once again the funding ETH addresses.
In the meantime,
1.4M LINK tokens were transferred to Binance from one of Chainlink’s development addresses.
While AnChain is reluctant to conclude that Chainlink’s founding team is related to the price manipulations, we believe that the timing, sophistication, access to extensive resource and information, as well as the outflow of LINK from the development addresses points straight to the people directly related to the project.
The Google “partnership” is a clear case of the pump-and-dump schemes Chainlink regularly orchestrates.
Bold, misleading statements are loudly announced, resulting in euphoria among the Link Marines and retail crypto investors.
Blindly believing the “news”, these unsophisticated investors are buying the worthless LINK tokens in bulk without questioning the legitimacy of the information.
In the meantime, Chainlink is moving large quantities of LINK to exchanges that are almost instantaneously dumped to their own vulnerable community.
Cleverly, though, Chainlink always let the demand outstrip the supply so that the price is going up while everyone is happy.
But how about the aforementioned Google logo on Chainlink’s landing page?
Why was it taken down from the website and other social media?
Apparently, Google was not happy playing a role in this Russian scam and kindly asked the project to remove any association between the two from the Internet.
Oracle
A month later, another technology giant was listed as a “partner”.
This time it was Oracle, and the “collaboration” was in the form of a joint innovation project for startups.
Again, the heavily advertised partnership did not go far.
The campaign did not have a second cohort of startups, and no successful projects came out of the innovation project.
Actually, there is a much uglier part of the story behind this “partnership”.
Fernando Ribeiro, who, according to his Twitter profile, is Principal Solution Architect at Oracle and who is known to be involved in the “partnership”
has publicly bragged about holding LINK among other cryptos.
Even to people not familiar with what is allowed and what not on the capital markets, such kind of behavior should ring a bell.
This is a clear cut case of insider trading in which a bad actor from a large corporation is taking advantage of his/her employer’s brand and collaborate with a bunch of scammers to enrich themselves on behalf of the general investing public.
Quite shameful, to say the least.
We are wondering whether Oracle will be happy with the behavior of their employee if the case comes to their attention.
Intel Corporation
The semiconductor giant was also somehow dragged into Chainlink’s pumps and dumps.
In an announcement from October 2019, Chainlink explains how its oracles can be used in combination with Intel’s Trusted Compute Framework (TCF) to provide connectivity between on-chain and off-chain environments.
However, looking at
Intel’s blog post from July 2019, Chainlink is mentioned more as a use case, not as an enabling factor.
Intel refers to Chainlink as a potential user of TCF in improving “the integrity of off-chain oracles”.
Nothing in Intel’s article points to a partnership in the sense of the technology company using Chainlink, apart from participation in terms of developers along with many other much bigger names.
The pattern is clear: big technology companies explain a product they are working on, briefly mentioning Chainlink’s oracles (this time more as a potential user than an example of integration).
Taking full advantage of the opportunity, Chainlink loudly announces a “partnership”, artificially fueling substantial price increases.
In a desperate move to prevent LINK price crash following the publication of the report, Chainlink started announcing “partnership” after “partnership”. Let’s take a closer look at them as well.
Four Major Korean Banks
A more recent PR trick went even further by hiding behind the shiny facade of a ghost company, to floodlight the community with a “breakthrough” event.
Right after the report was published, Chainlink made a big noise about the partnership with
CenterPrime, a private hyperledger based chain, feeding foreign exchange rate data network from several major Korean banks.
The partner is proudly presented to have “unique” access to the Korean Open Banking APIs, however, a simple Google search for “
CenterPrime Korean banks" returns eight pages of results ONLY about the partnership with Chainlink.
Not a single result points to the official page of CenterPrime or any bank affiliations.
Interestingly, the official announcement on Twitter does not ping the account of CenterPrime!
Maybe this is because CenterPrime Twitter account has just three followers and a single tweet only (of course, about the partnership with Chainlink).
Turning to
the official website of CenterPrime presented on their Twitter account (centerprime.io is shut down), the partner’s authenticity starts to unravel.
Firstly, we notice that the site does not have a Korean version, and the landing page looks as if it has been created in 10 minutes, containing almost no information about the purpose of CenterPrime.
In fact, we can safely assume the whole website of this shell company was created in under half an hour, considering the scarce content.
Besides the landing page, there are four others that barely contain any information.
Features and Providers present several meaningless “graphs” without information, but with the Chainlink and Google logos in them.
The “comprehensive guides and documents” supposed to be found in the Docs are just a bunch of random lines of code hanging in the air, updated months ago.
The Changelog and Discussions sections are empty.
The blog redirects to the Medium page of CenterPrime which, expectedly, has just one post pertaining to the announced collaboration with Chainlink.
A very good summary of this shallow announcement is found at the end of page 8 of our Google search, which is also the first result not related to the fake partnership.
T-Systems
The second recent announcement that fell into the category, which involves a big corporate name was the T-Systems “partnership”:
The announcement drove Chainlink’s fans crazy, yet the effect on the token price was neglectable:
At first glance, Chainlink was once again invincible but what exactly is the partnership about and is it material for Chainlink?
T-Systems will simply operate a node in Chainlink’s ecosystem and won’t use its product in any other form:
The statement above clearly says that Chainlink will be a client to T-Systems and not the other way round.
As thoroughly explained in the report, Chainlink’s problem does not lie in the insufficient number of node operators,
but in the lack of network users.
Currently, there are more approved operators than are actually needed, which is evident in the particularly low node operator utilization:
Why is there such a lack of balance?
Because of the subsidies.
Node operators get 1 LINK (approximately $7) for each completed job.
This reward is multiple times higher than the operating expenses incurred, which makes it highly profitable for them to be a part of the ecosystem.
In this sense, is such a partnership critical for the development of the project?
Absolutely not.
Why was it announced?
To support the LINK price from absolute collapse upon the publication of our report.
Unfortunately for the LINK community, this kind of “news” are also quite rare as all high profile companies seem to try to avoid association with the blockchain star.
So what is the alternative?
Machinated “news” involving high profile blockchain projects.
Chapter II of V: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5264584.msg54965682#msg54965682
to be continued...
Link to website: https://zeus-capital.com/news/how-the-link-fraud-trives-chainlink-partnerships/