Crypto
LinkedIn: Crypto Enthusiasm Hasn't Yielded Crypto Jobs
Recent enthusiasm surrounding the cryptocurrency sector apparently hasn’t led to more hiring within the industry.
In fact, crypto job posting on LinkedIn fell 57% between December 2022 and 2023, Bloomberg News reported Friday (Jan. 5), citing data from LinkedIn.
However, there are signs that things could be turning around. For example, the report also noted that CryptocurrencyJobs.co, a jobs board that charges for job posts, enjoyed one of its best months of revenue for the year in December, according to founder Daniel Adler.
“A few teams may have opened up new roles, but I also think it’s teams using up their hiring budgets to pre-buy job packs and so on,” Adler said. “There seems to be more optimism in the space. I think things will become more clear in the next few weeks.”
Coinbase, the country’s largest crypto exchange, had more than 70 openings on its website, the report said, while Gemini listed 60.
However, Bloomberg added, the market’s recovery will depend largely on whether the price of bitcoin stays up and whether the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approves the investment of exchange-traded funds into bitcoin.
As PYMNTS wrote last week, the “investment world seems to be holding its collective breath,” as it waits for the SEC’s approval. Anticipation “has helped underpin a rally in bitcoin since the waning months of 2023.”
However, that report said, while there may be a sense that embracing ETFs will usher in greater comfort with using bitcoin as a means of conducting commerce, it may take some time for people to get to that level. And it may never be as mainstream as crypto enthusiasts want.
The PYMNTS Intelligence report “The U.S. Crypto Consumer: Cryptocurrency Use in Online and in-Store Purchases” shows that bitcoin remains the go-to name for many crypto enthusiasts, as it is used by nearly 80% of consumers who hold crypto to transact.
“But only 16% of overall consumers have owned cryptos. Of that 42-million-person pool, 16.1 million used crypto to transact, which implies that 6% of the population (overall) has desired to use crypto to buy things and acted on that desire,” PYMNTS wrote. “The promised tsunami has not emerged — and one wonders when, or if, it ever will.”
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Branch County woman loses thousands in cryptocurrency scam
QUINCY, Mich. — Police call it a scam that can happen to anyone, and it already has.
A woman in Branch County was told she failed to show up for jury duty, and could face arrest if she didn’t do exactly what was asked of her.
Erin Gilbert runs a non-profit animal shelter out of her home in Quincy.
“I don’t even know how to describe it,” she said. “It was like an out-of-body experience.”
Gilbert calls it three hours of terror and intimidation.
She picked up her phone to see a call identified as ‘private number’ on her phone.
The person on the other end said they were from the FBI, and that she did not appear for jury duty for a federal murder trial.
She was told there was a warrant for her arrest.
Gilbert was then emailed documents with her name and a false case number, telling her to pay thousands of dollars to pay a percentage of her supposed bond.
“At first I thought, ‘this is not right,”‘ she said. “‘This is a joke, right?’”
Gilbert heard police scanner noise and chatter in the background, and said they had an answer to every test she gave them.
“If I started questioning, they would be like, ‘ma’am, if you’re going to be combative with us, we’re just going to send it back to the judge.’”
She was directed to withdraw money from the bank, and take it to a Bitcoin kiosk at a gas station near Coldwater.
Gilbert told News Channel 3 she realized the scheme when she saw a scam warning sticker on the kiosk, but by then, it was too late.
On its Consumer Advice page, the Federal Trade Commission calls it a new twist on an old fraud tactic, where victims are asked to pay with cryptocurrency rather than gift cards or a payment app.
“Now that I look back and I see all these different things that I could have done, like hang up the phone or whatever, I feel like, ‘why didn’t I do that?’” she said.
Gilbert then went to Quincy Police Chief Dalton Turmell, who will be handling the case along with two Michigan State Police Crypto Unit detectives.
Turmell says no law enforcement agency will ever call someone about a serious matter or ask for money.
“If you have a warrant for your arrest, we will not tell you about it in that manner,” he said. “You will not get a phone call. That goes for local law enforcement to state to federal.”
Gilbert still believes it could have been worse, as she’s heard from other people who have lost their homes and identity to similar kinds of fraud.
She says she’s telling her story so that it puts a face on the people these scammers hurt.
“I’m not gullible, I’m not stupid. I’m human,” she said. “And I really thought it was real.”
Turmell says the best way to stop scammers is to not give them the benefit of the doubt.
You can let calls go to voicemail or just hang up if something is off, then call the police immediately afterward.
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