Original title: A Difficult Personal Decision Original author: @TheWhiteWhaleV2 Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats Editor's Note: Following the 10.10 incident, the crypto industry underwent a painful but necessary period of self-reflection. When the failure of a centralized trading platform is enough to trigger a network-wide liquidation waterfall, how much pressure can the "decentralization" we trust withstand? The author of this article is a well-known trader with a long history of deep involvement in crypto trading and over 70,000 followers on the X platform, aiming to achieve $100 million in trading results. In August of this year, he publicly recorded total profits of $95 million on HyperLiquid, stating that if performance on other platforms is included, the total has "exceeded $100 million." Entering October, his career profit and loss remains positive, and he has "maintained eight-figure profits for the year." However, on October 10th, he experienced his first liquidation in a massive market-wide sell-off, losing approximately $62 million, a drawdown of about 62%. Even so, he emphasized that he was "still making a positive return" and continued to rebuild his position by selling HYPE tokens. He once publicly praised HyperLiquid founder Jeff Bezos as a "crypto Nobel laureate," but today he chose to leave HyperLiquid. In his view, this is not due to disappointment, but rather a shift in values. He calls on the industry to move from "protecting protocols" to "protecting users," and from celebrating zero bad debts to a truly meaningful risk buffer mechanism. After all, a mature financial system will never rely solely on "good luck" and "hope" as a last resort. The following is the original text: The protocol isn't dead, but the users are. I have made a personal decision: I will no longer trade on HyperLiquid. I want to emphasize the word "personal"—and it was an extremely difficult decision. I didn't ask anyone to follow me; I simply chose to continue acting in accordance with the changes in my values. Many people have witnessed the evolution of my thinking along the way. As human beings, we should evolve, reflect, let go of old frameworks, and build better new frameworks. And I know people often say not to develop an emotional attachment to a protocol. But HyperLiquid is different for me. Jeff created something the market desperately needed. He brought the issue of "structural fairness" into the spotlight, sparking a better discussion across the industry. He and the HL team deserve to leave their mark on crypto history. I sincerely hope they continue writing. But if you've followed me long enough, you'll know I'm an idealist, perhaps even overly so. I can't turn off that part of my brain: the part that sees things as they are and insists they "should" be. October 10th revealed the true nature of the industry to many newcomers. For those who had been there long enough, it served as a reminder that the ecosystem remains fragile and easily manipulated. Can a centralized trading platform trigger a global liquidation waterfall, briefly causing the prices of all protocols to plummet? This is not a "black swan" event; it's a design flaw. Let's briefly review the proceedings of that day: Binance used its own oracle—resulting in its stablecoin becoming unpegged. This triggered a small but manageable liquidation chain. The real chaos began when their API mysteriously went offline. Delta-neutral market makers suddenly couldn't hedge on major OTC exchanges. Unable to hedge, they had to remove quotes from CEXs and DEXs. Liquidity vanished, and prices plummeted instantly. And what about the industry as a whole? A chorus of celebration. "Zero bad debts!" "Perfect liquidation execution!" Great, the protocol isn't dead, but the users are. Protection protocols are important, that's obvious. But "protection protocols" are not the same as "protecting traders." If we want wider adoption, greater legitimacy, and for the crypto industry to continue to grow without being strangled by regulators, we must build genuine consumer protection at the systemic level. TradFi has circuit breakers, market maker obligations, and structural safety barriers. What does the crypto industry have? Hope. And a user manual: "Good luck!" So why did I leave HyperLiquid? Because I chose to support teams that proactively address these design flaws, rather than teams that merely observe the problems. I've spoken with Jeff and another member of Core 11. They don't seem to see this as part of the current roadmap. That's their choice, and I respect that. But it must be made clear that no one has a perfect solution, and there is no silver bullet. What matters to me is: who is moving towards a solution, rather than ignoring the problem. On October 10th, we lost so many people. Real lives were lost. Real families were destroyed. The reason is simply... a design flaw that allows a single entity to control global prices? The crypto industry can't sweep this under the rug. Protecting users shouldn't rely solely on "good luck." So the question becomes: who is actually building a protection mechanism to prevent the next "Binance-style disaster"? On Solana, I only found one. Drift's liquidation protection isn't magic, nor is it perfect, but it really exists. More importantly, it works. It checks: "Does the oracle price deviate from the 5-minute TWAP price by more than 50%?" If so, it temporarily suspends liquidation. This simple logic has saved many people. False breakouts were filtered out. Insurance funds provided a safety net in extreme situations. It was not a grand philosophical revolution, but a crucial step toward reason. I'm not as smart as Jeff, nor would I dare claim to know the best industry-grade solutions. But I am a user, and users vote with their money. The industry keeps repeating the same phrase: "Protection protocols protect traders." But that's not the whole story. A car without a driver isn't a complete system. Both are equally important, forming a beautiful symbiotic relationship. This article felt like a heartbreaking letter to me. It's not an ad for Drift. It's more like a heart-wrenching breakup. Not because the love is gone, but because you finally realize that you're going in different directions. HL will always be a part of my story. It will continue to be on my list of recommendations when people ask me where to trade. But now, it's time for me to move forward—towards my values, towards my ideals. With sincere gratitude, he said to Jeff and the team, "We will always have Paris."Original title: A Difficult Personal Decision Original author: @TheWhiteWhaleV2 Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats Editor's Note: Following the 10.10 incident, the crypto industry underwent a painful but necessary period of self-reflection. When the failure of a centralized trading platform is enough to trigger a network-wide liquidation waterfall, how much pressure can the "decentralization" we trust withstand? The author of this article is a well-known trader with a long history of deep involvement in crypto trading and over 70,000 followers on the X platform, aiming to achieve $100 million in trading results. In August of this year, he publicly recorded total profits of $95 million on HyperLiquid, stating that if performance on other platforms is included, the total has "exceeded $100 million." Entering October, his career profit and loss remains positive, and he has "maintained eight-figure profits for the year." However, on October 10th, he experienced his first liquidation in a massive market-wide sell-off, losing approximately $62 million, a drawdown of about 62%. Even so, he emphasized that he was "still making a positive return" and continued to rebuild his position by selling HYPE tokens. He once publicly praised HyperLiquid founder Jeff Bezos as a "crypto Nobel laureate," but today he chose to leave HyperLiquid. In his view, this is not due to disappointment, but rather a shift in values. He calls on the industry to move from "protecting protocols" to "protecting users," and from celebrating zero bad debts to a truly meaningful risk buffer mechanism. After all, a mature financial system will never rely solely on "good luck" and "hope" as a last resort. The following is the original text: The protocol isn't dead, but the users are. I have made a personal decision: I will no longer trade on HyperLiquid. I want to emphasize the word "personal"—and it was an extremely difficult decision. I didn't ask anyone to follow me; I simply chose to continue acting in accordance with the changes in my values. Many people have witnessed the evolution of my thinking along the way. As human beings, we should evolve, reflect, let go of old frameworks, and build better new frameworks. And I know people often say not to develop an emotional attachment to a protocol. But HyperLiquid is different for me. Jeff created something the market desperately needed. He brought the issue of "structural fairness" into the spotlight, sparking a better discussion across the industry. He and the HL team deserve to leave their mark on crypto history. I sincerely hope they continue writing. But if you've followed me long enough, you'll know I'm an idealist, perhaps even overly so. I can't turn off that part of my brain: the part that sees things as they are and insists they "should" be. October 10th revealed the true nature of the industry to many newcomers. For those who had been there long enough, it served as a reminder that the ecosystem remains fragile and easily manipulated. Can a centralized trading platform trigger a global liquidation waterfall, briefly causing the prices of all protocols to plummet? This is not a "black swan" event; it's a design flaw. Let's briefly review the proceedings of that day: Binance used its own oracle—resulting in its stablecoin becoming unpegged. This triggered a small but manageable liquidation chain. The real chaos began when their API mysteriously went offline. Delta-neutral market makers suddenly couldn't hedge on major OTC exchanges. Unable to hedge, they had to remove quotes from CEXs and DEXs. Liquidity vanished, and prices plummeted instantly. And what about the industry as a whole? A chorus of celebration. "Zero bad debts!" "Perfect liquidation execution!" Great, the protocol isn't dead, but the users are. Protection protocols are important, that's obvious. But "protection protocols" are not the same as "protecting traders." If we want wider adoption, greater legitimacy, and for the crypto industry to continue to grow without being strangled by regulators, we must build genuine consumer protection at the systemic level. TradFi has circuit breakers, market maker obligations, and structural safety barriers. What does the crypto industry have? Hope. And a user manual: "Good luck!" So why did I leave HyperLiquid? Because I chose to support teams that proactively address these design flaws, rather than teams that merely observe the problems. I've spoken with Jeff and another member of Core 11. They don't seem to see this as part of the current roadmap. That's their choice, and I respect that. But it must be made clear that no one has a perfect solution, and there is no silver bullet. What matters to me is: who is moving towards a solution, rather than ignoring the problem. On October 10th, we lost so many people. Real lives were lost. Real families were destroyed. The reason is simply... a design flaw that allows a single entity to control global prices? The crypto industry can't sweep this under the rug. Protecting users shouldn't rely solely on "good luck." So the question becomes: who is actually building a protection mechanism to prevent the next "Binance-style disaster"? On Solana, I only found one. Drift's liquidation protection isn't magic, nor is it perfect, but it really exists. More importantly, it works. It checks: "Does the oracle price deviate from the 5-minute TWAP price by more than 50%?" If so, it temporarily suspends liquidation. This simple logic has saved many people. False breakouts were filtered out. Insurance funds provided a safety net in extreme situations. It was not a grand philosophical revolution, but a crucial step toward reason. I'm not as smart as Jeff, nor would I dare claim to know the best industry-grade solutions. But I am a user, and users vote with their money. The industry keeps repeating the same phrase: "Protection protocols protect traders." But that's not the whole story. A car without a driver isn't a complete system. Both are equally important, forming a beautiful symbiotic relationship. This article felt like a heartbreaking letter to me. It's not an ad for Drift. It's more like a heart-wrenching breakup. Not because the love is gone, but because you finally realize that you're going in different directions. HL will always be a part of my story. It will continue to be on my list of recommendations when people ask me where to trade. But now, it's time for me to move forward—towards my values, towards my ideals. With sincere gratitude, he said to Jeff and the team, "We will always have Paris."

A whale that once made nearly 100 million in unrealized profits: Why did I leave HyperLiquid?

2025/11/19 20:00
6 min read

Original title: A Difficult Personal Decision

Original author: @TheWhiteWhaleV2

Compiled by: Peggy, BlockBeats

Editor's Note: Following the 10.10 incident, the crypto industry underwent a painful but necessary period of self-reflection. When the failure of a centralized trading platform is enough to trigger a network-wide liquidation waterfall, how much pressure can the "decentralization" we trust withstand?

The author of this article is a well-known trader with a long history of deep involvement in crypto trading and over 70,000 followers on the X platform, aiming to achieve $100 million in trading results. In August of this year, he publicly recorded total profits of $95 million on HyperLiquid, stating that if performance on other platforms is included, the total has "exceeded $100 million." Entering October, his career profit and loss remains positive, and he has "maintained eight-figure profits for the year."

However, on October 10th, he experienced his first liquidation in a massive market-wide sell-off, losing approximately $62 million, a drawdown of about 62%. Even so, he emphasized that he was "still making a positive return" and continued to rebuild his position by selling HYPE tokens.

He once publicly praised HyperLiquid founder Jeff Bezos as a "crypto Nobel laureate," but today he chose to leave HyperLiquid. In his view, this is not due to disappointment, but rather a shift in values. He calls on the industry to move from "protecting protocols" to "protecting users," and from celebrating zero bad debts to a truly meaningful risk buffer mechanism. After all, a mature financial system will never rely solely on "good luck" and "hope" as a last resort.

The following is the original text:

The protocol isn't dead, but the users are.

I have made a personal decision: I will no longer trade on HyperLiquid.

I want to emphasize the word "personal"—and it was an extremely difficult decision. I didn't ask anyone to follow me; I simply chose to continue acting in accordance with the changes in my values.

Many people have witnessed the evolution of my thinking along the way. As human beings, we should evolve, reflect, let go of old frameworks, and build better new frameworks.

And I know people often say not to develop an emotional attachment to a protocol. But HyperLiquid is different for me. Jeff created something the market desperately needed. He brought the issue of "structural fairness" into the spotlight, sparking a better discussion across the industry. He and the HL team deserve to leave their mark on crypto history. I sincerely hope they continue writing.

But if you've followed me long enough, you'll know I'm an idealist, perhaps even overly so. I can't turn off that part of my brain: the part that sees things as they are and insists they "should" be.

October 10th revealed the true nature of the industry to many newcomers. For those who had been there long enough, it served as a reminder that the ecosystem remains fragile and easily manipulated.

Can a centralized trading platform trigger a global liquidation waterfall, briefly causing the prices of all protocols to plummet? This is not a "black swan" event; it's a design flaw.

Let's briefly review the proceedings of that day:

Binance used its own oracle—resulting in its stablecoin becoming unpegged. This triggered a small but manageable liquidation chain. The real chaos began when their API mysteriously went offline. Delta-neutral market makers suddenly couldn't hedge on major OTC exchanges. Unable to hedge, they had to remove quotes from CEXs and DEXs. Liquidity vanished, and prices plummeted instantly.

And what about the industry as a whole? A chorus of celebration. "Zero bad debts!" "Perfect liquidation execution!"

Great, the protocol isn't dead, but the users are.

Protection protocols are important, that's obvious. But "protection protocols" are not the same as "protecting traders." If we want wider adoption, greater legitimacy, and for the crypto industry to continue to grow without being strangled by regulators, we must build genuine consumer protection at the systemic level.

TradFi has circuit breakers, market maker obligations, and structural safety barriers. What does the crypto industry have? Hope. And a user manual: "Good luck!"

So why did I leave HyperLiquid? Because I chose to support teams that proactively address these design flaws, rather than teams that merely observe the problems.

I've spoken with Jeff and another member of Core 11. They don't seem to see this as part of the current roadmap. That's their choice, and I respect that.

But it must be made clear that no one has a perfect solution, and there is no silver bullet. What matters to me is: who is moving towards a solution, rather than ignoring the problem.

On October 10th, we lost so many people. Real lives were lost. Real families were destroyed.

The reason is simply... a design flaw that allows a single entity to control global prices? The crypto industry can't sweep this under the rug.

Protecting users shouldn't rely solely on "good luck."

So the question becomes: who is actually building a protection mechanism to prevent the next "Binance-style disaster"?

On Solana, I only found one. Drift's liquidation protection isn't magic, nor is it perfect, but it really exists. More importantly, it works.

It checks: "Does the oracle price deviate from the 5-minute TWAP price by more than 50%?"

If so, it temporarily suspends liquidation. This simple logic has saved many people.

False breakouts were filtered out. Insurance funds provided a safety net in extreme situations.

It was not a grand philosophical revolution, but a crucial step toward reason.

I'm not as smart as Jeff, nor would I dare claim to know the best industry-grade solutions. But I am a user, and users vote with their money.

The industry keeps repeating the same phrase: "Protection protocols protect traders." But that's not the whole story. A car without a driver isn't a complete system. Both are equally important, forming a beautiful symbiotic relationship.

This article felt like a heartbreaking letter to me.

It's not an ad for Drift. It's more like a heart-wrenching breakup. Not because the love is gone, but because you finally realize that you're going in different directions.

HL will always be a part of my story. It will continue to be on my list of recommendations when people ask me where to trade.

But now, it's time for me to move forward—towards my values, towards my ideals.

With sincere gratitude, he said to Jeff and the team, "We will always have Paris."

Market Opportunity
Intuition Logo
Intuition Price(TRUST)
$0.07467
$0.07467$0.07467
+2.20%
USD
Intuition (TRUST) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference

Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference

The post Ethereum unveils roadmap focusing on scaling, interoperability, and security at Japan Dev Conference appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Key Takeaways Ethereum’s new roadmap was presented by Vitalik Buterin at the Japan Dev Conference. Short-term priorities include Layer 1 scaling and raising gas limits to enhance transaction throughput. Vitalik Buterin presented Ethereum’s development roadmap at the Japan Dev Conference today, outlining the blockchain platform’s priorities across multiple timeframes. The short-term goals focus on scaling solutions and increasing Layer 1 gas limits to improve transaction capacity. Mid-term objectives target enhanced cross-Layer 2 interoperability and faster network responsiveness to create a more seamless user experience across different scaling solutions. The long-term vision emphasizes building a secure, simple, quantum-resistant, and formally verified minimalist Ethereum network. This approach aims to future-proof the platform against emerging technological threats while maintaining its core functionality. The roadmap presentation comes as Ethereum continues to compete with other blockchain platforms for market share in the smart contract and decentralized application space. Source: https://cryptobriefing.com/ethereum-roadmap-scaling-interoperability-security-japan/
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:25
XRPR and DOJE ETFs debut on American Cboe exchange

XRPR and DOJE ETFs debut on American Cboe exchange

The post XRPR and DOJE ETFs debut on American Cboe exchange appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Today is a historical milestone for two of the biggest cryptocurrencies, XRP and Dogecoin. REX-Osprey announced the official listing of two spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that track the price of XRP and Dogecoin in the United States. The new crypto funds are available for US investors on the Cboe BZX Exchange. The REX-Osprey XRP ETF is trading with ticker XRPR, while the DOGE ETF is listed with ticker DOJE. The first XRP and DOGE ETFs were listed today, and they provide direct spot exposure to Dogecoin and XRP. XRPR and DOJE are gates to crypto exposure XRPR provides exposure to XRP, the native token of the XRP Ledger, which is a blockchain that enables fast and low-cost cross-border transactions. DOJE, on the other hand, is the first-ever Dogecoin ETF. It offers investors regulated access to the first memecoin that built global recognition through its Shiba Inu mascot and active online community. Both funds use a structure under the Investment Company Act of 1940, which governs open-end mutual funds and ETFs in the US. This law was designed to protect investors from fraud, conflicts of interest, and poor oversight. This route gives investors the protections of a regulated open-end ETF. Each fund will hold a majority of its assets in spot XRP or DOGE, while also investing at least 40% in other crypto ETFs and ETPs, including those traded outside the United States. According to the SEC filing, XRPR charges an expense ratio of 0.75%, while DOJE charges 1.50%. The funds may also use a Cayman Islands subsidiary to buy crypto directly. This setup copies REX-Osprey’s Solana + Staking ETF (SSK), which launched in July and quickly grew past $275 million in assets. Greg King, the CEO and founder of REX Financial and Osprey Funds, said, “Investors look to ETFs as…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/19 03:14
Trend Research has liquidated its ETH holdings and currently has only 0.165 coins remaining.

Trend Research has liquidated its ETH holdings and currently has only 0.165 coins remaining.

PANews reported on February 8 that, according to Arkham data, Trend Research, a subsidiary of Yilihua, has liquidated its ETH holdings, with only 0.165 ETH remaining
Share
PANews2026/02/08 11:07