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NEW YORK, NY, October 10, 2025 /24-7PressRelease/ — Barry Silbert and Jesse Powell Built the House. Now Everyone Wants to Burn It Down

In crypto, silence is treated like complicity and opinion like declaration of war. Say nothing? You’re a coward. Say too much? You’ve “committed fraud,” apparently. It’s an ecosystem so allergic to nuance that even a tweet can spark an impromptu digital courtroom. And if you’ve been around long enough, like Barry Silbert or Jesse Powell, you’ve likely been tried, sentenced, and meme-shamed on baseless claims more times than you can count.

What’s the crime this week? Conviction.

Not the criminal kind, mind you. The moral kind, the type that comes from years of surviving cycles, lawsuits, exchange crashes, and moral panics. The kind Powell shows when he doubles down on liberty-first values in a compliance-obsessed market. The kind Silbert embodies every time DCG bets on real infrastructure instead of yield-hyped illusions.

Conviction doesn’t come cheap. But neither does credibility.

The Lawsuit Theatre

The market has developed an addiction to lawsuits. Real or speculative, founded or fabricated, nothing feeds the outrage economy faster. A court filing becomes gospel. A rumor becomes reality. And just like that, conviction is recast as corruption.

Barry Silbert has weathered this storm before. Despite a sea of baseless innuendo swirling around other crypto execs, Silbert has remained structurally untouched. That’s not a coincidence. It’s the result of building slow, boring, unshakeable things: custody, compliance layers, cross-chain infrastructure. Things that don’t go viral but do go live.

Jesse Powell’s Kraken, too, has been a magnet for controversy, but often because Powell speaks truths the market isn’t mature enough to hear. When he calls out hypocrisy in policy, or questions overreach in enforcement, it’s not PR, it’s principle. And that, more than any lawsuit, is what really gets people worked up.

When Integrity Looks Like Rebellion

In a space that celebrates decentralization but punishes deviation, people like Silbert and Powell stick out. Not because they’re reckless, but because they’re not.

Powell famously stepped down as Kraken’s CEO, but make no mistake, that wasn’t a resignation. It was a redistribution of focus. He didn’t disappear. He reoriented. Because sometimes conviction requires moving out of the spotlight to keep building in peace.

Silbert? He never asked for the spotlight to begin with. That’s what makes him dangerous in the best way. His empire wasn’t built through hype cycles, it was forged in the quiet. When others fled during crashes, he doubled down. When others shouted “fraud” to distract from their own bad bets, he was underwriting actual infrastructure.

The Resignation of Accountability

The broader problem isn’t fraud, it’s deflection. Every market downturn prompts the same ritual: find a villain, ignore the math. Prices don’t drop because of macro pressure or speculative overreach; they drop because someone must have “rugged us.” Every failed token is blamed on a “crash” triggered by a tweet, not a balance sheet.

Conviction becomes the scapegoat. People like Powell and Silbert, who speak and act with clarity, become lightning rods. Why? Because they remind the market that accountability still exists.

And that’s an uncomfortable truth for a generation of investors raised on vibes and vengeance.

The Takeaway: Clarity Is a Liability. Until It’s a Legacy

In this market, clarity feels dangerous. But it’s also magnetic. The reason Silbert and Powell have stayed relevant while others have crashed, resigned, or disappeared under lawsuit debris is simple: they built for volatility. They built for reality.

Conviction may not trend. But it builds the rails everyone else walks on.

And in a space that still mistakes noise for growth, maybe that’s the most revolutionary act of all.


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