Kyle criticized Hyperliquid, sparking a heated debate, as FWDI faced backlash due to poor performance and was mocked in retaliation.
BlockBeats News, February 9th. In a post, former Multicoin co-founder and Forward Industries (FORD) board chairman Kyle Samani criticized Hyperliquid, sparking intense community discussion. Kyle stated, "In many ways, Hyperliquid epitomizes the worst aspects of the crypto industry. The founder fled his own country to build it. Openly facilitates crime and terrorism. Has closed-source code and is permissioned."
Yunt Capital analyst Steven retorted, "Yes, Hyperliquid embodies all the downsides of cryptocurrency in most aspects. Including VC rejection, democratizing liquidity through HLP, growing the community through the largest token airdrop in history ($9 billion), and instead of pocketing some or all of the $960 million revenue from HL, it's better to use it all to buy back the token." Steven's updated data on the Hyperliquid Aid Fund buyback shows that the fund holds 40 million HYPE tokens, using long-term protocol revenue for the buyback.
Hyperliquid community member Luke Cannon mocked Kyle's role as board chairman of Solana's largest treasury company, Forward Industries (FWDI), stating, "FWDI has all the issues of DAT company, with the stock price continuing to fall after a pump, resulting in billions of investor funds going up in smoke while the team still made millions. You were directly involved in all of this, and then you try to boast about your moral superiority."
You may also like

Particle Founder: The entrepreneurial insights I have gained the most from in the past year

Huang Renxun's latest podcast transcript: The future of Nvidia, the development of embodied intelligence and agents, the explosion of inference demand, and the public relations crisis of artificial intelligence

OKX Ventures Research Report: AI Agent Economic Infrastructure Research Report (Part 1)

The migration of settlement rights: B18 and the institutional starting point of on-chain banks

From Tencent and Circle: Looking at the Simple and Difficult Questions of Investment

The second half of stablecoins no longer belongs to the crypto circle

Cursor "Shell" Kimi Controversy Reversed: From Copyright Infringement Allegations to Authorized Collaboration, China's Open Source Model Once Again Becomes a Global AI Foundation

The Real Reason Tokens Don't Sell: 90% of Crypto Projects Overlook Investor Relations

Is the income of pump.fun real, earning a million dollars a day despite the market downturn?

The real reason why tokens are not selling: 90% of crypto projects neglect investor relations

Who is the true winner of the "Tokenization" narrative?

Moss: The Era of AI-Traded by Anyone | Project Introduction

Chip Smuggling Case Exposes Regulatory Loophole | Rewire News Evening Update

How a Structured AI Crypto Trading Bot Won at the WEEX Hackathon
Ritmex demonstrates how disciplined risk control and structured signals can make an AI crypto trading bot more stable and reliable on WEEX, highlighting the importance of combining execution discipline with scalable AI trading systems.

Old Indicator Fails, Three Major New Signals Emerge: BTC True Bottom May Still Be Below $60K

Meeting OpenClaw Founder at a Hackathon: What Else Can Lobsters Do?

Huang Renxun's Latest Podcast Transcript: NVIDIA's Future, Embodied Intelligence and Agent Development, Soaring Demand for Inferencing, and AI's PR Crisis
How a Structured AI Crypto Trading Bot Won at the WEEX Hackathon
Crypto_Trade shows how structured inputs and controlled adaptability can build a more stable and reliable AI crypto trading bot within the WEEX AI Trading Hackathon, highlighting a practical path toward scalable AI trading systems.