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Crypto Darling Helium Promised A ‘People’s Network.’ Instead, Its Executives Got Rich.

E ven for someone skeptical of crypto, Helium’s pitch was hard for Dulce Davis to ignore. Backed by investors Andreessen Horowitz and Tiger Global, the $1. 2 billion Web3 company said it was building the “People’s Network,” a global wireless internet connection for objects like parking meters and dog collars.

All Davis had to do was spend $500 on a machine that looked like a wifi router, plug it into her wall and receive Helium’s cryptocurrency in return — a recurring passive stream of income. One Helium investor claimed that owners could recoup their purchase in a few weeks. Even better: If demand for Helium’s system took off, driving up the value of its Helium Network Token, or HNT, the company implied that the network’s gains would be shared by all.

In a company blog post from 2018 , Helium COO and chief hype master Frank Mong wrote that one of the tenets of the Helium network is that it’s fair. “Everyone has an equal opportunity to mine,” he wrote. Davis is one of thousands of people who bought into Helium’s promise, together spending an approximate $500 million on hotspots they believed would pay steady dividends.

But so far, citizens of the People’s Network have seen vanishingly small crypto rewards. After waiting more than six months for her $500 hotspot to arrive at her home in Houston, Davis has mined a single token in three months — about $5. “I could have used my money elsewhere and actually gained some income,” the 52-year-old real estate agent told Forbes , “not lose it after I pay my electricity bill.

” But Helium has made a handful of people disproportionately rich: its executives and their friends. A review of hundreds of leaked internal documents, transaction data and interviews with five former Helium employees suggest that as Helium insiders touted the democratized spirit of their “People’s Network,” they quietly amassed a majority of the tokens earned at the project’s start, hoarding much of the wealth generated in its earliest and most lucrative days. Forbes identified 30 digital wallets that appear to be connected to Helium employees, their friends and family and early investors.

This group of wallets mined 3. 5 million HNT — almost half of all Helium tokens mined within the first three months of the network’s launch in August 2019, according to a Forbes analysis that was confirmed by blockchain forensics firm Certik. Within six months, more than a quarter of all HNT had been mined by insiders — valued at roughly $250 million when the price of Helium peaked last year.

Even after the crypto price crashed, the tokens are still worth $21 million today. Cryptocurrency companies typically compensate early investors and employees for building their offerings with an allotment of tokens, and disclose these rewards in blog posts or white papers. While Helium and its executives have publicly discussed their incentive plan — a scheme called Helium Security Tokens, or HST, which guarantees about a third of all HNT for insiders — they haven’t previously disclosed the additional windfall taken from Helium’s public token supply, worth millions, that was identified by Forbes .

This means that at a time when Helium rewards per hotspot were at their highest, insiders claimed a majority of tokens, while little more than 30% went to Helium’s community. Each hotspot earned an average 33,000 HNT in August 2019, according to blockchain data; today, each hotspot only earns around 2 HNT per month. Some insiders exploited vulnerabilities known to the company to increase their hauls even more.

“This is a recurring pattern in the crypto economy,” says Lee Reiners, Policy Director at the Duke Financial Economics Center, who teaches cryptocurrency law at Duke Law. “This thing was set up to enrich the founders and early supporters at the expense of everyday people who bought hotspots thinking they were going to bring value. ” Amir Haleem, Helium’s co-founder and CEO, said in an interview that approximately half of the initial hotspots were distributed to employees, and their family and friends.

“None of those numbers feel unreasonable to me or egregious in any way,” he told Forbes . When asked if Helium should have disclosed this additional insider windfall to its community, Haleem said, “I don’t know why we would be asked to be in a position to reveal anything about these people…They took an enormous risk and a huge chance on paying money to build something. ” In response to detailed questions about its Helium investment and the finding that insiders amassed a majority of tokens earned at the project’s inception, Andreessen Horowitz partner Ali Yahya, who led the firm’s token sale in Helium, said he was excited to support the company’s advancement and lauded the “unprecedented scale” of its network.

Tiger Global declined to comment. Neither Andreessen Horowitz nor Tiger Global appeared in this early insider group. One notable beneficiary of such preferential access was a preteen from Atlanta, Georgia who became Helium’s de facto kid mascot by bootstrapping a multi-million-dollar mining empire from hotspots allegedly purchased with chore money.

The then 11-year-old boy’s father, Arul Murugan, who was introduced to Helium via investor Multicoin Capital, secured dozens of devices “carved out of the initial supply of hotspots,” said a former Helium employee. Haleem told Forbes that Murugan eventually purchased roughly 1,000 hotspots, but declined to comment on Murugan’s affiliation with the company or its investors at that time. Murugan did not respond to a request for comment.

Helium isn’t the first crypto project to have made lofty promises, only to leave the people who bought into them feeling shortchanged . Amid a “crypto winter,” and signs that the SEC is preparing to crack down on crypto companies for listing unregistered security offerings, Helium’s cryptocurrency price has plummeted, meaning the few tokens users have mined are worth less than $5 each — a fraction of their $55 peak in November 2021. Given the financial incentives already set aside for executives and investors, the insiders’ bounties are hard to reconcile with the meager rewards seen by hotspot owners, who are dismayed by their returns.

“I could do without the 0. 02 cents bi-weekly earnings,” wrote one Reddit user who claimed to have given up on Helium entirely. Wrote another : “Does anyone else think that Helium (HNT) is a well coordinated scam?” When publicly confronted by Helium users about the service’s shortcomings, Haleem has countered that its moment has yet to arrive.

“Is Helium a spectacular failure and proof that web3 sucks?” he tweeted in July in response to criticism over Helium’s low earnings. “I’d say it’s just getting started. ” I n 2013, Napster cofounder Shawn Fanning and Haleem, who was then a prominent game designer, launched a startup they called Skynet Phase 1, a reference to the genocidal computer system from the Terminator franchise.

The company, which was later rechristened Helium Systems, claimed to be creating a wireless network for the Internet of Things, one of the hottest areas of VC investment. With Fanning’s celebrity, Helium secured big name investors such as Khosla Ventures and Salesforce founder Marc Benioff for a $15 million funding round in 2014. But after five years of failed product launches powered by $50 million in investments, Helium pivoted to the buzzy crypto market, and the People’s Network debuted in August 2019.

(Fanning departed the company before the blockchain launched, according to three sources; he did not respond to a comment request. ) “The Helium vision is the most ambitious we have seen in the blockchain space since the advent of smart contracts on Ethereum,” Multicoin Capital partner Tushar Jain wrote , announcing a $15 million series C funding round ahead of the launch. (Benioff did not respond to a comment request.

Khosla Ventures declined to comment. Multicoin Capital spokesperson John Reed said the firm is “proud to back Helium as the network scales. ”) The bet that crypto could convince regular people to build a grassroots telco for IoT devices seemed to pay off at the start.

Users earned tokens when their hotspots processed data or validated other devices, and some early hotspot owners reported bounties worth tens of thousands of dollars per year. Helium celebrated the success of one young entrepreneur, the son of investor Arul Murugan, who claimed that his suite of hotspots generated $100,000 worth of rewards in one year alone. It was enough to launch his startup Emrit, a Helium revenue-sharing business that claims to have since deployed “ tens of thousands ” of devices around the world.

But at the same time, Helium discovered its nascent system was rife with cheaters. To artificially inflate their rewards, some users bought multiple hotspots — sometimes dozens — and manipulated their locations so they appeared spread across a city or town, when in fact they were all within a single property. This had the effect of generating impeccable signal clarity when the machines authenticated one another, and therefore a larger number of tokens.

“Closet clusters,” as they were known by Helium employees, were widespread, with reports of them popping up in nature reserves in Poland and even Area 51 . Helium employees caught one perpetrator in the Southwest who arranged their cluster in the shape of a middle finger — visible at the time on an older version of the company’s app, one source told Forbes . While the community now manages a blacklist of more than 70,000 hotspots belonging to possible cheaters, and Helium claims to have implemented anti-spoofing measures, it was widely known within the company that employees engaged in the practice too, three former Helium employees said.

“When you see customers doing it, it’s like, well, what am I doing working?” said one of these former employees. “Why aren’t I just minting money by putting hotspots in a closet?” Haleem said the company has been focused on how to fix spoofing, “rather than who was responsible for the issues. ” He added that he was not aware of staff cheating the network, telling Forbes , “We weren’t looking closely at what employees were doing.

” Nearly 12 months after it launched, Helium said its hotspots spanned more than 1,000 cities across North America. Major crypto exchanges Binance and FTX listed its tokens shortly thereafter, allowing people to buy, trade and sell HNT. By July 2021 , more than 100,000 hotspots were online, though HNT rewards were steadily declining.

Like other crypto projects, Helium’s initial token distribution was its largest, with more than 60 million HNT issued in its first year, a sum that halves every two years to protect the value of the cryptocurrency, according to project documentation. In August 2021, Andreessen Horowitz led a $110 million token sale, and the value of Helium’s token continued to rise until it reached $55 in November. Haleem’s dream of “creating a more connected world,” three Andreessen partners wrote in a blog post at the time of the sale, had “become a reality.

” A glowing New York Times profile in February this year all but cemented Helium’s image as a Web3 success story, arguing that Helium had “largely avoided the hype and inflated claims that surround many crypto projects. ” A couple weeks later, Helium, which became Nova Labs in February after forming a new corporation by that name, said it was valued at $1. 2 billion after raising another $200 million .

“This is the fastest rollout of a global wireless network in history,” Haleem wrote in a blog post announcing the funding. W hen Helium first launched, it created a special token — Helium Security Tokens, or HST — which guaranteed that approximately a third of Helium’s tokens would be diverted to investors and company executives as compensation for supporting the network. While users grumbled about diminished rewards for themselves, it was something the company talked about openly, and CEO Haleem touted it on Discord as “by far the most fair token distribution of any project that I’m aware of.

” But what the community didn’t know was that Haleem and several Helium executives, their friends and family, and some investors, made previously undisclosed windfalls in addition to these guaranteed dividends — awarding them the lion’s share of tokens before earnings plummeted. Using information from leaked company documents, Forbes matched the street addresses of dozens of Helium insiders named on an internal “family and friends” list with GPS coordinates tied to hotspots that were distributed in the months after the project launched in 2019. These documents contained information such as names, work emails and home addresses.

Then, after cross-referencing those addresses with property records, information from Helium’s public blockchain revealed how many tokens were earned by each of those hotspots. For example, a hotspot linked to Haleem’s wife displayed the coordinates of a California home the couple owned, according to a property records search. Five hotspots connected to this wallet mined 250,000 HNT in the first three months of the network’s inception, according to blockchain data.

The wallet has earned a total 455,000 HNT from mining rewards, worth $25 million at HNT’s peak price, and $2 million today. It is unclear when or if Haleem sold those tokens; he declined to comment. Transaction histories also illustrate how insiders then sent large sums of HNT to a Binance wallet identified by Helium’s Discord community.

(Binance did not respond to an inquiry about the wallet; Haleem declined to comment on its authenticity. ) Over the course of a single day in August 2021, for example, a wallet that appears connected to COO Frank Mong received almost a dozen payments from two other wallets linked to him within a two-hour window. The sum of those payments, then valued at nearly $1 million, moved to the Binance wallet minutes later, according to Forbes ’ analysis.

Theoretically, moving HNT earnings to Binance, where it could then be exchanged for other cryptocurrencies or U. S. dollars, could have been the first step toward Mong cashing out.

Mong did not respond to a comment request. In response, Haleem claimed some cryptocurrency projects typically reserve as much as 90% of initial token supplies for investors and team members. Forbes was unable to find an example substantiating this claim; two crypto-focused venture capitalists told Forbes they were not aware of projects with a 90% distribution to insiders.

When asked for examples of projects that allocated nearly all of its initial tokens to insiders, Haleem said “there are plenty,” and directed Forbes to a chart showing percentages ranging from 10% to 58%. “That’s the playing field that we’re always on in crypto, whether rightly or wrongly,” he said. “The generally accepted reality is that someone has to start the network.

” B eyond issues with its miners and token system, Helium appears to have a more pressing problem: The company seems to be struggling to generate revenue from its network. Forbes found that over the past year, between June 2021 and August 2022, just $92,000 in revenue was generated from data moving across the network, according to Helium’s own numbers — a figure that starkly contrasts the $250 million the parent company has raised from investors. Instead, Helium generates the vast majority of its revenue — $53.

3 million during the same time period — from people registering their new hotspots and authenticating other devices on the network. Bringing in revenue from data on the network “doesn’t happen overnight,” Haleem told Forbes , adding that Helium’s network only became viable in the last nine months. “When someone pulls the trigger, and says, ‘I’m going to build a device that uses the Helium network,’ we expect it to take years before that device actually materializes in any meaningful scale.

” Haleem said Helium’s revenue is returned to hotspot owners. Asked how Nova Labs makes money, the company that employs Haleem, he said, “We’re not commenting on our internal business practices here. ” The crypto landscape is “littered with the bones of projects that have basically fallen by the wayside because the ultimate promise is not being met by fundamental economics returns,” Monsur Hussain, head of Financial Institutions Research at Fitch Ratings, told Forbes.

For Helium’s network to become profitable, Hussain added, “You’d actually need to have the whole earth covered in a few feet of these devices to potentially consume enough data. ” In August, the City of San Jose chose not to renew a pilot project with Helium when it failed to subsidize internet costs for low-income households through the mining of HNT. The city, which purchased 20 hotspots last year, noticed “a decline in the amount of HNT generated per miner,” Clay Garner, Chief Innovation Officer for the Office of Mayor Sam Liccardo, told Forbes , attributing the drop to a lack of data being sent across the network.

San Jose “can’t afford to work on things that are not scaling significantly,” Garner added. Haleem declined to comment. The company also appears to have exaggerated the nature of some of its partnerships.

In July, Mashable and The Verge alleged that Helium had overstated its relationship with corporate clients Salesforce and the electric scooter-share Lime. Both companies confirmed to Forbes they do not use Helium, despite being featured on the company’s website as customers (Helium has since removed Salesforce and Lime from its website; Haleem said, “We will do a better job on making sure that we’re accurately representing those logos in the future”). Helium’s apparent overstatement of these business partnerships, combined with revenue that relies on sign-on fees rather than actual use of its network could invite regulatory scrutiny, according to John Stark, a former Securities and Exchange Commission official who led the agency’s Office of Internet Enforcement.

“Any one of those [factors] would give rise to SEC enforcement interest,” he told Forbes . The SEC did not respond to a comment request. Three years after its blockchain debut, Helium’s users appear to have grown frustrated with the company’s failure to deliver on its lofty promises.

Beyond complaints over low earnings, community members report waiting up to a year for their hotspots to ship. Once their hardware does arrive, some members claim that random variables like topography, squirrels, mesh window screens and bird droppings can negatively affect their rewards. “I realized it was going to take years to break even,” Jonathan Newman, a Canada-based hotspot owner, told Forbes .

After eight months, Newman’s hotspot finally arrived and is on track to earn around $150 a year — hardly the returns he’d been sold on. With little network usage, community grievances and a diminishing crypto price, Helium is now trying to sell its community on a whole new network. For its next act, the company says it is building Helium 5G, a network to provide decentralized connection for the latest iteration of cellular devices.

It includes a collaboration with two of the nation’s largest wireless carriers, DISH and T-Mobile ; Helium will be paying the latter for access to its network. (DISH did not respond to a request for comment; T-Mobile declined to comment. ) Then, last month, the company announced the launch of a brand new token, MOBILE, to reward hotspot owners for building its 5G ecosystem.

So how can crypto enthusiasts get involved? By purchasing an upgraded hotspot for $1,000 to $2,600. Alex Konrad contributed reporting. .


From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarahemerson/2022/09/23/helium-crypto-tokens-peoples-network/

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