| > Him placing the bets or a co-conspirator placing the bets and sharing the profit is the same thing. So we're in agreement that if he is not profiting from saying it, then it's OK, correct? > I'm pretty sure this is the same as match or race fixing to get the payout from bets made. If my friends make a bet that I will/won't do something, and I choose to make one side win, that is not match fixing. I'm sure match fixing only applies to regulated games. If people want to make bets on unregulated games, and lose their shirt, they have only themselves to blame. Here's a paper on match fixing: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/llr/vol56/iss4/9/ For something to be match fixing, the government has to recognize the activity as a sport, and most state laws require the person to benefit from the fixing, which the CEO here is not and/or they require "rule tampering" - there was no rule broken here. |
There has to be some motivation for people to do such random things, and even if not directly illegal, they do smell rather fishy and unethical.
T hen again crypto isn't known for its bastion of legality and morality, therefore I would assume there are some deals going on in the background which are probably illegal, and if not that then unethical - not that they would care about that.