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Bitcoiners abandon jailed privacy developers for Saylor gains

Sunday, May 10, 2026 · from 2 podcasts
  • The Bitcoin community largely ignored a jailed privacy developer’s $2 million legal defense fundraiser.
  • Coinbase layoffs prove fiat-funded crypto firms are bloated while Bitcoin startups stay lean.
  • Without legal safeguards, every open-source Bitcoin developer is a target for the next no-knock raid.

The state is winning the war on Bitcoin privacy because the community stopped fighting. Keone Rodriguez, a co-founder of Samourai Wallet, is writing from a West Virginia prison cell, asking for help to cover millions in legal fees. On Rabbit Hole Recap, Matt Odell and Marty Bent argued the DOJ successfully bullied the developers into pleading guilty to unlicensed money transmission for software they didn’t control.

While the Ethereum community rallied behind Tornado Cash developers, the Bitcoin response has been tepid. Odell notes the majority now prefers speculative gains over the tools that make the money worth having. “The Pioneers are being left to rot in cages while the industry celebrates price action,” he said.

“The state is winning the war on privacy because Bitcoiners stopped paying attention.”

- Matt Odell, Rabbit Hole Recap

The prosecution marks a deliberate shift from regulating financial entities to criminalizing code. On TFTC, Lauren Rodriguez, Keone’s wife, noted that just six months before the indictment, FinCEN - the actual regulator - informed the DOJ that Samourai was not in violation. The government proceeded anyway, treating the act of writing software as a criminal conspiracy.

The case hinges on the claim that knowing a criminal could use a tool makes the developer liable. Rodriguez points out this reverses 1990s legal precedent that code is protected speech. If this theory holds, any open-source Bitcoin or Lightning developer could be prosecuted for the downstream choices of anonymous users.

Bitcoin culture is fracturing between those who want sovereignty and those who want a booming stock ticker. Odell warns that Michael Saylor’s pivot toward “digital credit” and complex treasury strategies feels more like a marketing campaign than a technical roadmap. This “Saylorization” creates a dynamic where any criticism of MicroStrategy is met with blind hostility.

Bent observed that at recent conferences, thousands flocked to hear about tokenization while rooms discussing Bitcoin as sovereign money remained empty. The incentives have shifted toward weaponizing capital markets rather than building peer-to-peer infrastructure.

“Without privacy, Bitcoin becomes a perfect panopticon, creating physical security risks like the public target lists for Bitcoin holders in France.”

- Marty Bent, TFTC

Political pressure is now the primary strategic objective. Rodriguez highlights the campaign to free Ross Ulbricht as a blueprint, arguing the Bitcoin community’s 35 to 70 million U.S. owners form a voting bloc politicians can’t ignore. The goal is a presidential pardon and new laws with explicit developer protections before the next wave of indictments.

The quiet period is a trap. Bent warns the current lull in prosecutions is temporary while the government waits for new surveillance infrastructure to build up. He cites a 2024 crypto brief where the administration seeks to expand the Patriot Act to cover digital currencies, which would require impossible KYC/AML compliance for open-source software.

The community’s neglect has immediate consequences. Rodriguez says the DOJ’s forfeiture of Samourai’s website led to scammers recreating it, creating real victims where the original, non-custodial service had none. When privacy tools are destroyed, only the armor protecting law-abiding citizens is removed.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

RABBIT HOLE RECAP #408: THE LAYOFFS CONTINUEMay 7

  • Matt highlights Bitcoin's role as a safe haven when central banks devalue currencies, framing it as the victor in a fiat world.
  • Matt highlights Utah's SB 275 digital identity law that mandates self-sovereign IDs using open-source protocols with user-controlled private keys and bans phone-home surveillance.
  • Matt warns South Africa's proposed law mandates full wealth disclosure and criminalizes non-compliance, posing a direct threat to self-custody and property rights for Bitcoiners there.
Also from this episode: (10)

Payments (1)

  • Keone Rodriguez and Bill from Samurai Wallet face $2 million in legal debt and a $250,000 fine after pleading guilty to unlicensed money transmission.

Politics (2)

  • Matt notes Bitcoin Policy Institute raised just over $1 million for their defense fund, far less than Tornado Cash developers received, highlighting a disparity in community support.
  • Odell argues the Clarity Act's developer protections are essential to prevent future prosecutions like Samurai Wallet, but fears the rest of the bill only benefits corporate shitcoiners.

Adoption (1)

  • Matt observes attendance for Bitcoin-as-freedom-money talks was sparse at the conference, while tokenization events drew crowds, indicating a shift in community interests.

Protocol (5)

  • Odell says the percentage of Bitcoiners focused on freedom money has never been lower, despite the absolute number growing, creating a frustrating fracturing within the community.
  • Matt criticizes MSTR's retail-focused earnings calls and Saylor's willingness to sell Bitcoin for dividends, questioning the constant goalpost shifting around the company's financial strategy.
  • Odell points out executive compensation at Bitcoin treasury clones can reach $15-20 million annually, while open source devs on grants make around $100,000, illustrating a stark resource disconnect.
  • Matt notes OpenSats distributes about $1 million monthly to over 200 grant recipients in 40+ countries, funding more than 400 developers total.
  • Odell details a Bitcoin Core vulnerability affecting versions 0.14.0 to 29.0, where a specially crafted block could cause a node crash via a use-after-free bug.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Odell warns the Guard Act passed Senate Judiciary unanimously, requiring age verification for AI chatbots as a Trojan horse for digital identity.

#742: Why Privacy Is Non-Negotiable with Lauren RodriguezMay 6

  • Lauren Rodriguez says her husband, Samurai Wallet co-founder Keone, is unjustly imprisoned, and their lives were upended by a DOJ raid with no prior contact or warning.
  • Marty Bent asserts financial privacy is a prerequisite for freedom, citing that tools like Samurai Wallet restore basic transactional privacy lost in Bitcoin's transparent ledger.
  • Bent and Rodriguez warn that without privacy, Bitcoin becomes a perfect panopticon, creating physical security risks like the public target lists for Bitcoin holders in France.
  • Rodriguez says the DOJ's forfeiture of Samurai's website led to scammers recreating it, creating real victims where the original service had none.
  • Marty Bent cites a 2024 crypto brief where the administration seeks to expand the Patriot Act to include digital currencies, which would require impossible KYC/AML compliance for open-source software.
  • Bent argues that existing KYC/AML laws are ineffective, citing data that they prevent only a tiny fraction of illicit funds while creating massive data breach risks.
  • Rodriguez connects the attack on financial privacy tools to a broader erosion of rights, using the analogy of blinds on windows and locks on doors as fundamental privacy norms.
Also from this episode: (4)

Protocol (3)

  • The government charged Keone and co-defendant Bill with conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitter business and conspiracy to money launder, despite FinCEN guidance indicating they were not in violation.
  • Rodriguez argues the case sets a dangerous precedent that developers are liable for user actions, equating it to holding messaging app creators responsible if criminals use their software.
  • Marty Bent warns of a regulatory slippery slope, noting the Bank Secrecy Act's $10,000 reporting threshold from 1970 is equivalent to nearly $70,000 today due to currency devaluation.

Politics (1)

  • Rodriguez calls for a presidential pardon and public pressure, directing listeners to billandkeone.org to sign petitions and donate towards their $2 million in legal debt.