I would describe myself as having neutral stance towards the crypto industry, DeFi/Ethereum more specifically. I am not a fan of most other alternative chains or Bitcoin. I understand that the majority of tokens and services are scams and markets caps are a bubble driven by speculation, but I also see true potential in the technology and ideology. Both of these opinions kind of cancel each other out leading to me being neither fully pro- nor fully anti-crypto.
However, the constant backlash from the public is nagging me. All the hate for crypto, even though much of it is uninformed, makes me question my decisions. I am also worried about future employability. If crypto fails, which is a real possibility in my mind, will I be unemployable because I spend several years in the scammy crypto industry?
Just feeling a bit lost. Anyone else in a similar position?
Then I started to recognize that its predatory and actually not benign or harmless. It is taking advantage of people. It started to become gross, and nobody I worked with shared any views or skepticism that I had. They all pretty much treated it like a religion across the board. Glad I left. I turned down money that most would not get a chance at in their lifetime, but where that money came from did not sit right with me, nobody in that company deserved any of it. I guess I was not cutthroat enough ... seems like this space is reserved only for snakes, and fools.
However, I don't foster any negative feelings towards developers per se. A job's a job, and crypto isn't exactly as easy as your run of the mill CRUD application development.
By working in the ethereum space you've proven you can work with/around obscure tools, learn strange jargon, probably have some knowledge of cryptographic algorithms, and a willingness to do a deep dive in what you believe in. I'm no hiring manager, but to me that all seems like a bunch of skills that will transfer to many businesses outside crypto.
There's more to a person than what areas of business they have experience in. You can work for Big Oil, Facebook/Google/UmbrellaCorp, or Nestlé and be a perfectly good person just doing their job. Anyone refusing you simply because you worked in crypto at some point is short-sighted.
Even if you are a crucial part in the next big rug-pull-sold-as-ending-world-hunger, I honestly doubt you'll run into too many ethical qualms unless you screw up enough to actually break the law and get caught. It's not like Meta or Wells Fargo suddenly care about ethics if you can talk things straight enough, most big companies are morally bankrupt anyway.
I just had the California Franchise Tax Board literally steal money out of a bank account of mine without any warning or notice. They left $0.01 in there and charged a $125 fee. I found out today they are claiming I owe taxes from when I wasn't even living in the country (and I was paying taxes then too!). In 2021/2022, I paid more taxes than I ever have in my life. I even over paid just to make sure that I was fully covered, including additional property taxes now that I purchased a place. I'm not some crypto tax dodger at all, I pay more than my fair share because that is the right thing to do.
Today, I ended up going to my other bank and pulling all of my money out as cash (thankfully they picked the 'wrong' account!). I can't trust the system to not steal even more money from me. That's messed up. Because monday is a bank holiday, now I have to wait until tuesday until my accountant can deal with this bullshit. What kind of broken system is this?
Things like this really make me want to double down on crypto. Not your keys, not your coins is taking on a whole new meaning for me. It is easy to say "well, that's never happened to me. crypto is a waste. i have no use for this stuff", but if all it takes is some faceless government entity to wipe out your entire bank account without any notice... then obviously something is wrong with the system.
As for future employability... that's silly. Any place that wouldn't hire you because of where you worked in the past isn't a place you'd want to work at anyway. I hire people because they have the skills and attitude that I'm looking for.
I think there's a dark side to most things, and that in the beginning it's not easy to see what it is. For example, I think that social media can be destructive to society and to individual people in a variety of ways that weren't at all obvious to me when I was younger. I don't think it was bad to believe in it, though -- it did, in fact, make the internet useful and accessible to way more people, and that's probably a good thing in the long run, even with all the problems that come with that.
In the worst case, you'd have to tell a future employer, "I went to work in DeFi because I believed in the potential of the underlying technology, but [IT DIDN'T WORK OUT || I DON'T BELIEVE IN IT ANYMORE] and now I'm ready to move on." That sounds pretty reasonable to me?
There are lots of informed crypto skeptics that understand finance, economics, and distributed systems enough to know that crypto is not going to work as it's sold to retail investors, and their voices grow louder everyday. Plenty of these critics, like myself, have experience working on crypto projects or have a background in SWE, distributed systems, and VC funded start ups. Working on crypto in 2016 is a much different ethical dilemma than working in the space in 2021, or even 2023. We simply know more, and right now we're watching the bodies rack up as the market experiences cascade failures.
Of course, if you 100% believe in a technology and think it has a future, then by all means keep working in that space. However, leaving is not impossible. There's such a need for senior devs that working on un-ethical projects isn't an unsurmountable goal.
This is not only limited to developers but marketing, hr and product as well.
Fields that I would especially be wary of entering or spending time in are:
* Gambling: Including real gambling ,virtual points gambling and gatcha games
* Gambling disguised as financial services: Gamifying Forex/Binary options and other "investments"
* Predatory financial services: Like payday loans and high yield loans
* Areas that you need to explain why your specific company is not a scam: Crypto/NTF etc
* Actual scams: Like toolbars (you would be surprised but its still a thing) and anything that is just thinly veiled phishing
The same advice goes to entrepreneurs and not just employees. I would advise to stay away from VCs that have any significant amount of investment in these fields (>10% of portfolio).
I wouldn't worry that much about employability. If you're honest, hardworking, and love writing software then I don't see any issues there. I'm sure you've solved enough hard interesting problems that'll carry over to other industries. It's all about moving bits anyway. You'll even have a leg up if you have a better than average understanding of security.
You may be holding yourself back because it does take some time to ramp up in a new "vertical" (so to speak). Building new professional connections, etc. So like... maybe in an alternate universe you'd be working your way up the ladder at Apple or Google or whatever. That time invested does pay off and there's an opportunity cost there.
The tough one is the ethical question. Sometimes it's hard to tell if our disillusionment is internal or external. In other words, is it nagging you because you can see why the public is negative towards crypto or is it nagging you because you don't want to alienate yourself from the crowd?
If it helps, I've long held the strong belief that I should wake up in the morning guilt-free about my job. I need to feel excited about coming in to work and tackling the next big problem. I refuse to work for or with jerks. I refuse to work on products that aren't striving to make things better. I refuse to work on exploitative or manipulative products. I refuse to work for unfairly low pay. And all of that positive energy (great product, great people, great mission, good/great pay) make the dark/hard times easier to manage.
In the long run I feel like this philosophy has made me a happier and more successful engineer.
EDIT: Just to give you an idea of how I applied the above philosophy. I once quit a well paying job in the very first month because a senior engineer was an insanely venomous person and no one seemed interested in stopping them. I didn't make a big stink about it, just quietly moved on. The next job I found was amazing and I'm so glad that I did what I did. Yes it was scary.
Yes.
I’ve worked in fintech and recently transitioned to cryptocurrencies (implementing cryptography). The backlash I received from my peers for even going into finance was very comparable.
> the constant backlash from the public is nagging me
I’ve lost friends, and I’ve resorted to say that I work with cryptography (which is 100% true, but omits the application).
It feels like you need to either double down on your beliefs or selectively inform people what you do for a living, to keep working with crypto.
It’s hard to be a conscientious cypherpunk when you see how average people will bend towards being cheated by stonks.
Since people’s judgement matters to you, consider working with something that you’re proud to tell people. That’s part of why I quit my first job in finance.
When friends of friends ask for investment advice, I don’t get back to them; it feels like selling people drugs. I don’t mind that they invest, but I spent years understanding the landscape, and I avoid most of what I see, including NFTs.
> will I be unemployable
Yes, your skills and personality will get you another job. Presumably, the technical level of your current job is the best you’ve done so far.
If you’re reading Hacker News, you’re over-exposed to the criticism. In reality, people don’t think that much about it.
Nah, who am I kidding? Who cares about the evil stuff done by BigTech? The money is so good it can buy them all the therapy they need.
The public morality once thought it was unethical to help humans escape slavery. It is not a good barometer, especially when the tide against crypto has turned strictly because it stopped making speculators and scammers cash.
Two things that I have to constantly keep in mind:
1. I have worked in stock markets for years before crypto and felt the same: I have been criticized in a similar fashion by laymen who don't necessarily have the proper understanding of what a stock market is and what value does it bring to the society. And yes, people who lost money were of course the most vocal.
2. Someone recently wrote: "99% of DeFi is scam. The rest is the future of finances". I strongly believe that idea, albeit I'd say the ratio is different.
---
One of the important things that is going to legitimize DeFi is deeper connection between DeFi protocols and real world use cases. One such example was for me when I fell on hard times and had to borrow on Aave to provide for the family. I had money available for me at a rate much lower than the bank, momentarily and with none of of the typical impossible soul-crunching KYC/AML bs. I recovered and paid back. I was happy. The lender was happy. Aave was happy. Stakers in Aave were happy. Absolute win-win all around. How is that not the future?
---
Oh, and don't work for scam projects.
Welcome people's ideas, but pass them through your filter and do what you feel is right, not what people think.
If you believe crypto is good and love working for it, keep on.
If you don't believe so, and have a good alternative to switch, do it.
Just don't make a decision because the people around you tell you so.
Not only about crypto but pretty much applies everything in life.
Ask yourself this. Regardless of wether crypto pricing goes up or down, regardless of wether there is major adoption or not. Will I get satisfaction from having built X? Will I look back after a decade and be grateful about my contribution?
So far, for me, the answer has been a no. I haven’t seen a use-case in crypto that excites me and is worth working on. The money would have been nice, but I’m in a luxury position where I’d rather spend my time working on useful things.
But again, that’s just my personal position and I accept that everyone is different.
The turning point was seeing my name on the company website, I was embarrassed for myself. Was an easy decision to quit.
Back end engineers and data engineers are very much sought after and the distributed nature of tokens in general give raise to a large set of interesting problems, that in my opinion are some times better solved without involvement of the blockchain. But a lot of other concepts do still hold.
Seniority and being a good team member are also invaluable and hard to find, and something that doesn’t matter what technical skill you’re involved with.
So in short I wouldn’t think to much on the fact that you spend time in crypto, but rather spend the time thinking on what concepts and systems are transferrable to other domains and roles and have it be reflected in your resume and cv accordingly. Being a good team member is much more than technicals. You’re a human in a team with insights and knowledge.
There isn't a constant backlash from the public - most people don't care, the ones that like it buy and the ones that don't write grumpy blog posts about it. The people who do care have split into the aye and nay camps and are arguing the situation out. The usual anti-capitalist types will hate it, but they hate everything financial.
Although any specific crypto is probably a mad idea that will eventually go bust, it is pretty clear at this point that the industry as a whole is here to stay. It has been more than a decade now, it is hard to come up with a scenario where all the money goes away.
People that worked at Enron, Lehman, LTCM, et al all got new jobs quite easily. You'll be fine.
> the constant backlash from the public is nagging me
The public is mostly angry that they paid too much. They were speculative gamblers that bought into the bubble extremely late. This is no different than people who aggressively took loans to play landlord at the height of the housing bubble. I can empathize with people that buy idiotic scam tokens as well as people that end up holding a ton of debt as their houses get foreclosed but at the end of the day they, not you, are responsible for their poor decision making. Do you really think it is your fault that people out there mortgaged their house to do 100x leveraged longs on dog themed coins?
If the wheel of fortune had gone their way instead of those shorting them, they wouldn't show any sympathy for the shorts.
Crypto has pluses and minuses and you should determine whether it’s a technology you believe in or not. I think basing your opinion of it on “the public” or (notoriously uninformed about crypto) HN opinion is just a bit mentally weak. Either believe in what you’re doing, or do something else. But don’t base your feelings on what the mob thinks.
Just make sure your company isn‘t scammy.
It looks like higher interest rates is going to burst a lot of bubbles. So maybe the industry will go back to its non-speculative roots soon.
That said, the environmental aspect is an issue that will linger.
What you should do will become visible by itself very soon. It'll be crystal clear what is the right thing to do. Contact a journalist? contact the feds? create an anonymous podcast? or talk to somebody who will air your story? write a book? all of the above?
It can be highly stressful and it might take another 2-3 years to gather all the evidence. But the characters in this game are always very shady, and if they haven't already broken some laws or crossed some ethical boundaries they will do so in the future.
It will make things harder, but the places you really want to work will recognize the truly difficult technical problems you are solving and look past the industry.
I worked with a couple of guys who used to work in porn -- some of the best engineers I ever worked with. It took a while for them to find a place that would move them past the recruiting screens, but once they did they ended up with great jobs that recognized their talent.
Crypto is interesting and is not going away. Find a company that does have proper values. Not all of it is about selling coins.
I run a very small DLT operation where we don't even mention crypto or blockchain. We just talk about empowering local communities and restoring biodiversity. We don't associate with Cryptobro's and there's plenty of companies like us.
I guess we're just a little harder to find because we don't scream so hard :)
Don't give up, apply you talent to create the world you do want to be a part of. <3
Speaking of net negative, enough people work for Big Tobacco, mass-market alcohol producers, fast-food giants, in pharmacological animal testing, for investment firms, loan lenders and weapon manufacturers. Arguments can be made for and against any part of these areas. They have benefits and drawbacks.
I believe you’ll have to make a value judgement for yourself, whether you’re fine with working on the supply side of things. Some people are, some are not.
Crypto is the same thing. The world doesn’t suddenly switch to crypto on the same time scales needed for VC investment. Crypto would be best if it slowly grew which is actually more like what is happening if you normalizes the peaks and troughs.
If there are 1000 crypto currencies out there today, I expect 995 to be worth nothing in 10 years. I
The public has been casting lots forever[0]. Some people want to put their fate/outcome in some random system like dice, stocks or crypto. Those systems aren't truly random, but from the perspective of the participants it's close enough.
There is a theological topic on Cleromancy[1], the attempt to perceive gods will by casting lots (rolling dice or whatever) and interpreting the outcome as divine will. Many people do amazingly dangerous things like banging their mortgage into a crypto stock and rationalize the outcome for the winner as being "lucky" or the "universe" made it happen. These overlap with faith based patterns we've seen before.
Casinos and all that rig the odds so that the system of providing "random" outcomes can last forever as a corporation. But the human desire lasts forever, to put their fate in the hands of an external uncontrollable source. Crypto is just another method of casting lots for some members of the public.
Crypto is riding this wave of Roaring Twenties style excess we're living through at the moment. Get out by the end of the 2020s and you'll do okay.
[0]https://earlychurchhistory.org/beliefs-2/casting-lots-in-the...
While anything involving money has a higher than normal proportion of scammers, it is also true that finance is generally a positive sum activity, that facilitates more productive coordination.
I recommend Nick Szabo's article on the origins of money:
https://fermatslibrary.com/s/shelling-out-the-origins-of-mon...
Szabo hypothesizes that the standardized collectibles seen in various early sites of homo sapien settlement dating from the paleolithic, like the ostrich-eggshell beads from the Kenya Rift Valley dated at 40,000 B.P and the mammoth ivory bead necklace from Sungir, Russai dated to 28,000 B.P, were in fact the earliest forms of money, and that the trade-based trustless coordination that this proto-money enabled raised the carrying capacity of the environment, and enabled humans to out-compete neanderthals.
Intriguingly, Szabo went on to become the first person to describe both the concept of a proof of work blockchain in Bitgold, which inspired Bitcoin, and smart contracts.
At the very least you're not working for Meta.
If you've been in crypto long enough to become opinionated about it and dissatisfied with it, then design something you think is the right way to do it, and pitch it to VCs. Some may agree with you, especially ones with a more long-term perspective on both the industry and their investment horizons, and who actually want to build enduring value rather than get rich quick.
>All the hate for crypto, even though much of it is uninformed
If you think it's uninformed, then either ignore it, or inform it (via twitter, blog, vlog, research paper, whatever).
>If crypto fails, which is a real possibility in my mind, will I be unemployable because I spend several years in the scammy crypto industry?
Depends on what you spent those years doing and if the same skillset is valuable in other domains. Distributed systems architecture and engineering? UI/UX design? Stuff like that is easily transferrable and in demand elsewhere.
Sadly, investors aren't pouring money they are in tokens of goddesses.
If you think all your company is doing is scam, then by all means leave. Otherwise, stay if you want to.
I have not found many people who think what we are building is a scam once I explained and demoed.
I’m curious because many of these protocols, such as dex/farms or maybe tomb forks etc, claim they earn pretty well either through fees or what not from participants, and their tokenomics often have a good portion going to devs.
Also, if defi protocol devs really do make that kind of money and I was one of them, I wouldn’t be too worried about employability because I know I could easily retire within a few years! But that’s just me though.
People keep working for Facebook and Google. And they tend to get other jobs when they want. So I wouldn't worry there.
But I also didn't agree with all the positions taken by previous employers dating back to when I was working at a grocery store after high school. That employer shipped most of our managers out to California as scabs to break a union strike for a time, and kept yo-yoing me between 25 and over 40 hours so they never had to classify me as a full-time employee.
Both inside and outside of tech, I found that you are very rarely going to work at a place which aligns completely with your values. Where you draw that line is ultimately up to you. I quit the grocery store over its bullshit. But at AWS, I'm ultimately helping companies safeguard the data of millions and millions of regular people.
Where you draw the line between your personal values and corporate reality is ultimately up to you. Do you think your work ultimately benefits the greater good? If not, I'd look at a different job.
Don't worry about not being employable in the future. Doing good work is doing good work. I have a very disreputable company on my resume (or, rather, I did). I got hired despite that. Did people ask me uncomfortable questions in interviews? Yeah. Did it stop me from being employable and getting a higher-paying job? No. And once I had more experience on my resume, I quietly dropped the company from my resume. I haven't found anyone who really cares what I did in 2013.
I work in this industry because it combined my libertarian beliefs with my software skillset. I work with a lot of like-minded people, and the atmosphere is very freedom-oriented and open to debate compared to the average tech company.
The 2018-2020 bear market was a true test of die hard crypto employees. Bitcoin went to $3k as the tech industry boomed. So many talented people capitulated and went to FAANG pa$ture$ but those of us who stuck it out also got paid.
I can’t really give you advice other than, if the industry and / or company disagrees with your moral beliefs, you should find another line of work. Similarly I don’t work in adtech or social media because I find it distasteful. You can’t earn a paycheck that makes up for a dissonance in your sense of self.
I agree there are more scams than most in crypto, but I don’t work for scams. I greatly enjoy the technology and the freedom it enables. YMMV
I would say that there must be a wide range of possible activities in the crypto space. From well- to ill-intended. From crypto altruism over scientific crypto research to creating new crypto ponzi schemes on a weekly basis. Working on crypto does not automatically turn you into a scammer, but working on scams does.
A good reason to continue on your path.
It's inevitable that defi (programmable money) will replace tradfi. Stay focused on creating value. Ignore the noise.
Whether you work in crypto or, say, defense or oil or animal testing or AI or finance or just plain ol' Big Tech, your labor output will contribute value to somebody in society (that's why they're paying you), while probably also hurting someone else in society in some small way (luring clueless investors, causing pollution, killing foreigners, exacerbating social conflicts, outcompeting small businesses... whatever). None of us are pure good or evil, and the majority of us live paycheck to paycheck under some corrupt government controlled by ruthless elites, no matter what particular -ism they call it. Your part is unlikely to be more than a cog in somebody else's big, unforgiving wheel.
You choose your battles, do what you can, give back when you can, and try not to cause unnecessary harm, while also taking care of yourself and the people, beings, places, and values you care about. That's already asking a lot of a species barely differentiated from chimps and suddenly given the power of electricity and machines.
As a developer (or some other techie), you have a pretty rare opportunity (in terms of human history, and even most other professions in today's world) of being able to float between verticals with relative ease. Most people can't switch careers without going back to school or going through years of training, but those of us in tech, we can keep mostly our same jobs and skills no matter which industry we choose work in.
So, whatever... self-reflection is a beautiful thing, and the whole point of it is to figure out where you stand relative to your values. Just like you wouldn't blindly follow speculative bubbles, you also don't need to let random online naysayers get to you. They don't get to judge you without knowing your story and situation, and the personal tradeoffs you've had to make in your life.
Consider yourself lucky that you're in a position where you're able to choose. If you decide to stay in crypto a bit longer to see if the technology (and ideology) matures, you can do whatever's in your power to make it less speculative. Write articles as an industry insider to educate people on the differences between exploitative speculation and peer-to-peer decentralized trust networks. Come up with democratic, open-source solutions to distribute the power among individuals, instead of replacing governments with unregulated centralized exchanges that hoard all the tokens, capital, etc. Don't let crypto become the next Wall Street, minus regulation -- and by that mean I mean big investors pooling individual savings and playing dumb games with them for personal gain. Do whatever the opposite of "privatize profits, socialize costs" would be in the crypto world (if such a thing were possible).
Crypto as a speculative financial tool might fail, but crypto the technology is here to stay, just one more chapter in our long book of accumulated human learnings, both good and bad.
If you eventually decide crypto isn't right for you, and you can afford to do so, take a few months off to evaluate your life and your options. Your values don't have to be a static thing, and neither do your passions. Explore both a bit before choosing your next path, and if you can settle on a profession or industry that would make you feel better... great, go for it! You can always reevaluate it again in a few years' time.
Tell your next employer why you entered crypto in the first place and why you left it. Honestly, they probably won't care... unless you switch to the nonprofit space, most employers' primary value is just profit, no matter what the feel-good whitewashing says on their website. And in the event they happen to ask, you'll be able to answer because you've done the self-reflection to be able to answer meaningfully, and you can tell them why you decided to take your skills elsewhere, that it wasn't a light decision, etc., etc.
It's OK to feel lost -- it's not a bad thing, it's an opportunity! Taking risks and learning from them is how we grow as people, right? And learning how to balance your needs against others' is how we strengthen communities, financial or online or otherwise.
Best of luck and enjoy the ride :)
I have always had a similar view to yourself, that a lot of the coins/tokens were silly, but DeFi and smart contracts were genuinely innovative and useful.
I've kind of held back from jumping in fully committed to Crypto because I'm very torn by the whole space and almost semi-reluctant to being associated with it.
I feel like with the recent declines in interest I should probably walk away at this moment and I find something I care about more.
At the same time, it may become more relevant in the future (I'm thinking along the lines of 3-10 years out, probably not any time too soon with current market conditions). In that case, my skills may be incredibly valuable.
Until recently I've mainly been doing React+node+Typescript dev and system administration+AWS management anyway, all of which are skills that translate well to any other domain. Recently I've been doing some web3 stuff (which is completely new to me), so that's an area where I especially worry the skills I'm developing could become irrelevant.
But I don't think/hope they will. Even if they do, I have all the other skills to "fall back on" and as with any niche skill you develop, you have to consider its future value. For web3 development, I think if it has any value in the future, it will have a lot of value, so I'm happy with this time investment.
As for other considerations, I really like the company and people I work with. We provide financial services to other crypto companies (so we're essentially B2B). There is a ton of toxicity in the crypto industry unfortunately (Coinbase and Kraken are two prominent examples) so that's my biggest gripe with publicly identifying with "crypto values" (I'm pretty far from libertarian anyway). So my main concern really is people forming an opinion about how my values might align with their company values due to my work history.
But that could be said for working for any FAANG also (since they're all largely amoral, capitalistic, profit-drive companies)
But if it doesn't change your mind and you don't believe in this industry you should find another job, somewhere which aligns with your values. I don't believe nutral is good enough.
Crypto can't fail, the question is just what kind of crypto there will be, will there be a centralized corpo/state dystopia paired with surveillance or can we recreate everything in a robust, decentralized and anonymous way to bring forth an unprecenentend social mobility for all?
seriously tho, you can focus on your skills and carefully re-label them such that your future job prospects aren't affected. crypto became a scam because that was the only way to kill crypto and the Bitcoin's movement. the technology will probably be around in new forms sometime next decade, but the stigma will make it hard to find jobs until then.
At this point, you may as well stick around and make a dent in the crypto world.
Find a way to have an impact. Write blog posts. Get a serious project delivery under your belt.
As to what you (or other people) think about your resume: don't be so hard on yourself. You made this choice for a decent reason. Follow your intuition and try to have fun / have an impact somewhere.
There will be companies that will refuse to hire you if you've been working in an industry they considered to be scammy. But those compares are a few and far between.
There are people around you that kept building in the last 3 year crypto bear market
There are no insights that appeared since then that werent the same then
Is there a scam in the crypto market? Sure, just like it was rampant in the Forex market many years ago. But, you still can find fair players and need to know where to look for them.
PS: I believe this backslash mostly comes from people competing against the crypto market in some way. I could see on Twitter that the loudest are those who are heavily invested in (or will try to sell you at some point) gold, oil, stock market, etc.
It's just a year or so. Two years will look worse. Three years and you'll start looking like a fraudster.
Never too late to minimize the damage.
Look for other jobs. It can’t hurt. And keep your skills and any side projects diverse too. Should you need to get out of the industry you can point at those unrelated projects and skills.
If your skillset is in demand then other companies should jump at you regardless. If you’ve done nothing but focus on Etherum and Solidarity for the last few years then I guess you’ll suffer.
As for the rest. Don't worry about future employability and there is as much shady stuff going on in tradfi as in crypto.
It's like allowing / disallowing casino gambling.
"people like it!"
"it's verifyibly awful for you!"
"but it's fuuuuuun."
"it's ruining the planet."
"Don't be an asshole! Apes!"
...
"aaaaand we didn't make it"