Wikipedia Founder: ICOs Can Be 'Absolute Scams'
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales told CNBC that investors should be "very wary" of ICOs, which he referred to as "absolute scams."

The founder of Wikipedia had some harsh words for initial coin offerings (ICOs) in a new interview this morning.
Jimmy Wales, speaking on CNBC, said that he thinks many ICOs – through which cryptographic tokens are sold to fund the bootstrapping and development of a new blockchain network – are "absolute scams."
"There are a lot of these initial coin offerings which are in my opinion are absolute scams and people should be very wary of things that are going on in that area," he told the network.
That said, he said the underlying technology behind such offerings is "super interesting," going so far as to say that blockchain will ""be with us for some time to come," according to CNBC.
Wales' comments echo those issued by other observers in the space, including those given in the past week by Jay Clayton, the head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Speaking before Congress earlier this week, Clayton argued that the risk of fraud is worse than in the heyday of penny stock scams.
"Pump-and-dump – it’s actually easier here than it is in the penny stock area, because it’s all electronic, it’s all anonymous, [and] it’s harder to catch the bad guys at the end of the day," he said at the time.
In July, the SEC released guidance noting that digital tokens could be treated like securities, and were "subject to the requirements of the federal securities law" under certain circumstances, and a number of other regulators have issued similar statements in recent months.
In contrast, other governments such China and South Korea have gone as far as banning the use of the funding model altogether.
Image via Joi Ito / Wikimedia Commons.
More For You
State of the Blockchain 2025

L1 tokens broadly underperformed in 2025 despite a backdrop of regulatory and institutional wins. Explore the key trends defining ten major blockchains below.
What to know:
2025 was defined by a stark divergence: structural progress collided with stagnant price action. Institutional milestones were reached and TVL increased across most major ecosystems, yet the majority of large-cap Layer-1 tokens finished the year with negative or flat returns.
This report analyzes the structural decoupling between network usage and token performance. We examine 10 major blockchain ecosystems, exploring protocol versus application revenues, key ecosystem narratives, mechanics driving institutional adoption, and the trends to watch as we head into 2026.
More For You
Miner capitulation is a contrarian signal, indicates renewed bitcoin momentum, VanEck says

VanEck data shows declining bitcoin mining activity has historically preceded strong returns in bitcoin.
What to know:
- VanEck data shows that in the past 30 days bitcoin’s hashrate dropped by the most since April 2024
- Hashrate declines are historically aligned with miner capitulation and markets closer to local bottoms than tops.
- According to VanEck, periods of negative 90-day hashrate growth have delivered positive 180-day bitcoin returns 77% of the time.











