David Sacks denies reports of a conflict of interest during his tenure as White House AI and cryptocurrency director.

AI Summary1 min read

TL;DR

David Sacks denies conflict of interest allegations by The New York Times, stating they fabricated claims and delayed the report. He has refuted all accusations and hired a law firm to address the issue.

Tags

David Sacksconflict of interestThe New York TimesAI and cryptocurrencyWhite House
According to Mars Finance, David Sacks, the "Czar" of US AI and cryptocurrency affairs, posted on the X platform that five months ago, The New York Times sent a reporter to fabricate a report alleging a conflict of interest during his tenure as White House Special Envoy for AI and Cryptocurrency Affairs, throwing out a series of accusations, all of which he has refuted in detail. These accusations included fabricating dinners with tech company CEOs, making false promises of access to the president, and groundlessly claiming he influenced defense contracts. Sacks stated that every time he refuted one accusation, The New York Times would throw out a new one, causing the report to be delayed for five months. The published report is now devoid of substance, consisting only of irrelevant anecdotes. Given The New York Times' clear lack of intention to write an impartial report, he has hired a law firm and publicly released the firm's letter to The New York Times.

Visit Website