This is only the most recent incident in which Justin Sun has used legal threats to try to shape media narratives around himself and his companies — BuzzFeed news in 2018, CoinGeek in 2023, CoinDesk in 2024.
Post
good reporting! this guy is a slimebag.
If Peter Thiel & Charles Koch can pay to scrub Google searches of their name to achieve a reputation rehab, why can't Justin Sun?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Search_engine_manipulation_effect
How else are they supposed to find more gullible marks?
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/03/08/peter-thiel-why-google-never-talks-about-search.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/21/books/review/the-contrarian-peter-thiel-max-chafkin.html
Self-erasure as a service
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/10/how-to-delete-yourself-from-the-internet.html
Justin Sun has sued Bloomberg for publishing details about his wealth that he himself provided. While Sun claims the lawsuit stems from privacy concerns, Sun seems to be trying to suppress unflattering details about his wealth and business activities as he reinvents himself in the US.
According to Bloomberg, Sun owns 63% of the supply of the TRX token. His TRX holdings, even massively discounted by Bloomberg, represent 40% of his net worth. Another 30% is his ownership of the HTX cryptocurrency exchange — ownership he’s previously denied.
Sun claims that Bloomberg violated a confidentiality agreement when they published estimates of his major crypto holdings. However, his own exhibits suggest Sun tried to retroactively impose extreme confidentiality terms a month after sharing the information.
The conversations between Sun and the journalists reflect eagerness to share information, followed by concern and then regret once it became evident that Sun would not be allowed to dictate the format or contents of Bloomberg’s reporting.
By the time Sun filed his lawsuit, Bloomberg had already published the Billionaires Index entry. Sun has withdrawn the motion for a TRO and injunction, claiming he is “engaged in discussions” with Bloomberg to correct errors, though corrections seem minimal thus far.