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Binance sued in Canada for securities law violations – Cointelegraph

Cryptocurrency exchange Binance has been slapped with a new class-action lawsuit in Canada, with plaintiffs alleging that the firm has violated local securities laws.

Ontarios Superior Court of Justicepublished a certification motion on April 19 for a class-action lawsuit against Binance alleging that it sold crypto derivative products to retail investors without registration.

According to plaintiffs represented by Christopher Lochan and Jeremy Leeder, Binance sold crypto derivatives products in violation of the Ontario Securities Act (OSA) and federal law.

The lawsuit seeks damages and rescission of unlawful derivatives trades.The plaintiffs argued that tens of thousands of Canadian users of the Binance website invested in its cryptocurrency derivatives products.

It is noteworthy here that cryptocurrency derivatives traders include a great many retail investors, the certification motion reads, adding that more than 50% of Canadian crypto owners have at least $5,000 in the market, according to the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC).

Binance is a major global cryptocurrency exchange accounting for 58% of the total spot trading volumesamong centralized exchanges as of March 2024. Apart from its leading position as a major spot crypto trading venue, Binance also operates the biggest derivatives market among other exchanges like Bybit and OKX.

According to data from Bybit, the derivatives market for centralized exchanges (CEXs) is almost entirely dominated by Binance, OKX and Bybit.

The latest class action against Binance comes a few years after the crypto exchange announcedin June 2021plans to cease operations in Ontario after the OSC approached the firm with a warning.

Related: SEC seeks $5.3B judgment against Terraform Labs and Do Kwon

As a result of its failure to adhere to this announced cessation of sales, in early 2022, the OSC notified the defendants of its intention to seek a cease trade order, the new court document reads.

Even after Binance announced departure from Canada in May 2023, local authorities have continued to crack down on the exchange. The OSCs investigation into the defendants is ongoing, the court motion reads.

Cointelegraph approached Binance for a comment regarding the class action lawsuit in Ontario but did not receive a response at the time of publication.

Magazine: Bitcoin Halving will pump games, Shrapnels simple secret revealed: Web3 Gamer

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Binance sued in Canada for securities law violations - Cointelegraph

Binance Labs, Coinbase Backed Web3 Gaming Guild GuildFi Rebrands to Zentry – Cryptonews

Last updated: April 23, 2024 23:44 EDT | 2 min read

Web3 gaming guild GuildFi which raised $140 million from Binance Labs, Coinbase Ventures, Animoca, Pantera Capital, Hashed and others, has been rebranded to Zentry.

In an announcement, Zentry said the rebranding was a strategic decision and as part of this revamp the firm will relaunch GuildFi. Zentry will introduce a new token conversion program where holders of the original GuildFi token $GF will be able to convert to the new Zentry token $ZENT.

Zentry said it will build a Superlayer to reunite three billion gamers in one economy, regardless of the platform used. Gamers will be unified. The Superlayer will combine loyalty systems, gamer identities, and cross-world activities from countless games and platforms into a single overlay experience.

In addition to linking Web3 and Web2 games, social media and in real-life (IRL) activities will unify the community of gamers. This tech also creates a new game of games in itself, said the firm.

Were reshaping how gamers are recognized and rewarded by enabling how a players gaming activities benefit their real-world self, and their real-world actions to boost their digital self, said Jarindr Thitadilaka, founder and CEO of Zentry, in a press release.

Zentry aims to unite the silos in gaming, and also bridge the silos between our physical and virtual lives. Its all about gamifying daily life, because most peoples real life includes untold hours spent online, explains Thitadilaka. In this new Play Economy, you can buy a coffee from your barista and your Zentry character gets a perk, or vice versa.

In 2024, web3 gaming is growing rapidly with the space attracting more VC investment. In 2023, it is estimated that the blockchain gaming-related rounds reached $1.7 billion which is a significant part of that has flowed to the 270 blockchain games in development on Immutable.

Recently King River Capital, blockchain gaming firm Immutable and Polygon Labs announced they had teamed up to launch a $100 million gaming fund.

Web3 gaming platform Elixir Games raised $14 million in a seed funding round from Square Enix, the Solana Foundation and Shima Capital, and others. The funding will be used by Elixir Games to launch its native token $ELIX and its Launchpad & Incubation Program which go live later this year.

Web3 gaming firm Illuvium announcedit had raised $12 million in a series A funding round with contributions from investors such as Australian venture capital firm King River Capital, Arrington Capital and Animoca Ventures.

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Binance Labs, Coinbase Backed Web3 Gaming Guild GuildFi Rebrands to Zentry - Cryptonews

US glacial response to Nigeria’s detention of former IRS crypto investigator rankles federal agents – The Record from Recorded Future News

This week Tigran Gambaryan the head of financial crime compliance for Binance, the worlds largest cryptocurrency exchange found himself in the last place hed ever expected to be: in a Nigerian courtroom pleading for bail.

A former investigator with the IRS, hed spent more than a decade following illicit cryptocurrency transactions back to the people who made them. Rolling up, among others, the alleged founder of AlphaBay, Alexandre Cazes, and Silk Roads Dread Pirate Roberts, Ross Ulbricht.

But now, after a spectacularly bad turn of events, Gambaryan has found himself at the center of a battle between his company and regulators of the Nigerian government. A Nigerian court has charged him personally for a roster of alleged crimes that Binance is accused of committing, and it is unclear how a middle manager, a former cop, has ended up shouldering the blame. Gambaryan has pleaded not guilty. He says hes done nothing wrong.

Even so, Nigerian authorities have held Gambaryan under guard since late February. Click Here spoke to more than a dozen current and former IRS and FBI agents who either knew Gambaryan well or had worked with him, and they all voiced the same concern: Why isnt the government doing more for one of its own?

Youre leaving a fellow law enforcement officer, even though hes out of the game, kind of hanging, said Matt Price, a former IRS agent who worked with Tigran on cases and at Binance. We cant believe theyre not doing anything. And while his plight appears to have been elevated inside the Biden administration in recent days, agents are asking what took them so long?

I have done nothing wrong, Gambaryan said in a cell phone video he filmed back in March. Ive been a cop my whole life. Im asking the United States government to assist me I need your help guys. I dont know if Ill get out of this without your help. Please help.

Gambaryans cell phone video summed in 40 seconds what is otherwise a very complicated series of events. Hello my name is Tigran Gambaryan and Im the head of financial crime compliance at Binance, it began. I have been detained by the Nigerian government for a month and I dont know what is going to happen to me after today.

While Gambaryan recorded the message, it was clear he was worried guards would stop him or grab his phone because just a few hours earlier he had awoken from a nap to learn that the Binance colleague who had been detained with him had somehow escaped. I had nothing to do with it, I was not involved in any of it, he said in the video.

Nadeem Anjarwalla was Binances regional manager in charge of Africa. He and Gambaryan were detained by the authorities at the same time. But the afternoon of that video, according to three people familiar with what happened, Gambaryan found a Post-it note from Anjarwalla that essentially said he was sorry, but he was making a break for it. Anjarwalla had put pillows under the covers of his bed so guards would think he was still there.

While it is unclear exactly how he got out of the government compound, it appears he asked guards if he could go to a nearby mosque to say prayers for Ramadan, and while he was in the mosque, he gave them the slip. It was left to Gamabaryan to break it to his captors that Anjarwalla was gone. The Nigerian government now claims that it is in negotiations with Kenya to have Anjarwalla extradited.

Their anger and embarrassment at having lost Binances country manager seems to have fallen mostly on Gambaryan. Within days of the escape, the Nigerian authorities charged him, Anjarwalla and Binance itself with tax evasion and money laundering.

The fact that Gambaryan found himself on the receiving end of all of this is particularly ironic because his job at Binance was to act as a liaison between law enforcement and the company and he came to Nigeria in the first place to teach local investigators how to track shady transactions back to the criminals behind them.

The timing of the Nigerian governments decision to detain Gambaryan and Anjarwalla in February came just months after the Justice Department reached a plea agreement with Binances founder and former CEO, Changpeng Zhao. Zhao had agreed to plead guilty to a roster of charges including tax evasion and money laundering related to lax oversight at the exchange.

Zhao, known as CZ, agreed to step down as CEO, surrender his passport and pay a multibillion-dollar fine. The announcement, rumored for months, rocked the crypto world and, some observers say, may have planted an idea into the minds of some Nigerian officials.

CZ was sort of a cult figure within the industry, said Jacob Silverman, who wrote a book with Ben McKenzie on the crypto industry entitled Easy Money: Cryptocurrency, Casino Capitalism, and the Golden Age of Fraud.

He said that people had looked up to CZ because he had managed to build the biggest crypto exchange in the world at breakneck speed, though he had had a reputation for, you know, to use the old [Mark] Zuckerberg phase, move fast and break things.

Silverman said there was always a whiff of something being not-quite-on-the-up-and-up about Zhao. Among other things, he would never travel to the U.S. He lived in the United Arab Emirates, but he was from Canada.

People kept wondering, whats this guy up to in Dubai? Silverman said, adding that kind of mystery was rife in the early days of the industry. There was a sense that the existing rules, especially the existing rules around banking and how money moves shouldnt really apply. And thats certainly what animated a lot of the overseas growth of crypto, especially in East Asia and in Africa. There was this notion that we should be able to move money wherever we want to without really much heed for how were doing it or how much were sending or to whom.

In its case against Zhao, the Justice Department said the former CEO prioritized Binances growth, market share and profits over U.S. law. He admitted to facilitating billions of dollars in cryptocurrency transactions without adhering to some of the most fundamental rules of banking. Binance didnt implement anti-money laundering protocols or adhere to know your customer procedures, which require that a bank or financial institution should know basic information about their customers.

For several years after Binance first opened in 2017, you could register a Binance account with just an email address and a password, said Silverman. And CZ knew that they were flagrantly in violation of Know Your Customer and anti-money laundering laws and regulations. The Justice Department said as much when it charged Zhao, using internal texts and emails as proof that the attitude was do it now, and ask for forgiveness later.

In early January, just weeks after the Zhao plea agreement was made public, Gambaryan was part of a group of Binance employees who traveled to Abuja, the Nigerian capital, to meet with regulators from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.

It was more of a training event with the EFCC, this is something that Tigran did quite a bit, said Price. He did these trips a lot and I had done it quite a bit. You come in and talk to law enforcement people, it's usually a soft approach and you're trying to build relationships and trying to train them how to do crypto investigations.

So in other words, Gambaryan was there to teach the Nigerian regulators how to track cryptocurrency transactions back to the bad guys. But the January trip, the first of two Gambaryan would make in the first part of 2024, took a bad turn. Nigerian officials said they were concerned that Binance was evading taxes and violating anti-money laundering rules.

A Nigerian official allegedly took someone from the Binance team aside during the early January trip. The official said that regulatory authorities were planning an investigation of the company and that the cost of settling the companys legal problems would come to some $150 million. The authorities floated the idea of detaining some of the people in the delegation.

Obviously Tigran said, shit, I got to get out of here, said Price, adding that Gambaryan canceled his remaining appointments and hopped a plane back to the States.

Yuki Gambaryan, Tigrans wife, said she heard about it all in almost real time. He texted me, saying that, Hey, this is just a heads up, but things are not going well right now and we might get detained. So I was aware of it.

Then, just weeks later, Gambaryan got an invitation from the Nigerian government to meet with regulators again. Gambaryan told his friends that he felt he had an obligation to go. I asked his wife whether she was worried when he left for that second trip at the end of February.

I was. One hundred percent. Everybody was, she said.

Soon after officials detained Gambaryan and Anjarwalla, they asked Binance to turn over all the Nigerian transaction data they had. Local newspaper reports then said the government had limited the request to the top 100 users. Central bank officials then began accusing Binance of manipulating the exchange rate of the local currency, the naira, and said the company couldnt account for tens of billions of dollars in transactions.

All of which Binance has disputed.

The Justice Departments indictment against the former CEO of Binance showed Zhao and his lieutenants had a penchant for rule-breaking. You had, for example, employees of Binance joking about the price of an AK-47 and as if they knew about it in the context of a conversation of terrorist groups using Binance, said Silverman, the author of that book on cryptocurrencies. I think the company, at least at the top levels, definitely had a sense that some pretty bad people were using the platform.

Binance has been left to convince skeptics that they have changed. Richard Teng, the companys new CEO, is a former Singaporean regulator. He hired people like Gambaryan to help redeem the brand. Nigerian regulators are either unconvinced, or opportunistic. It is hard not to see echoes of the charges the Justice Department brought against Zhao in what Gambaryan is battling in Nigerian courts now.

Nigeria has the second largest cryptocurrency adoption rate in the world, after India. Its crypto transactions topped $56.7 billion last year, according to Chainalysis, a blockchain data platform.

We spoke to half a dozen people close to Tigrans case in both the U.S. and Nigeria and they say there may have been something else about the Zhao plea agreement that caught the eye of Nigerian officials. CZ agreed to pay a record $4.3 billion in fines and restitution to the U.S. government one of the biggest fines in corporate history.

Silverman said it sends another message. I think that indicates the gravity of the situation and maybe the amount of money sloshing around, he said.

It doesnt seem like a coincidence that days after Nigerian officials detained the two Binance executives in a government compound, they mused in the local press about potential billion-dollar fines.

Nigerias case against Gambaryan is about more than just trying to hold Binance and the cryptocurrency industry to account. There is a larger context: Nigeria is in the midst of a full-blown economic crisis.

The numbers tell the story. Inflation in Nigeria is now well over 30 percent. Food prices are up even more than that and the local currency, the naira, has declined in value against the U.S. dollar by some 40 percent since the beginning of the year. Just to keep up with inflation, Nigerians have started flocking to cryptocurrencies and trading stablecoins, which are pegged to the U.S. dollar amongst themselves, peer-to-peer.

Binance just facilitates those trades, it doesnt control them. But it has angered Nigerias central bank nevertheless. According to Feyi Fawehimni, a Nigerian scholar who has been writing about the nations economic and political affairs for more than a decade, it was easy to blame Binance for economic problems.

People who wanted simple answers simply turned on them and said, Oh, OK, this economy is struggling. Nobody has dollars, whos fault is this? he said. The dollar rate has jumped so significantly and the central bank had no control, so Binance became a kind of scapegoat.

Central bankers didnt want to blame the people trading naira, so they blamed the Binance platform instead. These are unpopular people, right? he said. Nobody likes Binance. The US government doesn't like them. The U.K. government doesn't like them. Everyone is suspicious of them as a crypto platform across the world so someone in the government made the calculation that if we go after these people, nobody's going to really fight for them.

And the calculation was right. Gambaryan has given critics of Binance a human shape, a shorthand not just for crypto and all the problems it has caused in Nigeria. They didnt have a former CEO to blame so they settled for a compliance officer.

Nearly all the current and former IRS agents we spoke to for this story said Nigeria wasnt alone in being unable to see the difference between Gambaryan and the company he worked for: the U.S. government seemed to be doing that too.

It wasnt until mid-March that the U.S. State Department seemed to focus on the case. Tigran's wife said he had six visits from embassy personnel in Abuja while he was being held in the government compound. And theyve visited him once since hed been moved to Kuje prison. They seem kind of out of touch to me, she said. They don't seem to understand our sense of urgency.

We spoke to four people at the State Department familiar with the case. They declined to be identified by name because they are not authorized to speak. But they claimed that the State Department didnt like to interfere with legal proceedings in other countries and quickly added that Binance wasnt just any company, before mentioning the Zhao plea agreement and the parade of cases against the industry more generally.

At the end of March, after Gambaryan had been in Nigerian detention for over a month, his case was flagged at the Justice Departments Office of International Affairs. Its part of the Criminal Division and is supposed to help the department sort through international criminal matters. It is unclear what the response to that query was.

But the rank-and-file agents we spoke to all agreed that the Gambaryan case was moving slowly. The thought is that if he was an ExxonMobil or Apple executive detained overseas, would the response have been quicker?

The only official email that we discovered that went out about Gambaryan among the rank and file came from a special agent in the Cyber Crimes Unit in D.C. It was sent to a small group of agents, nearly all of whom either knew Tigran well or had worked with him. Two people who had seen the email described its contents as mentioning that Tigran had been detained and that he would always be part of the law enforcement family. There was no mention of elevating this up the chain of command, but the email did suggest that everyone keep Yuki and Tigran in their thoughts and prayers.

I guess the best word for me would be, I think, it is sad, said John Baker, who was at the IRS with Tigran and retired from the government a couple of years ago, so was at liberty to say on the record what other agents told us privately. Originally I was thinking he's well known, so well regarded that somehow the United States would get involved to kind of figure out what's going on. He has friends in various agencies, including the FBI or the U.S. Attorney's Office. But it sounds like most people don't even know whats happened to him or haven't heard.

Go after the companies and the people making the decisions, he said. But when we're dealing with people who are, you know, middle management, employees, people who have no way to make a decision other than to receive a paycheck, that's crazy to me.

The CEO of Binance, Richard Teng, said on Bloomberg television last week that the company is talking to the Nigerian government to get Gambaryan back. Our key priority is to get Tigran home safely, right? he said on the sidelines of a cryptocurrency conference in Dubai. Tigran is a person of the highest integrity, people that know him know that he has devoted his entire lifetime previously with U.S. agencies. We are giving him and his family all the support needed and our key priority, our prayers, is to bring Tigran home safely as soon as possible.

So given all of this one could be forgiven for wondering why Gambaryan returned to Nigeria at the end of February after that earlier close call. Hindsight is always 20-20. But his friends say that when the Nigerian government invited him back for that fateful February meeting, Gambaryan thought he saw an opening to make things right.

Former IRS agent Price said that was just the way Gambaryan was. He believed he could solve it, he said. Knowing Tigrans personality, I certainly could see him believing he would be the only one that could fix it.

On Friday, Gambaryans tax trial was postponed until May 17. A bail hearing is supposed to resume April 23. Chengpeng Zhao, the former Binance CEO, is supposed to be sentenced on April 30th. He is facing up to 18 months in prison under federal sentencing guidelines, but prosecutors have said they may be asking for a stiffer sentence.

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US glacial response to Nigeria's detention of former IRS crypto investigator rankles federal agents - The Record from Recorded Future News

OPINION: Soviet-style control of art and media is not so foreign as you might think – Alaska Watchman

My good friend in Kiev (former Soviet Union), Slava Pilman, was a promising and struggling visual artist. In the early 1970s, he admired Western art of the mid-19thand early 20thcenturies, but he had no passion and tolerance for the Socialist Realism style.

From about the early 1930s to the mid-late 1980s, Socialist Realism was the official cultural doctrine of the Soviet Union. This style mandated an idealized representation of Soviet life and cultural traditions under socialism in literature and the visual arts. The doctrine was first proclaimed by the First Congress of Soviet Writers in 1934, which approved the standardized methods for the Soviet cultural production in all media.

Soon after the October Socialist Revolution of 1917 in Russia, Vladimir Lenin laid down his principles on what purpose visual art must serve for the working masses. He believed that it was important that visual art was no longer a domain of the upper classes and the bourgeoisie.

Then, socialist realism was seen as the means of educating people; so, any deviance was often punishable by the Soviet Secret Police with varying harsh outcomes.

Art belongs to the people, he stated. It must leave its deepest roots in the very thick of the working masses. (Clara Zetkin, Reminiscences of Lenin, January 1924).

Writers and artists were required to follow the party line on style and substance, especially under Joseph Stalinspolitical rule (19221953). Moscow University and Moscow Metro are clear symbols of Stalinists architecture style. Then, socialist realism was seen as the means of educating people; so, any deviance was often punishable by the Soviet Secret Police with varying harsh outcomes.

During the Nikita Khrushchev political era (19571964), literature and visual art were still stagnant. Khrushchev declared:As long as I am President of the Council of Ministers, we are going to support genuine art. We arent going to give a kopeck [cent] for pictures painted by jackasses. History can be our judge. For the time being history has put us at the head of this state, and we have to answer for everything that goes on in it. Therefore, we are going to maintain a strict policy in art. (Source:Encounter (London), April 1963).

Leonid Brezhnevs stagnant political era (19641982) in the Soviet Union continued to be sanctioned by only one artistic style Socialist Realism. Paintings and sculptures emphasized idealized figures heroically enduring hardships on a relentless crusade for progress and prosperity toward delusional communism.

So, Slava Pilman, as well as many other intellectuals in the Soviet Union, was trapped in the illusive socialist reality. I kept advising Slava to compromise and adjust his artistic style to the existing socialist environment, Slava, paint cows, peasants and workers, otherwise you will starve to death. Slavas usual response was, I am a free artist, and I will paint what I see and think, not what they want me to see and think. Slava, you are free from a job, I reminded him, and you are going to die in the Gulag as a free man.

editors of the major newspapers in the former Soviet Union, for the most part, were political appointees, with the connection to the State Secret Police. Their job was to suppress freedom of speech and advocate socialist doctrines.

I left the Soviet Union on March 16th, 1977, under the status of a political refugee; and I lost track of my friend Slava Pilman. One day, however, Slavas predicament re-appeared in my memories when in 1987 the Soviet delegation visited Juneau. Then, I was teaching archaeology, history and Russian Studies at the University of Alaska Southeast; I was frequently called to translate/assist for various delegations from the Soviet Union, visiting Alaska.

That delegation consisted of six high-ranking Soviet officials; it was sponsored by Rotary International. My close friend, the late Bill Ruddy and his wife Kathy Kolhorst hosted this group. Vladimir Nadein, a long-time letters editor of theIzvestiya(News) newspaper, was one of the delegates in this group. Then,Izvestiyawas the second largest newspaper afterPravda(Truth) in the Soviet Union, with a circulation of several million copies and all content tightly controlled by the Communist Party watch dogs.

One day, Nadein asked me, Sasha (Alexander), is there any way we can visit the State Archives? I am curious if we can locate any existing first-hand documents related to the Alaska-Siberia Lend-Lease Program during WWII. Per his request, I took him to the State Library and in about ten-fifteen minutes the librarian brought us several original documents of the ALSIB program. Remarkable, Nadein proclaimed. It would take months just to get permission to request the information in our State archives. He examined the documents attentively and took some notes.

In fact, the editors of the major newspapers in the former Soviet Union, for the most part, were political appointees, with the connection to the State Secret Police. Their job was to suppress freedom of speech and advocate socialist doctrines.

I have never expected that todays progressive American media, including those in Alaska, would resemble far-left Soviet style practices poorly edited publications, unchecked primary sources and, periodically, publication of poorly written and misleading articles. No surprise that newspapers in Alaska and around the nation are losing their readership.

As my good friends noted in our private correspondence: Every day, I wonder and despair about the condition of the media. Ive always said, why isnt lying against the law? It is so common, not only in the media, but in our government, which has failed us miserably.

Indeed, our American media is dominated by far-left ideology. Once known for their pursuit of the factual truth with an open mind, they are now indoctrinated by progressive dogma in our illiberal journalism schools and universities.

The views expressed here are those of the author.

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OPINION: Soviet-style control of art and media is not so foreign as you might think - Alaska Watchman

The media is controlled and I’m out of control: Artist who smashed guitar at Coachella pulls out after backlash – Guitar World

After intense backlash to his guitar smashing at Coachella, AP Dhillon has withdrawn from the festival's second weekend, citing scheduling conflicts.

On April 14, Dhillon smashed his metallic gold ESP LTD Kirk Hammett V on stage, an act that received considerable backlash online. Since the controversial performance, however, Dhillon has clarified why he smashed his guitar.

In photos shared by Dhillon on social media, a backdrop is clearly visible, stating Justice for Sidhu Moosewala. He wrote: The media is controlled and I'm out of control. Dhillon also shared a video of Kurt Cobain smashing his guitar.

Sidhu Moosewala was an Indian rapper and singer known for his contributions to Punjabi music and cinema. Some of the themes he covered in his music are considered controversial in India.

However, he was widely considered a key figure in mainstreaming Punjabi music at a global level. In May 2022, Moosewala was shot and killed in broad daylight by unidentified attackers at the age of 28. The murder, later attributed to a well-known gang, was committed shortly after the government temporarily withdrew his security cover.

Despite the controversial act, AP Dhillon continues the long lineage of artists smashing their guitars in protest, anger, or as a public statement.

One of the first guitar-smashing acts was actually a performance art piece by DIAS, intended "to focus attention on the element of destruction in Happenings and other art forms, and to relate this destruction in society".

All the latest guitar news, interviews, lessons, reviews, deals and more, direct to your inbox!

In 1962, experimental artist Robin Page threw his guitar and kicked it out of the London Institute of Contemporary Arts' front door. This allegedly inspired Pete Townshend to incorporate guitar smashing into his performances.

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The media is controlled and I'm out of control: Artist who smashed guitar at Coachella pulls out after backlash - Guitar World