One of the internetâs more controversial social media brands is getting into the crypto-powered fundraising game.
Revealed in an SEC filing on Tuesday, the alt-right-friendly Gab let slip it intends to raise $10 million in a forthcoming initial coin offering (ICO). But perhaps most notable about the companyâs plan is its decision to take a compliant route to reaching investors.
As opposed to opening up its token offering to just any global buyer, Gab will pursue its funding under Reg A+, a creation of the 2012 Jobs Act that allows non-accredited U.S. investors to buy equity in startups. (Gab first announced its plans to run an ICOÂ in August, but hadnât revealed how much it would raise or how it would do so.)
Following the filing, Gab CEO Andrew Torba clarified that the company has created 2 million ethereum-based âgabâ tokens that, due to the mechanics of the design, will effectively function as Class B shares in the company.
Selling for $5 apiece when released, Gab tokens will represent 16.6 percent of the total equity in the business, Torba said, adding:
âThereâs no tricks or utility made-up nonsense. Itâs an equity token plain and simple.â
Equity held in gab tokens may be reduced later with the issuance of new shares of common or preferred stock, as the circular acknowledges. (The token shares are non-voting.)
To those who have been following closely, though, Gabâs plan of action may not be surprising. For one, the company has been dismissive of many aspects of the ICO trend to date, referring in another Medium post to a controversial project as a âdumpster fire.â
Utsav Sanduja, Gabâs COO and global affairs director, expounded on this theme in an email, writing that he believes many ICOs have been âfraudulently raising fundsâ by bypassing regulations and standards.
âWe believe this is the wrong approach,â he said. âWe have many crypto millionaires on Gab who love liberty and our mission, but were unable to invest in our last round which was fully in fiat.â
Launched in 2016, the company is known as a gathering place for the alt-right.
A visitor to the site today will find lots of posts about President Donald Trump, memes mocking activist celebrities and a pretty decent animal photos thread (with a smattering of body painting mixed in among the dog memes).
Despite making some noises last year to diversify its audience, the SEC filing describes the âmassively underservedâ niche market it hopes to capitalize on:
âWe estimate that there are over 50 million conservative, libertarian, nationalist and populist internet users from around the world who are seeking an alternative to the current social networking ecosystems.â
Investors have already registered an intention to buy $1.6 million-worth of tokens, and there is no date scheduled for the offering because itâs contingent on regulatory approval, though the team hopes to run the sale in the first or second quarter of the year.
Stepping back, details were also revealed about the platform on which the tokens will operate and how it could add value to Gabâs existing offering.
The company, for example, has a vision to create a new architecture for social media that itâs calling the âExodus Protocol.â It doesnât have a white paper or a complete technical description other than a broad outline described on Gabâs page on Start Engine, from which it will sell the equity tokens.
The page describes Exodus as a peer-to-peer social networking infrastructure that will allow Gab to âoffload the risks of routing data.â The current plan is to build it in a decentralized fashion, leaning on existing protocols like the distributed data protocol Dat and the content addressing system IPFS.
It may not use a blockchain at all, though Torba told CoinDesk that it is looking at both EOS and Blockstack as potential platforms.
âNothing concrete set in stone right now. The truth is, all of this tech is super early and very unscalable,â he wrote.
The company said it has a large number of anonymous technologists working with it now helping it to assess its options, which it calls the Alt-Tech Alliance, âinspired by events that took place at Google last year when engineer James Damore was fired,â Sanduja explained.
The engineer was let go in August for writing a memo arguing that men may be better suited for engineering roles at the company. It put out a call for the best of the best engineers to join, but that Alt-Tech Allianceâs channel on Gab only has two posts.
Torba said:
âThe point of this ICO is to raise capital to build out a team to make Exodus happen. The goal is a censorship-resistant, open-source communication protocol that no government or corporation can censor.â
Disclosure:Â CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which has an ownership stake in Blockstack.
Trump image via Shutterstock.