ZachXBT Converts $41K in Unauthorized Memecoins to Earthquake Relief

What You Need to Know
- ZachXBT sold $41,000 of memecoins bearing his name and donated proceeds to earthquake relief in Venezuela.
- Projects airdrop tokens to prominent wallets to create implied endorsements regardless of recipient consent or awareness.
- Vitalik Buterin systematically sells low-cap memecoins and donates proceeds, establishing a recognized counter-norm to airdrop marketing.
- On-chain donation receipts make token rejections verifiable and undermine airdrop strategies targeting credible figures.
Projects launching tokens against a known investigator’s name without permission, then watching him convert the proceeds to disaster relief, is a more efficient rebuttal than any cease-and-desist. ZachXBT sold roughly $41,000 worth of memecoins bearing his name and image across multiple blockchains and routed the full amount to earthquake relief in Venezuela, publishing on-chain receipts for every transaction.
The tactic he was countering is old and well-documented. Teams airdrop tokens to prominent wallets because an address with recognizable provenance holding a token functions as an implied endorsement, regardless of whether the holder ever asked for it or knows the project exists. It works precisely because most recipients do nothing, and silence reads as tolerance. ZachXBT’s response closes that loop cleanly: the $25,000 went to GiveDirectly via The Giving Block, a subsequent $5,000 to Direct Relief, and the earlier 153 SOL donation to the same organization, all with transaction hashes posted publicly. The receipts matter as much as the donations because they make the rejection verifiable rather than rhetorical.
Vitalik Buterin has been running the same playbook for years, to the point where Arkham Intelligence flagged his wallet in late April 2026 for systematically selling low-cap memecoins through automated scripts.
That two of the most visible figures in the industry have independently arrived at the same response, liquidate and donate, suggests the tactic is becoming a recognized counter-norm rather than an individual choice. For teams still using prominent wallet holdings as grassroots marketing, the calculus is shifting: the more credible the target, the more likely the airdrop produces a public rejection with on-chain proof attached. The Giving Block and Direct Relief end up as incidental beneficiaries of a reputational arms race. What it signals about the memecoin market more broadly is less interesting than what it signals about how high-profile figures are learning to manage unsolicited association with projects they consider worthless.
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