Yuga Labs, Moonpay named in celebrity NFT endorsement lawsuit

Quick Take

  • A Californian law firm filed a class-action lawsuit against almost 40 people and companies, including Yuga Labs and MoonPay.
  • It claims they used celebrities to misleadingly promote and sell its NFTs.

A Californian law firm filed a class-action suit against almost 40 people and companies, including Yuga Labs and MoonPay, alleging they were part of “a vast scheme” of undisclosed celebrity endorsements.

Scott + Scott, which was recently scouting for participants for the class action, claim that Yuga Labs and Hollywood talent agent Guy Oseary devised a plan to leverage their “vast network of A-list musicians, athletes, and celebrity clients and associates to misleadingly promote and sell the Yuga Financial Products,” including its Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFTs. 

The firm alleged that MoonPay was used as a “front operation” to compensate promoters without disclosing it to investors. As a result, it claims defendants were able to "artificially increase the interest in and price of the BAYC NFTs during the Relevant Period, causing investors to purchase these losing investments at drastically inflated prices."

The lawsuit also includes allegations about MoonPay’s relationships with celebrities, which have come under scrutiny before. 

MoonPay declined to comment. Yuga Labs called the claims “opportunistic and parasitic.”

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“We strongly believe that they are without merit, and look forward to proving as much,” said a Yuga Labs spokesperson.

MoonPay CEO Ivan Soto-Wright has previously acknowledged commercial relationships with users of its Concierge service, but actual details have been scarce.

Earlier this week, a federal judge dismissed a proposed class-action lawsuit against EthereumMax founders and celebrity promoters including Kim Kardashian, with judge Michael Fitzgerald ruling that customers should have known better, even though he said he worried about "celebrities’ ability to readily persuade millions of undiscerning followers to buy snake oil with unprecedented ease and reach."

This story has been updated to include a response from Yuga Labs. 


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About Author

Callan Quinn is an NFT, gaming and metaverse reporter. She started her career working for the expat magazine City Weekend in Guangzhou, China. She also has worked as a business journalist in the UK, Somaliland and the republic of Georgia. Before joining The Block, she was a freelance journalist covering the Chinese tech industry. She speaks Mandarin, French and German. Get in touch via Twitter @quinnishvili or email [email protected].

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