Tag Archives: nomad

This digital nomad left the U.S. for Bangkok and lives on $8K a month

Jesse Schoberg began plotting his escape from Elkhorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager. “It’s your typical small town in the Midwest: small, quiet, not too much adventure,” he tells CNBC Make It. “I always knew that I wanted to get out and explore the world.”

The 41-year-old entrepreneur has now been living abroad for 14 years, splitting his time among more than 40 countries — and he has no plans to return to the U.S. anytime soon. 

Schoberg bucked the traditional path of attending college and securing a 9-to-5 job, instead choosing to move to Madison when he was 19, sharpening his coding skills and helping businesses with their website design and development. 

By the time he turned 27, however, Schoberg began to feel restless. He decided to move to a new city and researched apartments in Austin and Denver, but his mind kept drifting to Panama City, the capital of Panama, where he had “one of the best vacations of his life,” as he recalls. 

He moved to Panama City in 2008 and lived there for six years before packing his bags to travel the world full time as a digital nomad, a movement he had learned about, and was inspired to try, during a work retreat in Curaçao. 

In between his travels, Schoberg now calls Bangkok home. He relocated to Thailand in December 2021 and shares a one-bedroom apartment with his fiancee, Janine. 

“The quality of life in Thailand compared to the United States, is much better for 90% of things and more stress-free,” he says. “It’s also a lot easier to afford a luxurious lifestyle.”

Becoming a digital nomad

Schoberg has built a formidable career as an entrepreneur and web developer, earning a six-figure salary each year — but his success didn’t happen overnight.

When he first moved to Panama, Schoberg brought the web design and development firm he established in the U.S. — and his list of clients — with him. 

In 2013, Schoberg and two of his friends who had worked with him on previous projects for the firm, Jason Mayfield and Laura Lee, created DropInBlog, a software start-up that helps website owners add an SEO-optimized blog to almost any platform in minutes. 

Today, DropInBlog has an all-remote staff of 12 employees, with Schoberg at the helm as CEO. 

Becoming his own boss gave Schoberg a more flexible schedule, and he used his newfound free time to travel: After visiting several countries in South America, including Colombia and Costa Rica, he decided to check out Asia, living for short stints in Taiwan, Japan and the Philippines (where he met his fiancee on a Tinder date). 

In 2015, Schoberg stopped in Thailand — and he immediately knew he found his new home. “When I got to Bangkok for the first time, it just had that pulse that felt familiar to Panama City … there’s just this incredible energy on the street and with the people,” he says. “I knew right away that Bangkok was going to be my Panama City 2.0.” 

Schoberg and his fiancee have been splitting their time between Mexico City and Bangkok as he waits for his Thai Elite Visa, a 5-year renewable visa that costs about $18,000 and gives you unlimited access to Thailand as well as entry and exit privileges. 

‘I live a lot better here than I did in the U.S.’ 

Since moving to Bangkok, Schoberg has been able to spend more on travel, dining and other hobbies as well as boost his savings. “While I can afford a pretty nice life in the U.S., I live a lot better here than I did in the U.S.,” he says. “The level of services that you get here — fancier movie theaters, nice cars — completely blow away what you get in the U.S.” 

As an entrepreneur and CEO, Schoberg earns about $230,000 per year. His biggest expenses are his rent and utilities, which together are about $2,710 each month. Schoberg and his fiancee live in a one-bedroom apartment in a building with a private gym, pool, co-working space, restaurant and daily cleaning service. 

He and Janine spend about $1,900 each month on takeout and dining out, often ordering food from local restaurants on a popular app called gopanda. Schoberg’s go-to meals are laos khao soi, a tomato noodle soup with ground meat, and pad krapow, a spicy basil chicken dish. Both meals usually cost $2-$3, Schoberg says, and local restaurants will often give long-term customers discounts. 

The food scene, he says, is a “huge plus” to living in Thailand, and one of the main reasons he chose to move to Bangkok. “Bangkok has an amazing culinary scene, you have pretty much every type of food in the world here,” Schoberg says. “Just around the corner from my apartment, there’s a Belgian sandwich shop and a Vietnamese barbeque joint.” 

Here’s a monthly breakdown of Schoberg’s spending (as of June 2022):

Rent and utilities: $2,709.52 

Food: $1,900.52

Transportation: $197

Phone: $40

Health insurance: $280.39

Subscriptions: $78.48

Discretionary: $2,669.37 

Total: $7,875.28

The Thai culture and people are “much friendlier and more relaxed” than in the U.S., Schoberg adds, and while English is spoken in the more popular tourist regions, like Bangkok, learning Thai has given Schoberg “a huge advantage” as a foreigner.

He attends two Thai classes per week, which costs $269.44 a month, and stresses that “you can really engage in the culture and have a better life” in Bangkok if you’re able to understand Thai.

As a new resident, Schoberg is still exploring Bangkok and all that it has to offer, including its many malls, parks, restaurants and concert venues — one of the magical aspects of living in Bangkok, he adds, is that it can feel like you’re living in two different cities at once. 

“You’ve got the street-level city, which is your food vendors, people running to work, taxis and motorbikes,” he says. “And then there’s this sky city that’s happening in the skyscrapers, with fancy rooftop bars, working spaces and malls … here, you have the contrast of the Chanel store to the 20-cent pork skewer being grilled on the street.” 

Planning a life of travel 

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Solana, Nomad crypto wallets are hacked, with losses in the tens of millions

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A pair of crypto hacks totaling nearly $200 million in losses and probably affecting more than 10,000 users has prompted worry in an industry already unsettled by falling prices.

On Wednesday, Solana, a popular blockchain and token, said that some wallets that held its assets had been breached. At least 7,700 such wallets are believed to be affected, the company said, while London-based blockchain-analysis firm Elliptic put the amount stolen at $5.2 million in crypto, which includes Solana tokens and the stablecoin known as USD.

“An exploit allowed a malicious actor to drain funds from a number of wallets on Solana,” the company said via Twitter. “Engineers are currently working with multiple security researchers and ecosystem teams to identify the root cause of the exploit, which is unknown at this time.”

The hack is believed to have taken hold on wallets such as Slope and Phantom. These are “hot wallets” — that is, wallets that allow for lightning-fast transactions because they are always connected to the internet, as opposed to “cold wallets,” which usually require a USB drive and have long periods of disconnection. Solana — which at one time had the fifth-most-popular token before a slide — has made a name for itself as a blockchain that can transfer funds extremely quickly.

The news follows Monday’s revelation from Nomad, a so-called blockchain bridge, which acknowledged that about $190 million had been taken from it after a hacker infiltrated its system. The attack was known as a “free-for-all,” because the hacker’s original code allowed anyone to copy it and steal the crypto for themselves. It is not known where the money went.

Nomad said its executives were working with law enforcement and a blockchain data firm called TRM Labs to locate the funds, with no update as of Wednesday afternoon. It said they were working on “investigation/recovery” as well as “technical fixes.”

In an unusual move, the company early Wednesday provided an address for anyone who might have chosen to grab the money in a noble act of protection.

“Dear white hat hackers and ethical researcher friends who have been safeguarding ETH/ERC-20 tokens, please send the funds to the following wallet address on ethereum,” it said on Twitter. It is not known whether any good Samaritans took the company up on its offer.

A blockchain bridge allows consumers to swap crypto from one blockchain to another — say, from bitcoin to ethereum — making it vulnerable on what security experts call “both sides,” weaknesses on either blockchain. These bridges also tend to be newer and, in some cases, more hastily designed. In March, another blockchain bridge known as Ronin was hacked for amounts totaling more than $600 million in crypto.

“To date, approximately $1.8 billion has been stolen from these services and it’s worrying that their security standards don’t seem to match the huge amounts of capital being entrusted to them,” Tom Robinson, co-founder and chief scientist of Elliptic, said in an email to The Washington Post, referring to bridges.

Meanwhile, the Solana case has prompted concern because it was made vulnerable by factors out of its control. While some argue the hack does not show that any of the industry’s foundations are shaky — “This wasn’t a core blockchain problem, likely seems like one app someone built was buggy,” crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried told Fortune on Wednesday — it highlighted to critics the interconnectedness of crypto networks and the inability of any one part to fully vet all the others.

While the hacks involved discrete entities, blockchain bridges and hot wallets also underline what many crypto enthusiasts say is so appealing about the form: ease of use. The former allows disparate blockchains to communicate — potentially as essential to a coming tech era as, say, people with AT&T and Verizon phone plans being able to talk to one another was to an earlier one.

And cold storage, while safer, would seem to undercut what lies at the heart of crypto’s appeal, which is to allow for transfers without the delays and waits of traditional bank transactions.

On social media Wednesday, many showed images of their wallets suddenly displaying zero balances, while others questioned hot wallets. “So you’re telling me storing my entire net worth on a google chrome extension would be considered a bad move?” one wag wrote of Phantom.

But experts say the issue may be more serious than that. Finding solutions, they note, might mean making sacrifices within the goals envisioned by crypto idealists.

“One of the advantages to opening up the banking system this way is the speed and lower barrier to transactions,” said William Callahan III, a former Drug Enforcement Administration special agent who now serves as director of government and strategic affairs for a company called the Blockchain Intelligence Group. “But what these hacks show is we need to take a step back and question that idea of accessibility, since speed is also part of the problem. We need to balance speed with security.”

Still, Callahan said, he believed such shoring-up was possible. “Blockchain bridges need to step up their protection, while maybe consumers need to use more cold storage,” he added.

The need for speed might be diminishing on its own as some people exit cryptocurrency. Bitcoin, a strong barometer of crypto activity, has lost 50 percent of its value in 2022 as investors have shed the asset, though it has seen a rebound from its sub-$19,000 price in June to hover around $23,000 in recent weeks.



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Hackers drain nearly $200 million from crypto startup Nomad

Billions of dollars of value have been wiped off the cryptocurrency market in recent months. Companies in the industry are feeling the pain. Lending and trading firms are facing a liquidity crisis and many firms have announced layoffs.

Yu Chun Christopher Wong | S3studio | Getty Images

Hackers drained almost $200 million in cryptocurrency from Nomad, a tool that lets users swap tokens from one blockchain to another, in yet another attack highlighting weaknesses in the decentralized finance space.

Nomad acknowledged the exploit in a tweet late Monday.

“We are aware of the incident involving the Nomad token bridge,” the startup said. “We are currently investigating and will provide updates when we have them.”

It’s not entirely clear how the attack was orchestrated, or if Nomad plans to reimburse users who lost tokens in the attack. The company, which markets itself as a “secure cross-chain messaging” service, wasn’t immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC.

Blockchain security experts described the exploit as a “free-for-all.” Anyone with knowledge of the exploit and how it worked could seize on the flaw and withdraw an amount of tokens from Nomad — sort of like a cash machine spewing out money at the tap of a button.

It started with an upgrade to Nomad’s code. One part of the code was marked as valid whenever users decided to initiate a transfer, which allowed thieves to withdraw more assets than were deposited into the platform. Once other attackers cottoned on to what was going on, they deployed armies of bots to carry out copycat attacks.

“Without prior programming experience, any user could simply copy the original attackers’ transaction call data and substitute the address with theirs to exploit the protocol,” said Victor Young, founder and chief architect of crypto startup Analog.

“Unlike previous attacks, the Nomad hack became a free-for-all where multiple users started to drain the network by simply replaying the original attackers’ transaction call data.”

Sam Sun, research partner at crypto-focused investment firm Paradigm, described the exploit as “one of the most chaotic hacks that Web3 has ever seen” — Web3 being a hypothetical future iteration of the internet built around blockchain technology.

Nomad is what’s known as a “bridge,” a tool that lets users exchange tokens and information between different crypto networks. They’re used as an alternative to making transactions directly on a blockchain like Ethereum, which can charge users high processing fees when there’s lots of activity happening at once.

Instances of vulnerabilities and poor design have made bridges a prime target for hackers seeking to swindle investors out of millions. More than $1 billion in crypto assets has been stolen through bridge exploits so far in 2022, according to a report from crypto compliance firm Elliptic.

In April, a blockchain bridge called Ronin was exploited in a $600 million crypto heist, which U.S. officials have since attributed to the North Korean state. Some months later, Harmony, another bridge, was drained of $100 million in a similar attack.

Like Ronin and Harmony, Nomad was targeted through a flaw in its code — but there were a few differences. With those attacks, hackers were able to retrieve the private keys needed to gain control over the network and start moving out tokens. In Nomad’s case, it was much simpler than that. A routine update to the bridge enabled users to forge transactions and make off with millions’ worth of crypto.



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Be neighbors with J.Lo and Chelsea Clinton for $13.75M

Looking to live in a boutique building with big-name neighbors?

Financier John Silvetz and model Deon Bray are listing their apartment at the famed Whitman, at 21 E. 26th St. by Madison Square Park, for $13.75 million.

The intimate condo, built in 1924, consists of four floor-through units, including one duplex.

Jennifer Lopez owns the penthouse, as Gimme reported exclusively, while the fourth floor is owned by Chelsea Clinton and Marc Mezvinsky. The second floor belongs to NASCAR champ Jeff Gordon. Silvetz and Bray bought their third-floor unit for $10 million in 2013, as Gimme exclusively reported.

It first went on the market for $15.95 million with a different brokerage two years ago. 

Silvetz, formerly of Deutsche Bank and BlueCrest Capital, is now at Eisler Capital, which came under fire after Russia invaded Ukraine.

The star-studded building sits near Madison Square Park.
New York Post
One of four bedrooms inside the home.
The Corcoran Group

That’s because a Russian oligarch who is now under EU and UK sanctions, Mikhail Fridman, helped Ed Eisler launch his firm — one of the biggest startup hedge funds in Europe — in 2015 with $100 million from LetterOne Holdings, according to Bloomberg.

Eisler then returned the money, according to reports. (Fridman founded LetterOne Holdings with sanctioned oligarch Petr Aven in 2013. That’s the same year they made billions — together with their partners, sanctioned oligarch Viktor Vekselberg and non-sanctioned oligarch Len Blavatnik — selling their shares in a Russian-British oil company, TNK-BP, to Russia’s state oil company Rosneft.) 

The 5,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, 5½-bath loft is smart-wired and comes with a private elevator landing that opens to a foyer with a long hallway leading to an open living/dining room and a chef’s kitchen.

An eat-in chef’s kitchen awaits said chef.
The Corcoran Group
The expansive loft sports 5,000 square feet.
The Corcoran Group

There are also 12-foot-4-inch-tall ceiling heights, wide-plank oak floors, a media room, a home office and views of Madison Square Park.  

The Whitman was built in 1924. 

The listing brokers are Jared Seligman of the Corcoran Group and Eleonora Srugo of Douglas Elliman.

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