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David Sacks: From the PayPal Empire to the White House as a Crypto Policy Manager
In December 2024, Donald Trump announced a appointment that resonated deeply in tech and financial circles: he named David Sacks as the AI and Cryptocurrency Czar at the White House. This move marks a significant shift in how the U.S. administration will approach regulation of digital assets and AI governance. But who is David Sacks really, and why did Trump trust him with this critical responsibility?
From South Africa to Silicon Valley: The making of an entrepreneur
David Sacks was born in Cape Town into a Jewish family and emigrated to the United States at age five, settling in Tennessee. His grandfather, who founded a candy factory in the 1920s, inspired an entrepreneurial legacy that eventually defined his career. Although initially hesitant to pursue business — his father was an endocrinologist — the entrepreneurial spirit ultimately prevailed.
His education laid the foundation for his later influence. He studied Economics at the University of Memphis before transferring to Stanford, where he completed his undergraduate degree in 1994. Later, he earned his J.D. from the University of Chicago in 1998. These academic credentials prepared him for the pivotal turning point in his professional journey.
The PayPal legacy that shaped David Sacks
In 1999, David Sacks joined PayPal as the top product manager and rose to COO. During these formative years, he worked closely with Elon Musk and other innovators who would later be known as the “PayPal Mafia” — a network of tech entrepreneurs who, after leaving the company, created some of the world’s most valuable companies.
When eBay acquired PayPal in 2002, Sacks founded Yammer, an enterprise social networking platform later bought by Microsoft. This success propelled him into new opportunities in venture capital. In 2017, he co-founded Craft Ventures, an investment fund that by November 2023 had managed $3.3 billion. Craft’s portfolio includes investments in SpaceX, Uber, Airbnb, Reddit, and BitGo, among other tech giants.
Meanwhile, Sacks became co-host of the podcast “All-In,” where he discusses technology, politics, and economics with other prominent venture capitalists, amplifying his intellectual influence in these spaces.
The Musk connection: Partner on Twitter and shared vision
The relationship between David Sacks and Elon Musk goes beyond nostalgia for PayPal. When Musk decided to acquire Twitter for $44 billion in 2022, Sacks provided significant capital and served as a strategic advisor during the transition of ownership, according to reports from The New York Times.
This role reinforces Sacks’s position as one of the few entrepreneurs with direct access to the most influential circles in Silicon Valley. The “PayPal Mafia” is not just a nostalgic nickname; it represents a functional power network that continues shaping modern technology.
Trump’s pick: From venture capitalist to regulator
Sacks did not hide his support for Donald Trump during the presidential campaign. He believed Trump’s policies better addressed national challenges compared to the Biden administration, especially in economics, foreign policy, and border security. His political backing positioned him as a natural candidate for influential roles in a potential Trump administration.
The appointment of David Sacks as AI and Crypto Czar assigns him the task of drafting regulatory frameworks for the digital assets industry — a field where his investment experience is unquestionable. Trump stated that Sacks would work to protect online free speech and develop regulations that bring clarity to the crypto ecosystem, a goal that aligns perfectly with this entrepreneur’s vision.
Bitcoin as an alternative to fiat money: David Sacks’s philosophy
What sets David Sacks apart from other venture capitalists is his ideological conviction about cryptocurrencies. To him, Bitcoin and Ethereum embody the realization of PayPal’s original dream: a “money database” where transactions flow within a secure digital ecosystem, free from government intermediaries.
Sacks has been investing in Bitcoin since 2012, when few saw beyond its speculative aspect. In an interview with Anthony Pompliano, he explained his investment thesis: “Between 2017 and 2018, we expressed the idea that cryptocurrencies would evolve from a retail phenomenon into an institutional asset class.” As a result, he invested through BitGo — the institutional crypto custody platform — and Multicoin, a hedge fund specializing in digital assets.
However, his stance is not purely speculative. Sacks sees Bitcoin as a solution to a structural problem: the risk of devaluation of government-controlled currencies. He explained, “When the government has control, especially as the world’s reserve currency, there’s a massive temptation to print money to fund budgets and accumulate unpayable debt.”
In his view, Bitcoin offers an alternative model backed by mathematics and encryption rather than state authority. With a limited supply of 21 million units, Bitcoin provides a form of money that doesn’t require trusting governments, only trusting that cryptography remains inviolable.
While Sacks recognizes that Bitcoin has the strongest case among digital assets, he also validates other innovations like Ethereum, blockchain technology, and decentralized finance as valuable contributions to the crypto ecosystem. His role as a regulator in Washington will now test whether his ideological principles can translate into policies that balance innovation and oversight.