Helium Says Its Crypto Mesh Network Is Used By Lime And Salesforce — It’s Not

by Janice Allen
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On Friday, mashable reported dat Helium, a crypto project praised by The New York Times earlier this year and whose parent company is backed by investment companies such as Andreessen Horowitz, had misled people about the companies it works with. Helium advertises on its homepage that Lime, the mobility company behind those electric scooters and bicycles, is using its crypto-powered mesh wireless network. However, the company told mashable that it has had no relationship with the company since 2019 and that it has only tested Helium’s technology for the first time.

Now, Salesforce, whose logo appeared on Helium’s website alongside Lime’s, also says it doesn’t use the technology. “Helium is not a Salesforce partner,” Salesforce spokesperson Ashley Eliasoph . told me The edge in an email. When I asked about the image below, which appeared on Helium’s website, Eliasoph said “it’s not right”.

Helium’s website still listed Lime and Salesforce as customers hours after Mashable’s report was released.

Sometime between 4:35 PM ET and 5:30 PM ET, the Lime and Salesforce logos were removed from the Helium home page. The edge sent an email to Helium at 4:48 p.m. ET asking about its relationship with Salesforce, to which the company has not responded at the time of writing.

Lime or Salesforce is no longer mentioned on the Helium website.

Unlike many crypto projects, it’s actually relatively easy to understand Helium’s core pitch (although there are definitely ways to make it more complicated if you want). The idea is that you put a Helium hotspot — which can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars — in your home, and the users of the network connect to it if they’re nearby and need some data. The more data that passes through your hotspot, the more HNT (Helium’s cryptocurrency) you earn.

Basically, it is a kind of decentralized mesh network, where the individuals running the nodes can benefit from providing their data. (It’s worth noting, though, that using your home Internet in this way violates the terms of service agreements for many Internet service providers.) The economy supposedly works because businesses or individuals pay to use the Helium network instead of, say, mobile data. .

Now, however, we have to ask ourselves: who wants to pay for that? Not many people, it seems. As a Twitter thread points to ita report of the generalist says only about $6,500 in data credits (or DCs) was spent last month to access Helium’s network. That’s in stark contrast to the millions of dollars people have spent on equipment to set up network hotspots in the hopes of making a profit, and it would be shockingly low if Lime actually connected its scooters to the network, or if Salesforce. -customers to monitor warehouses such as: Helium thrown in 2017.

The New York Times article, citing Helium as an example of “how crypto can be very helpful in solving certain types of problems,” listed Lime as well as Victor, a rodent and reptile trap company, as Helium users. Lime now clearly denies that is the case (and says it’s sending Helium a shutdown), and Victor didn’t immediately respond. The edge‘s asking if it is using the network. The site touted by Helium as the place to buy Helium-enabled Victor mousetraps in his announcement of the partnership doesn’t seem to be selling them anymore. There also don’t seem to be any mentions of Helium in Victor’s documentation.

Helium’s documentationhowever, does refer to Victor’s products, saying “a Helium Network user needs 50,000 DCs per month to transmit data for his fleet of Helium-connected mousetraps. (Yes, these really exist, and they are glorious.)”

We also contacted Dish who: announced last year that it would use Helium’s 5G network. That announcement is also on Helium’s homepage, at the very top under ‘latest news’.

I want to close this with a parting thought. The author of the Time the story says that Helium couldn’t really work without crypto technology, citing the fact that the company was launched without any form of crypto integration, and only got the idea when it was on the brink of collapse. But for yearshave disadvantaged communities should build their own local networks after being ignored by the government and communications companies. That goes against what? this chipper Helium ad implies:; that people are only willing to do something for their community if they are paid for it. On the other hand, it’s not necessarily surprising that Helium misrepresented an essential piece of the puzzle.


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