PotCoin is allegedly in discourses with delegates of Dennis Rodman to support his trek to the US-North Korea summit in Singapore one week from now, the Washington Post detailed June 7. PotCoin is a digital currency made to encourage exchanges inside the legitimized cannabis industry.
Rodman's specialist Chris Volo affirmed the previous ball star's enthusiasm for setting out to Singapore, saying he would give "moral help" to President Trump and Kim Jong Un.
A State Department representative communicated questions about Rodman's potential nearness at the summit, noticing that Rodman isn't a piece of the official US appointment and including that "We have no remark on Dennis Rodman's private travel. He's not an agent of the US government."
Rodman first made a trip to North Korea in 2013 as a major aspect of a trek with individuals from the Harlem Globetrotters. He at that point returned two more circumstances that year and built up relations with Kim, who is supposedly an eager enthusiast of the '90s-period Chicago Bulls. In spite of the fact that Rodman figured out how to build up a warm association with the North Korea's pioneer, it's uncertain whether Kim would give Rodman a chance to take an interest in the summit.
Famous people have frequently filled in as representatives for different cryptographic money ventures. Performing artist Steven Seagal was a brand minister for Bitcoiin2Gen, a digital currency that asserted to be a "prevalent or further developed variant of Original Bitcoin." Lionel Richie showed up in a TV promotion from financier firm TD Ameritrade that publicized Bitcoin prospects, and boxing star Floyd Mayweather posted an Instagram post gloating about the "$hit t$n of cash" he would apparently make on an ICO by Stox.