4 giờ trước
Why wrench attacks have become a leading source of violent crypto-related crime
In January 2025, French authorities released Ledger co-founder David Balland after kidnappers allegedly demanded a significant cryptocurrency ransom, highlighting how digital assets can fuel coercive, real-world crimes. Wrench attacks, where criminals use threats or violence to force victims to unlock wallets or authorize transfers, appear to be rising alongside total crypto market capitalization and the growth of visible on-chain wealth. Public-facing founders, influencers and OTC or P2P traders in regions such as Western Europe and parts of Asia-Pacific are described as especially exposed, prompting calls to reduce personal visibility, limit instantly accessible balances and treat data leaks and support impersonation as part of the same threat landscape.
Đã chọn
4 giờ trước
4 giờ trước
Ethereum’s "walkaway test", ossification goals and the push for quantum-safe design
Vitalik Buterin's "walkaway test" frames Ethereum's long-term credibility as its ability to remain secure and useful even if protocol upgrades largely stop. Within this vision, the network must be able to "ossify if we want to" while still handling quantum-era cryptographic threats through account abstraction and flexible signature schemes. The roadmap aims at full quantum resistance, higher scalability, durable state architecture and resilient proof-of-stake economics so Ethereum can adjust its security assumptions without relying on emergency coordination.
4 giờ trước
1-9
South Korea's Digital Asset Basic Act Stalls Over Bank-Controlled Won Stablecoin Push
South Korea's Digital Asset Basic Act has been delayed as the Bank of Korea and the Financial Services Commission disagree over who should be allowed to issue won-pegged stablecoins. The central bank favors bank-led consortia with at least 51% bank ownership, while regulators and lawmakers warn this could constrain competition and innovation. With the dispute expected to push the bill into 2026, banks, fintech platforms and crypto firms are already preparing to launch or distribute local stablecoins once a framework is finalized.
Đã chọn
1-9
1-5
ZachXBT ties Coinbase support impersonation scheme to roughly $2M in losses
Onchain investigator ZachXBT said a Coinbase support impersonation operation stole roughly $2 million in crypto, traced through onchain activity and social media artifacts. The FBI reported more than $16 billion in internet crime losses in 2024, underscoring the role of social engineering; Coinbase reiterates it never requests passwords, 2FA, seed phrases, or transfers to a safe address.
Đã chọn
1-5
12-24
Ondo Finance targets early 2026 launch of custody-backed tokenized US stocks on Solana
Ondo Finance plans to expand its Global Markets product to Solana in early 2026, offering tokenized US stocks and ETFs that are backed by securities held with US-registered broker-dealers. The structure is designed so that holders receive economic exposure, including dividend effects, while compliance is enforced via Solana Token Extensions such as Transfer Hooks. Minting and redemption are expected to run 24 hours a day, five days a week, with transfers and trading available around the clock on Solana.
Đã chọn
12-24
12-19
Malaysia's RMJDT royal ringgit stablecoin signals Asia's move to regulated tokenized money
Malaysia's RMJDT, a ringgit-pegged "royal" stablecoin on the Zetrix blockchain, is positioned for payments and cross-border trade settlement and backed by ringgit cash and short-term government bonds. The project includes a 500 million Malaysian ringgit Zetrix-token treasury with plans to reach 1 billion ringgit to stabilize network costs and validator support, reflecting a broader Asian push toward licensed stablecoin issuance and regulated onchain settlement in local currencies.
12-19
12-19
Libya’s ultra-cheap electricity fuels covert Bitcoin mining and state crackdown
Libya’s heavily subsidized power, reportedly costing about $0.004 per kilowatt-hour, helped turn the country into a covert Bitcoin mining hub that once generated around 0.6% of global hash rate. As mining activity expanded in a legal grey zone and was estimated to consume roughly 2% of national electricity output, authorities responded with raids, hardware seizures and prison sentences while debating whether to regulate, tax or eliminate the sector.
Đã chọn
12-19