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Showing posts with the label bitcoin-investment

Crypto Chaos: Hacks, Regulations, and Meme Coin Security Lessons

Tonight’s crypto tape had a bit of everything: hacks, regulators linking arms, Wall Street doubling down, and a meme coin launchpad learning the hard way why domain security matters. Let’s dive in. One of the more jarring stories came from the Solana meme coin corner. Bonk.fun, a launchpad tied to Bonk (BONK), saw its domain hijacked and its team account compromised. Attackers slipped in a fake “terms of service” prompt that actually hid a wallet-draining contract. Browsers started throwing up phishing warnings, but not before some users signed and lost funds. It’s a rough hit for a platform already fighting for relevance in a crowded meme ecosystem, and a reminder that slick UX doesn’t matter if DNS and account security aren’t locked down. In more grown-up DeFi news, Across Protocol (ACX) is floating a bold shift: moving from a DAO to a U.S. C‑corp. The plan on the table would let ACX holders swap their tokens for equity in a new company or take a USDC buyout with a 25% pr...

Crypto Chaos: Scams, Regulation, and Bold Market Moves Unveiled

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Crypto Talkies: Crypto’s Volatile, Very Busy Day If you felt like the market was pulling you in ten directions at once today, you weren’t imagining it. Between scary new scam stats, governments sharpening their knives, and a few very large conviction buys, crypto spent the day reminding everyone that it’s still very much a high-stakes experiment. Let’s start with the story that hits closest to home for everyday users: address poisoning scams are quietly becoming one of Ethereum’s biggest security threats. These aren’t sophisticated protocol hacks, they’re simple human-error plays. Attackers send tiny dust transactions from lookalike addresses, wait for those to appear in your transaction history, and rely on you to copy-paste the wrong one next time you send funds. That small slip is now costing users huge sums: over 60 million dollars drained so far, with attackers focusing less on spray-and-pray and more on a smaller pool of wealthier targets. The takeaway is uncomfortable ...