Study: Political Memecoins Lead to Investor Disillusionment
A survey revealed that politically-themed memecoins like TRUMP, LIBRA, and CAR attracted many first-time crypto investors, but also led to significant losses and disillusionment. Memecoin Losses Prompt 21% of New Crypto Investors to Quit A survey study of 1,066 crypto investors conducted by Chainplay in collaboration with Storible found that nearly 80% bought president-endorsed memecoins […] Powered by...
Binance Teams up With Hong Kong Law Enforcement to Fight Digital Asset Threats
Binance is strengthening crypto security with Hong Kong police, enhancing collaboration to combat cybercrime and financial threats in the blockchain industry. Binance Strengthens Cybercrime Collaboration With Hong Kong Police Crypto exchange Binance revealed on Feb. 20 that CEO Richard Teng recently met with Raymond Lam Cheuk Ho, Chief Superintendent of the Cyber Security and Technology […] Powered by...
SEC Reshuffles Crypto Lawsuits—Is Ripple on the Verge of Legal Victory?
The SEC is pausing lawsuits against Binance and Coinbase, sparking speculation on whether Ripple could be next—potentially signaling a shift toward clearer crypto regulations. Crypto Crackdown Unraveling? SEC Pauses Cases—But What About Ripple? The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is prioritizing cryptocurrency cases with imminent court deadlines while pausing others, Fox Business journalist Eleanor […] Powered by...
Cloudflare Asks Court to End LaLiga’s “Illegal” Blocking Response to Encrypted Client Hello
The background to events currently underway in Spain is detailed in our earlier reports but can be summarized as follows. Through various court orders, top Spanish football league LaLiga may issue instructions for local ISPs to block pirate streaming sites and IPTV services. Blocking is carried out by domain, URL, IP address, or meddling with DNS entries. Those actions are based on information supplied by LaLiga each week, no scrutiny...
Meta Says it Made Sure Not to Seed Any Pirated Books
Over the past two years, rightsholders of all ilks have filed lawsuits against companies that develop AI models. Most of these cases allege that AI developers used copyrighted works to train LLMs without first obtaining authorization. Using copyrighted content without permission can be problematic, but many AI companies cite fair use as a defense. Whether that is valid will vary from case to case. Just last week, a Delaware federal...