SEC v Ripple: Regulator drops charges vs founders but case will proceed
The next step in the SEC v Ripple case is to see what Ripple ends up paying for its sales of XRP and if the SEC decides to appeal the earlier ruling.
The next step in the SEC v Ripple case is to see what Ripple ends up paying for its sales of XRP and if the SEC decides to appeal the earlier ruling.
Hex founder Richard Heart faces fraud charges relating to his Hex entities offering unregistered securities and over ill-gotten wealth that the SEC is urging him to forfeit.
Binance undergoes "re-evaluation" of its workforce, cutting down about one-fifth of its total manpower who are either underperforming or might not be "the right cultural fit."
Vishal Gupta said he would pursue an undisclosed new blockchain-based project, stating in a Twitter thread that it was “time for me to move on” but played coy on his future plans.
Terra founder Do Kwon's future is looking bleak as the U.S. SEC cements the allegations against him that resulted in the collapse of the trading system by formally filing charges.
As authorities in South Korea investigate Do Kwon and Terraform Labs due to the LUNA/UST implosion, major exchanges like Kraken, FTX, and Binance listed LUNA2 without a second thought.
In an era where there are widespread calls to get big money out of politics in order to protect democratic processes, ‘crypto’ is going the other direction.
A British lawyer has filed a request for Seychelles authorities to probe transactions related to 230,000 BTC that have been linked to the country and to OneCoin.
Arthur Hayes has reportedly surrendered himself to U.S. authorities in Hawaii, to face charges of failing to implement money laundering protections at BitMEX exchange.
Prosecutors announced that they have indicted BitMEX’s founders for violating the Bank Secrecy Act in failing to implement required AML measures.
Tether CTO Paolo Ardoino gave an interview in which he celebrated Tether's ability to redeem $7 billion—10% of its alleged reserves—in one 48-hour period during last year's 'crypto' meltdown.
While the U.S. securities regulator won the November court ruling, a judge has ruled that investors selling the LBC token in secondary markets are not violating securities laws.