HTX (fka Huobi) and Heco Chain hacked for $115 million

Justin Sun confirmed that HTX (formerly Huobi) and its related Heco Chain protocol were hacked for a combined $115 million. It's been a rough few weeks for Sun, whose Poloniex exchange was hacked for around $120 million on November 10, and a rough few months for HTX, which was hacked for $8 million in late September.

HTX suspended withdrawals as they investigated the hack, and wrote that the company would "fully compensate for HTX's hot wallet losses". Security firm Cyvers said they believed the theft was enabled by a private key leak.

Binance fined over $4 billion, founder pleads guilty and resigns

Binance founder Changpeng "CZ" Zhao pleaded guilty to money laundering charges and agreed to step down as CEO of Binance, the largest global cryptocurrency exchange. He will pay a $50 million fine and faces the possibility of 18 months in prison.

Binance agreed to pay $4.3 billion in restitution for widespread wrongdoing including failure to implement proper anti-money laundering programs, unlicensed money transmitting, and sanctions violations. Binance will be allowed to continue operating, but will be subjected to a three-year-long monitorship program to ensure AML and sanctions compliance.

Simultaneously with the DOJ action, Binance reached agreements with the CFTC, FinCen, and OFAC on ongoing legal issues. Notably, the SEC lawsuit was not among those settled.

CZ posted a long thread on Twitter, admitting "I made mistakes, and I must take responsibility," carefully sidestepping mentioning what any of those mistakes were.

Aragon DAO votes to sue its founding team

Aragon is a prominent project that creates DAO infrastructure. Ironically, its own DAO-based governance has been fraught, with the group facing a governance crisis in May over conflicts between the DAO and the Aragon Association (a small group of "stewards" for the project).

Now, after the Aragon Association decided without consulting the DAO to dissolve itself and wind down the project's governance tokens (while keeping some of the funds), the DAO has voted to sue the group. The DAO has accused the group of improperly taking investors' money to put it "into their new secretive company". They've allocated $300,000 to legal efforts.

Bittrex finally closes up for good

After paying a then-record $29 million fine for sanctions violations in October 2022, shutting down US operations in March 2023, filing for bankruptcy in May, and paying $24 million to settle a lawsuit from the US SEC in August, Bittrex is finally throwing in the towel. The company announced that it was closing its global operations, and urged customers to withdraw funds stored with the exchange within only two weeks. The also informed customers who held US dollars on the exchange that they would not be allowed to withdraw, and would have to convert their dollars to Euros or cryptocurrency.

Bittrex used to be a major player in the US cryptocurrency market, with over 20% of US market share in 2018. However, the exchange's dominance had dwindled to below 1% as of 2021.

DOJ reportedly seeking $4 billion resolution to Binance investigation, with possible criminal charges against CEO

According to Bloomberg, ongoing negotiations between the U.S. Department of Justice and Binance have involved penalties greater than $4 billion as part of ending an ongoing, multi-year probe into the exchange. Such a settlement would not insulate founder Changpeng "CZ" Zhao from criminal charges.

The negotiation may involve a deferred prosecution agreement, in which the US would file a criminal complaint but agree not to prosecute so long as Binance met agreed conditions under a monitoring process.

It remains to be seen if this is the avenue the DOJ and Binance will go with. A Bloomberg source speculated that a decision could come within the next few weeks.

Kraken sued by U.S. SEC

Kraken is the latest cryptocurrency exchange to face a lawsuit from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. According to the SEC, Kraken violated securities laws by listing tokens like Polygon (MATIC) and Solana (SOL), which the SEC has argued in this and in other lawsuits are unregistered securities.

Furthermore, the SEC claims that Kraken commingled corporate and customer funds, "at times pa[ying] operational expenses directly from bank accounts that hold customer cash."

Kraken's new CEO, Dave Ripley, posted on Twitter that the company "plan[s] to vigorously defend [their] position" that they do not list securities.

DOJ cracks down on $225 million crypto romance scam

At least according to the rather shady Tether stablecoin provider, the U.S. Department of Justice has been working on an investigation into a massive "pig butchering" romance scam and human trafficking operation based out of Southeast Asia.

According to Tether, they "voluntarily fr[oze] approximately 225 million in USDT tokens" in connection to the investigation.

Some romance scammers hoping to lure victims into sending them cryptocurrencies are themselves victims of human trafficking operations, where they are held victim and forced to send such messages.

dYdX insurance fund loses $9 million in apparent attack

Around 40% of the "insurance fund", intended to protect dYdX users from having to backstop other traders' losing trades, was drained in what dYdX CEO described as "pretty clearly a targeted attack against dYdX". An attacker manipulated the market for the Yearn Finance token, which is not normally heavily traded on dYdX, but which experienced a surge in trades around the attack. By taking advantage of flaws in dYdX's risk management, the attacker was able to rack up big losses and then force the dYdX insurance fund to pay out.

Kronos trading firm suffers key breach

The cryptocurrency trading firm Kronos Research announced on Twitter that they had stopped trading while they investigated "unauthorized access of some of our API keys". They claimed that "potential losses are not a significant portion of our equity". They later confirmed the loss at around $26 million.

Aqua web3 gaming marketplace shuts down

It's not that blockchain gaming was a flop, they were "just too early" (said CEO Sean Ryan). The Aqua gaming NFT marketplace announced their shutdown, attributing it to "challenges in raising funds and the slower-than-expected growth within the web3 gaming sector". Users were instructed to transfer their funds off the platform by December 1.

The company launched its marketplace in September 2022, backed by $10 million from the DIGITAL venture fund.

No JavaScript? That's cool too! Check out the Web 1.0 version of the site to see more entries.