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✨ KrypToon is now verified on Binance Square. This marks an important step for KrypToon’s Web3 media presence and strengthens our ability to share crypto-focused updates, project information, market insights, community discussions, and research-based content with a wider audience. KrypToon focuses on: 🔹 Web3 project updates 🔹 AMA and X Spaces coverage 🔹 Community campaign visibility 🔹 Market news and educational content 🔹 Research-based project awareness 🔹 Multi-platform crypto media support Our goal is to support the Web3 ecosystem through clear communication, responsible content, and consistent community engagement. 🔗 Official Links: 🟡 Binance Square: [KrypToon Binance Square](https://app.binance.com/uni-qr/cpro/KrypToon) 🌐 All Social Links: bio.link/kryptoon ⚠️ Disclaimer: This post is for informational and community-awareness purposes only. KrypToon may provide media, AMA, campaign, and promotional support for Web3 projects. Nothing shared by KrypToon should be considered financial advice, investment advice, trading guidance, or an endorsement by Binance. Digital assets are volatile and risky. Always do your own research before making any crypto-related decision. #KrypToon #BinanceSquare #Web3 #CryptoNews #CryptoMarketing
✨ KrypToon is now verified on Binance Square.

This marks an important step for KrypToon’s Web3 media presence and strengthens our ability to share crypto-focused updates, project information, market insights, community discussions, and research-based content with a wider audience.

KrypToon focuses on:

🔹 Web3 project updates
🔹 AMA and X Spaces coverage
🔹 Community campaign visibility
🔹 Market news and educational content
🔹 Research-based project awareness
🔹 Multi-platform crypto media support

Our goal is to support the Web3 ecosystem through clear communication, responsible content, and consistent community engagement.

🔗 Official Links:

🟡 Binance Square:
KrypToon Binance Square

🌐 All Social Links:
bio.link/kryptoon

⚠️ Disclaimer:
This post is for informational and community-awareness purposes only. KrypToon may provide media, AMA, campaign, and promotional support for Web3 projects. Nothing shared by KrypToon should be considered financial advice, investment advice, trading guidance, or an endorsement by Binance. Digital assets are volatile and risky. Always do your own research before making any crypto-related decision.

#KrypToon #BinanceSquare #Web3 #CryptoNews #CryptoMarketing
Статья
Why the New House Bill Could Reshape Digital Asset Crime EnforcementCrypto theft is no longer a side issue in digital finance. It has become a national law-enforcement problem, a consumer-protection problem, a market-confidence problem, and a political problem. Every major cycle in crypto brings new forms of crime: exchange hacks, private key compromises, wallet drainers, phishing campaigns, fake investment platforms, romance-investment scams, SIM swaps, malware, insider compromise, bridge exploits, social-engineered treasury theft, and laundering networks that move stolen funds across chains, mixers, bridges, exchanges, and offshore services. That is why the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act matters. Introduced by U.S. House lawmakers Lance Gooden and Josh Gottheimer, the bill would establish a Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force within the Department of Justice. The task force would be chaired by the Attorney General or the Attorney General’s designee and would include senior representatives from the DOJ, FBI, Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations, Treasury, FinCEN, and other federal law-enforcement agencies selected by the Attorney General. [1][2] The purpose is simple but significant: create a single federal coordination structure for preventing, investigating, and prosecuting cryptocurrency theft and directly related criminal activity. This is not a bill to create a new crypto regulator. It is not a bill to ban crypto. It is not a bill to define every digital asset. It is not a bill to rewrite securities or commodities law. Instead, it focuses on criminal enforcement coordination. That distinction is the most important part of the legislation. The crypto industry has spent years arguing about whether tokens are securities, commodities, payment instruments, collectibles, software rights, governance tools, or something else. This bill takes a different lane. It says that regardless of the market-structure debate, theft is theft. If someone steals a person’s crypto through hacking, phishing, tricking, scamming, or unauthorized transfer, law enforcement needs a clearer playbook. Why This Bill Arrived Now The timing is not random. According to the FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report, cryptocurrency-related complaints reached 181,565 in 2025, representing a 21% increase from 2024. Reported losses reached $11.366 billion, up 22% year over year. The average reported loss was $62,604, and 18,589 complainants reported losing more than $100,000. [3] Those numbers explain the political pressure. Crypto crime is no longer limited to protocol teams, exchanges, or high-net-worth traders. It affects retirees, small business owners, retail investors, developers, founders, creators, market makers, and ordinary people who may not fully understand wallet custody, irreversible settlement, private keys, or blockchain tracing. The problem is also changing. Chainalysis reported that in the first half of 2025, stolen funds from crypto services exceeded $2.17 billion, with the Bybit hack accounting for a major share of losses. The same report also noted that personal wallet compromises represented a growing share of stolen-fund activity. TRM Labs separately reported that illicit actors stole $2.87 billion across nearly 150 hacks in 2025, with attackers increasingly targeting operational infrastructure such as keys, wallets, and control planes instead of only smart contract code. [5] This is the new reality. Crypto theft is not only about bad smart contracts. It is about compromised humans, compromised devices, compromised keys, compromised operations, and fragmented law-enforcement response. What the Bill Actually Does The bill establishes the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force inside the Department of Justice. Its membership includes DOJ, FBI, DHS, HSI, Treasury, FinCEN, and other federal law-enforcement agencies deemed appropriate by the Attorney General. [2] The task force would serve as the primary federal coordinating body for the prevention, investigation, and prosecution of cryptocurrency theft and criminal activity directly related to such theft. It would improve coordination among federal agencies involved in crypto theft investigations and prosecutions. It would also develop and disseminate best practices for evidence collection, digital evidence analysis, investigative techniques, asset tracing, and victim engagement. [2] That “best practices” language is important. Many local police departments are not equipped to handle crypto theft cases. A victim may report stolen funds to local authorities, only to discover that the officer taking the report has limited training in wallet addresses, transaction hashes, block explorers, exchange subpoenas, chain-hopping, mixers, bridges, or custody records. The victim may then contact an exchange, a wallet provider, the FBI, the FTC, IC3, or a blockchain analytics company, but there may be no clear path. The proposed task force tries to solve that coordination gap. The bill also requires technical assistance, training, and guidance for state and local law enforcement, including prosecutors. It calls for information sharing among federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial law-enforcement agencies. It also directs the task force to coordinate with international law-enforcement partners when investigations cross borders. [2] That international component matters because crypto theft rarely respects national boundaries. A victim may be in Texas, the attacker may use infrastructure in Eastern Europe, laundering may move through Asian exchanges, and the stolen assets may pass through multiple networks within minutes. Without coordination, speed favors the attacker. What the Bill Does Not Do The bill’s limitations are just as important as its powers. The bill text says it does not authorize the regulation of cryptocurrency, digital asset markets, financial institutions, or financial products. It does not expand or limit the regulatory authority of any federal agency. It does not create new criminal offenses. It does not create a private right of action. [2] That language appears designed to avoid the biggest political fight in crypto: regulation by enforcement versus clear market rules. Supporters of the bill can argue that this is a narrow criminal-coordination measure. Critics of broader crypto regulation may find it easier to support because it does not create a new licensing regime, new token classification rules, or new agency powers over ordinary crypto markets. This narrowness may be its political advantage. A broader bill touching SEC authority, CFTC jurisdiction, stablecoin issuance, exchange registration, DeFi interfaces, wallet software, or self-custody could quickly become controversial. A bill focused on theft victims, hacking, phishing, and law-enforcement coordination is easier to frame as pro-consumer and pro-market integrity. Still, narrow bills can have broad consequences. If passed, this legislation could become the foundation for a more permanent federal crypto-crime response structure. It could shape how cases are referred, how evidence is collected, how victims are supported, and how agencies coordinate with exchanges and blockchain analytics providers. Legal Analysis: Existing Law Is Not the Problem, Coordination Is The bill does not create new crimes because many tools already exist. Crypto theft can already implicate federal laws depending on the facts. Hacking and unauthorized computer access may involve the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Online fraud schemes may involve wire fraud. Laundering stolen proceeds may involve money laundering laws. Coordinated schemes may involve conspiracy statutes. Identity theft, access-device fraud, sanctions violations, and extortion laws may also become relevant depending on the conduct. [6] The real problem is not always legal authority. The problem is timing, coordination, jurisdiction, evidence preservation, and technical capability. Crypto theft moves fast. Stolen funds can be split into hundreds of addresses, swapped into different assets, bridged across chains, deposited into centralized exchanges, sent to high-risk services, or mixed through obfuscation tools. Even when the blockchain is transparent, attribution is hard. Knowing where funds moved is not the same as knowing who controls the wallet. This is why evidence collection matters. A strong crypto theft response requires wallet addresses, transaction hashes, screenshots, communication records, exchange account details, IP logs, device evidence, phishing domains, smart contract interactions, and fast engagement with compliant exchanges or service providers. If victims report late or agencies do not know what to collect, recovery odds can fall quickly. That is where the task force could matter. It could help standardize what local police ask victims for. It could give prosecutors a clearer intake framework. It could create referral channels between local cases and federal investigators. It could improve coordination with exchanges and international partners. It could also identify recurring criminal infrastructure before it harms more victims. The DOJ Context: Rebuilding Coordination After NCET The bill also lands in a sensitive DOJ policy environment. In April 2025, DOJ issued a memorandum titled “Ending Regulation By Prosecution.” The memo disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and directed the department to narrow its digital asset enforcement priorities. It stated that DOJ would focus on criminal misuse of digital assets rather than acting as a digital asset regulator. [4] That shift was welcomed by parts of the crypto industry that believed the prior approach blurred the line between criminal prosecution and market regulation. But critics argued that dismantling a dedicated crypto enforcement team risked weakening the government’s ability to respond to complex crypto crime. The new House bill appears to respond to both sides of that debate. It does not revive the exact old approach of aggressive regulatory-style crypto enforcement. It does not tell DOJ to pursue crypto platforms simply because they are crypto platforms. But it does create a dedicated coordination body focused on theft, scams, hacking, and directly related criminal activity. That is a politically careful design. It accepts the argument that DOJ should not be a market regulator, while also rejecting the idea that crypto crime can be handled through fragmented, general-purpose enforcement alone. In short: less “regulation by prosecution,” more “coordination against theft.” Why Victims Need a Clearer System The biggest human issue in this bill is victim support. When a bank account is compromised, a victim usually knows where to start: the bank, card issuer, police report, fraud department, or consumer protection agency. Crypto victims often face a maze. Was the theft a hack? A scam? An investment fraud? A wallet drainer? A fake support agent? A phishing site? A malicious smart contract? A SIM-swap theft? An exchange account takeover? A romance-investment fraud? A malware incident? Each category may involve different evidence, different agencies, different platforms, and different recovery possibilities. Victims often panic, delay reporting, or get targeted again by fake recovery scammers. The FTC warns that scammers commonly use crypto payments, fake investment platforms, impersonation, romance manipulation, and unrealistic profit promises. It also warns that crypto scams often begin through unexpected texts, calls, emails, social media, or dating platforms. [7] That second wave of exploitation is especially dangerous. After losing funds, victims search for help. Scammers then impersonate investigators, lawyers, blockchain experts, government officials, or recovery agencies. They promise to recover stolen assets for an upfront fee, then steal more. A federal task force cannot eliminate these crimes, but it can create clearer public guidance and law-enforcement intake standards. That matters because confusion is part of the scammer’s business model. Arguments in Favor of the Bill Supporters will argue that the bill fills a real enforcement gap. Crypto theft is cross-border, technical, fast-moving, and often too complex for local law enforcement to handle alone. A centralized DOJ-led task force could provide a consistent point of coordination. It could reduce duplicated work across agencies. It could help train local investigators. It could improve federal-state referrals. It could support victims who currently do not know where to turn. Supporters will also argue that the bill protects innovation. Legitimate crypto adoption depends on trust. If users believe theft is inevitable and law enforcement is helpless, mainstream adoption suffers. A better enforcement framework could strengthen confidence in digital assets without imposing new market rules. That point is important. A serious enforcement system is not anti-crypto. It can be pro-crypto if it targets thieves rather than lawful builders. The bill’s rule of construction tries to make that clear by avoiding new criminal offenses, new regulatory authority, and direct regulation of digital asset markets. [2] Industry support from groups such as The Digital Chamber and Satoshi Action Fund reflects this framing. They support the idea that law enforcement needs better tools, training, and coordination to investigate theft and support victims without turning the bill into a broad regulatory expansion. [1] Arguments Against or Concerns About the Bill Critics may still raise several concerns. The first concern is effectiveness. Creating a task force does not automatically solve the resource problem. Agencies still need investigators, prosecutors, blockchain analytics tools, training budgets, multilingual international coordination, and fast subpoena processes. A task force without funding or authority may become a report-writing structure rather than an operational force. The second concern is duplication. DOJ, FBI, HSI, Treasury, FinCEN, Secret Service, state police, IC3, and other agencies already touch cybercrime and financial crime. Critics may ask whether another task force simplifies coordination or adds another layer. The third concern is scope creep. Even though the bill says it does not regulate digital asset markets or create new crimes, some crypto advocates may worry that a permanent DOJ task force could expand over time into broader crypto surveillance or informal regulation. The fourth concern is privacy. Asset tracing can help victims and identify criminals, but aggressive surveillance tools may also raise civil-liberties concerns if not bounded by clear legal process, warrants, subpoenas, and due-process protections. The fifth concern is victim expectations. A federal task force may create hope, but crypto theft recovery is difficult. Blockchain tracing can follow funds, but freezing, seizing, and returning assets depends on where funds go, whether intermediaries cooperate, and whether suspects can be identified. These concerns do not necessarily defeat the bill. They show what Congress must clarify if it wants the task force to work. The Main Challenge: Speed Crypto theft investigations are often a race. A victim may discover a drained wallet hours after the theft. By then, the funds may already be split, swapped, bridged, and moved toward off-ramps. In some cases, centralized exchanges can freeze funds if alerted quickly. In other cases, assets move through noncustodial or offshore channels where recovery is far harder. This is why a “standing playbook” matters. If state and local agencies know exactly what to collect, where to report, and how to escalate urgent cases, recovery odds can improve. If victims are told to preserve transaction hashes, wallet addresses, screenshots, communications, and device evidence immediately, investigators can act faster. But speed also requires private-sector cooperation. Exchanges, custodians, stablecoin issuers, blockchain analytics firms, wallet providers, and cybersecurity companies all play roles. A DOJ-led task force would need strong channels with lawful service providers while respecting privacy and due process. Impact on Exchanges, Wallet Providers, and Crypto Startups If the bill becomes law, crypto companies may feel indirect pressure even though the bill does not impose new market regulation. Exchanges may receive more coordinated law-enforcement requests. Wallet providers may face more victim-support expectations. Cybersecurity firms may become more important partners. Stablecoin issuers may face more freezing and tracing requests when stolen funds move through their tokens. Compliance teams may need better systems for identifying stolen-fund exposure. This could benefit mature companies. Well-run exchanges and custodians already invest heavily in compliance, monitoring, suspicious activity reporting, customer support, and law-enforcement response. A clearer federal coordination model could reduce confusion and create more predictable engagement. Smaller teams may struggle. A startup with limited legal and compliance resources may find law-enforcement requests difficult to process. This is why the task force should also develop clear, proportionate standards for industry cooperation, not informal pressure that only large firms can handle. International Dimension Crypto theft is global. North Korean-linked actors, organized scam compounds, ransomware groups, phishing networks, laundering brokers, darknet services, and offshore exchanges all create international enforcement problems. U.S. law enforcement cannot solve these cases alone. The bill’s international coordination language is therefore essential. [2] Effective crypto-theft enforcement requires cross-border cooperation through mutual legal assistance, sanctions coordination, Interpol channels, exchange cooperation, and joint operations. But international enforcement is slow. Criminals move at blockchain speed, while legal process moves at government speed. The task force’s real value may be its ability to pre-build relationships before major cases happen. Xhandle Publication Rules and Responsible Coverage For X, this topic should be covered carefully. X prohibits scam tactics used to obtain money, property, or private information, including social engineering, money-flipping schemes, fraudulent discounts, and phishing. X also prohibits inauthentic media that could mislead people and cause harm. [8] That means a professional X article about crypto theft should avoid: Fake recovery-service promotions. Wallet addresses claiming to track stolen funds without evidence. Unverified accusations against platforms or individuals. Guaranteed recovery claims. Engagement-bait around victims. Screenshots exposing private victim information. Instructions that help criminals hide funds. The safest framing is educational and policy-focused: explain the bill, the enforcement problem, the victim-support gap, the legal limits, and the security implications. This article should not be used to promote a recovery service, trading platform, token, private investigator, or paid “asset recovery” link. What the Bill Should Add or Clarify The bill is useful, but Congress could strengthen it. First, the annual report should include public, anonymized data on case intake, victim categories, common attack types, recovery outcomes, cross-border challenges, and bottlenecks. Second, the task force should publish victim-facing guidance in plain English. Third, it should create standardized intake templates for local police. Fourth, it should clarify how privacy and due process will be protected when blockchain analytics and exchange data are used. Fifth, it should define how the task force will coordinate with IC3, FTC, state attorneys general, and consumer-protection agencies. Sixth, it should include training support for prosecutors, not only investigators. Crypto cases fail when prosecutors cannot explain wallets, keys, tracing, and chain evidence clearly to judges and juries. Seventh, it should address fake recovery scams as a core secondary harm. These additions would make the bill more practical. Final Takeaway The Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act is not the largest crypto bill in Congress, but it may be one of the most practical. Its message is clear: the United States does not need to settle every crypto classification debate before improving its response to theft. People are losing money now. Attackers are moving faster than victims, faster than local police, and often faster than fragmented federal processes. Crypto theft has become a national enforcement challenge involving fraud, hacking, phishing, scams, wallet compromise, laundering, and cross-border coordination. The bill’s strongest feature is its narrow focus. It does not create new crypto crimes. It does not create a new market regulator. It does not expand agency authority over digital asset markets. It focuses on criminal enforcement coordination, best practices, state and local training, victim engagement, international cooperation, and annual reporting to Congress. [2] That makes it politically realistic. For crypto supporters, the bill can be seen as a trust-building measure that targets criminals without punishing innovation. For consumer-protection advocates, it is a step toward giving victims a clearer path. For law enforcement, it could create the playbook that many agencies currently lack. The main risk is that the task force becomes symbolic rather than operational. To matter, it needs resources, technical expertise, strong private-sector coordination, privacy safeguards, fast response channels, and measurable outcomes. Crypto theft is not going away. The question is whether the federal response will remain fragmented or become coordinated enough to match the speed, scale, and sophistication of the threat. The Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act is an attempt to answer that question. And for millions of current and future crypto users, the answer matters. #CryptoRegulation #CryptoCrime #DOJ #BlockchainSecurity #DigitalAssets #CryptoTheft #CyberCrime #FBI #FinCEN #Web3Security #ConsumerProtection #CryptoLaw #Blockchain #Policy Source map for the numbered references inside the article: [1] Reps. Lance Gooden and Josh Gottheimer introduced the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act on June 11, 2026, proposing a DOJ-based task force with DOJ, DHS, Treasury, FBI, and other law-enforcement participation. [2] The bill text establishes the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force, defines its membership, duties, state/local coordination role, reporting obligations, and limits. [3] FBI IC3 reported 181,565 cryptocurrency-related complaints in 2025, with $11.366 billion in losses and an average reported loss of $62,604. [4] DOJ’s April 2025 “Ending Regulation By Prosecution” memo disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and shifted crypto enforcement toward direct criminal misuse of digital assets. [5] Chainalysis and TRM Labs reported that stolen crypto, personal wallet compromise, operational infrastructure attacks, and major hacks remained major crypto-crime concerns in 2025. [6] DOJ guidance on the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and wire fraud explains federal criminal tools already used in cyber and online fraud cases. [7] FTC consumer guidance warns that scammers use crypto payments, impersonation, fake investment platforms, romance/investment manipulation, and unrealistic profit promises to steal funds. [8] X’s authenticity rules prohibit scams, phishing, social engineering, money-flipping schemes, fraudulent discounts, and misleading manipulated content.

Why the New House Bill Could Reshape Digital Asset Crime Enforcement

Crypto theft is no longer a side issue in digital finance.
It has become a national law-enforcement problem, a consumer-protection problem, a market-confidence problem, and a political problem. Every major cycle in crypto brings new forms of crime: exchange hacks, private key compromises, wallet drainers, phishing campaigns, fake investment platforms, romance-investment scams, SIM swaps, malware, insider compromise, bridge exploits, social-engineered treasury theft, and laundering networks that move stolen funds across chains, mixers, bridges, exchanges, and offshore services.
That is why the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act matters.
Introduced by U.S. House lawmakers Lance Gooden and Josh Gottheimer, the bill would establish a Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force within the Department of Justice. The task force would be chaired by the Attorney General or the Attorney General’s designee and would include senior representatives from the DOJ, FBI, Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations, Treasury, FinCEN, and other federal law-enforcement agencies selected by the Attorney General. [1][2]
The purpose is simple but significant: create a single federal coordination structure for preventing, investigating, and prosecuting cryptocurrency theft and directly related criminal activity.
This is not a bill to create a new crypto regulator.
It is not a bill to ban crypto.
It is not a bill to define every digital asset.
It is not a bill to rewrite securities or commodities law.
Instead, it focuses on criminal enforcement coordination. That distinction is the most important part of the legislation.
The crypto industry has spent years arguing about whether tokens are securities, commodities, payment instruments, collectibles, software rights, governance tools, or something else. This bill takes a different lane. It says that regardless of the market-structure debate, theft is theft. If someone steals a person’s crypto through hacking, phishing, tricking, scamming, or unauthorized transfer, law enforcement needs a clearer playbook.
Why This Bill Arrived Now
The timing is not random.
According to the FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report, cryptocurrency-related complaints reached 181,565 in 2025, representing a 21% increase from 2024. Reported losses reached $11.366 billion, up 22% year over year. The average reported loss was $62,604, and 18,589 complainants reported losing more than $100,000. [3]
Those numbers explain the political pressure.
Crypto crime is no longer limited to protocol teams, exchanges, or high-net-worth traders. It affects retirees, small business owners, retail investors, developers, founders, creators, market makers, and ordinary people who may not fully understand wallet custody, irreversible settlement, private keys, or blockchain tracing.
The problem is also changing.
Chainalysis reported that in the first half of 2025, stolen funds from crypto services exceeded $2.17 billion, with the Bybit hack accounting for a major share of losses. The same report also noted that personal wallet compromises represented a growing share of stolen-fund activity. TRM Labs separately reported that illicit actors stole $2.87 billion across nearly 150 hacks in 2025, with attackers increasingly targeting operational infrastructure such as keys, wallets, and control planes instead of only smart contract code. [5]
This is the new reality.
Crypto theft is not only about bad smart contracts. It is about compromised humans, compromised devices, compromised keys, compromised operations, and fragmented law-enforcement response.
What the Bill Actually Does
The bill establishes the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force inside the Department of Justice. Its membership includes DOJ, FBI, DHS, HSI, Treasury, FinCEN, and other federal law-enforcement agencies deemed appropriate by the Attorney General. [2]
The task force would serve as the primary federal coordinating body for the prevention, investigation, and prosecution of cryptocurrency theft and criminal activity directly related to such theft. It would improve coordination among federal agencies involved in crypto theft investigations and prosecutions. It would also develop and disseminate best practices for evidence collection, digital evidence analysis, investigative techniques, asset tracing, and victim engagement. [2]
That “best practices” language is important.
Many local police departments are not equipped to handle crypto theft cases. A victim may report stolen funds to local authorities, only to discover that the officer taking the report has limited training in wallet addresses, transaction hashes, block explorers, exchange subpoenas, chain-hopping, mixers, bridges, or custody records. The victim may then contact an exchange, a wallet provider, the FBI, the FTC, IC3, or a blockchain analytics company, but there may be no clear path.
The proposed task force tries to solve that coordination gap.
The bill also requires technical assistance, training, and guidance for state and local law enforcement, including prosecutors. It calls for information sharing among federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial law-enforcement agencies. It also directs the task force to coordinate with international law-enforcement partners when investigations cross borders. [2]
That international component matters because crypto theft rarely respects national boundaries. A victim may be in Texas, the attacker may use infrastructure in Eastern Europe, laundering may move through Asian exchanges, and the stolen assets may pass through multiple networks within minutes.
Without coordination, speed favors the attacker.
What the Bill Does Not Do
The bill’s limitations are just as important as its powers.
The bill text says it does not authorize the regulation of cryptocurrency, digital asset markets, financial institutions, or financial products. It does not expand or limit the regulatory authority of any federal agency. It does not create new criminal offenses. It does not create a private right of action. [2]
That language appears designed to avoid the biggest political fight in crypto: regulation by enforcement versus clear market rules.
Supporters of the bill can argue that this is a narrow criminal-coordination measure. Critics of broader crypto regulation may find it easier to support because it does not create a new licensing regime, new token classification rules, or new agency powers over ordinary crypto markets.
This narrowness may be its political advantage.
A broader bill touching SEC authority, CFTC jurisdiction, stablecoin issuance, exchange registration, DeFi interfaces, wallet software, or self-custody could quickly become controversial. A bill focused on theft victims, hacking, phishing, and law-enforcement coordination is easier to frame as pro-consumer and pro-market integrity.
Still, narrow bills can have broad consequences.
If passed, this legislation could become the foundation for a more permanent federal crypto-crime response structure. It could shape how cases are referred, how evidence is collected, how victims are supported, and how agencies coordinate with exchanges and blockchain analytics providers.
Legal Analysis: Existing Law Is Not the Problem, Coordination Is
The bill does not create new crimes because many tools already exist.
Crypto theft can already implicate federal laws depending on the facts. Hacking and unauthorized computer access may involve the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Online fraud schemes may involve wire fraud. Laundering stolen proceeds may involve money laundering laws. Coordinated schemes may involve conspiracy statutes. Identity theft, access-device fraud, sanctions violations, and extortion laws may also become relevant depending on the conduct. [6]
The real problem is not always legal authority.
The problem is timing, coordination, jurisdiction, evidence preservation, and technical capability.
Crypto theft moves fast. Stolen funds can be split into hundreds of addresses, swapped into different assets, bridged across chains, deposited into centralized exchanges, sent to high-risk services, or mixed through obfuscation tools. Even when the blockchain is transparent, attribution is hard. Knowing where funds moved is not the same as knowing who controls the wallet.
This is why evidence collection matters.
A strong crypto theft response requires wallet addresses, transaction hashes, screenshots, communication records, exchange account details, IP logs, device evidence, phishing domains, smart contract interactions, and fast engagement with compliant exchanges or service providers. If victims report late or agencies do not know what to collect, recovery odds can fall quickly.
That is where the task force could matter.
It could help standardize what local police ask victims for. It could give prosecutors a clearer intake framework. It could create referral channels between local cases and federal investigators. It could improve coordination with exchanges and international partners. It could also identify recurring criminal infrastructure before it harms more victims.
The DOJ Context: Rebuilding Coordination After NCET
The bill also lands in a sensitive DOJ policy environment.
In April 2025, DOJ issued a memorandum titled “Ending Regulation By Prosecution.” The memo disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and directed the department to narrow its digital asset enforcement priorities. It stated that DOJ would focus on criminal misuse of digital assets rather than acting as a digital asset regulator. [4]
That shift was welcomed by parts of the crypto industry that believed the prior approach blurred the line between criminal prosecution and market regulation. But critics argued that dismantling a dedicated crypto enforcement team risked weakening the government’s ability to respond to complex crypto crime.
The new House bill appears to respond to both sides of that debate.
It does not revive the exact old approach of aggressive regulatory-style crypto enforcement. It does not tell DOJ to pursue crypto platforms simply because they are crypto platforms. But it does create a dedicated coordination body focused on theft, scams, hacking, and directly related criminal activity.
That is a politically careful design.
It accepts the argument that DOJ should not be a market regulator, while also rejecting the idea that crypto crime can be handled through fragmented, general-purpose enforcement alone.
In short: less “regulation by prosecution,” more “coordination against theft.”
Why Victims Need a Clearer System
The biggest human issue in this bill is victim support.
When a bank account is compromised, a victim usually knows where to start: the bank, card issuer, police report, fraud department, or consumer protection agency. Crypto victims often face a maze.
Was the theft a hack?
A scam?
An investment fraud?
A wallet drainer?
A fake support agent?
A phishing site?
A malicious smart contract?
A SIM-swap theft?
An exchange account takeover?
A romance-investment fraud?
A malware incident?
Each category may involve different evidence, different agencies, different platforms, and different recovery possibilities. Victims often panic, delay reporting, or get targeted again by fake recovery scammers.
The FTC warns that scammers commonly use crypto payments, fake investment platforms, impersonation, romance manipulation, and unrealistic profit promises. It also warns that crypto scams often begin through unexpected texts, calls, emails, social media, or dating platforms. [7]
That second wave of exploitation is especially dangerous.
After losing funds, victims search for help. Scammers then impersonate investigators, lawyers, blockchain experts, government officials, or recovery agencies. They promise to recover stolen assets for an upfront fee, then steal more.
A federal task force cannot eliminate these crimes, but it can create clearer public guidance and law-enforcement intake standards. That matters because confusion is part of the scammer’s business model.
Arguments in Favor of the Bill
Supporters will argue that the bill fills a real enforcement gap.
Crypto theft is cross-border, technical, fast-moving, and often too complex for local law enforcement to handle alone. A centralized DOJ-led task force could provide a consistent point of coordination. It could reduce duplicated work across agencies. It could help train local investigators. It could improve federal-state referrals. It could support victims who currently do not know where to turn.
Supporters will also argue that the bill protects innovation.
Legitimate crypto adoption depends on trust. If users believe theft is inevitable and law enforcement is helpless, mainstream adoption suffers. A better enforcement framework could strengthen confidence in digital assets without imposing new market rules.
That point is important.
A serious enforcement system is not anti-crypto. It can be pro-crypto if it targets thieves rather than lawful builders. The bill’s rule of construction tries to make that clear by avoiding new criminal offenses, new regulatory authority, and direct regulation of digital asset markets. [2]
Industry support from groups such as The Digital Chamber and Satoshi Action Fund reflects this framing. They support the idea that law enforcement needs better tools, training, and coordination to investigate theft and support victims without turning the bill into a broad regulatory expansion. [1]
Arguments Against or Concerns About the Bill
Critics may still raise several concerns.
The first concern is effectiveness. Creating a task force does not automatically solve the resource problem. Agencies still need investigators, prosecutors, blockchain analytics tools, training budgets, multilingual international coordination, and fast subpoena processes. A task force without funding or authority may become a report-writing structure rather than an operational force.
The second concern is duplication. DOJ, FBI, HSI, Treasury, FinCEN, Secret Service, state police, IC3, and other agencies already touch cybercrime and financial crime. Critics may ask whether another task force simplifies coordination or adds another layer.
The third concern is scope creep. Even though the bill says it does not regulate digital asset markets or create new crimes, some crypto advocates may worry that a permanent DOJ task force could expand over time into broader crypto surveillance or informal regulation.
The fourth concern is privacy. Asset tracing can help victims and identify criminals, but aggressive surveillance tools may also raise civil-liberties concerns if not bounded by clear legal process, warrants, subpoenas, and due-process protections.
The fifth concern is victim expectations. A federal task force may create hope, but crypto theft recovery is difficult. Blockchain tracing can follow funds, but freezing, seizing, and returning assets depends on where funds go, whether intermediaries cooperate, and whether suspects can be identified.
These concerns do not necessarily defeat the bill.
They show what Congress must clarify if it wants the task force to work.
The Main Challenge: Speed
Crypto theft investigations are often a race.
A victim may discover a drained wallet hours after the theft. By then, the funds may already be split, swapped, bridged, and moved toward off-ramps. In some cases, centralized exchanges can freeze funds if alerted quickly. In other cases, assets move through noncustodial or offshore channels where recovery is far harder.
This is why a “standing playbook” matters.
If state and local agencies know exactly what to collect, where to report, and how to escalate urgent cases, recovery odds can improve. If victims are told to preserve transaction hashes, wallet addresses, screenshots, communications, and device evidence immediately, investigators can act faster.
But speed also requires private-sector cooperation.
Exchanges, custodians, stablecoin issuers, blockchain analytics firms, wallet providers, and cybersecurity companies all play roles. A DOJ-led task force would need strong channels with lawful service providers while respecting privacy and due process.
Impact on Exchanges, Wallet Providers, and Crypto Startups
If the bill becomes law, crypto companies may feel indirect pressure even though the bill does not impose new market regulation.
Exchanges may receive more coordinated law-enforcement requests. Wallet providers may face more victim-support expectations. Cybersecurity firms may become more important partners. Stablecoin issuers may face more freezing and tracing requests when stolen funds move through their tokens. Compliance teams may need better systems for identifying stolen-fund exposure.
This could benefit mature companies.
Well-run exchanges and custodians already invest heavily in compliance, monitoring, suspicious activity reporting, customer support, and law-enforcement response. A clearer federal coordination model could reduce confusion and create more predictable engagement.
Smaller teams may struggle.
A startup with limited legal and compliance resources may find law-enforcement requests difficult to process. This is why the task force should also develop clear, proportionate standards for industry cooperation, not informal pressure that only large firms can handle.
International Dimension
Crypto theft is global.
North Korean-linked actors, organized scam compounds, ransomware groups, phishing networks, laundering brokers, darknet services, and offshore exchanges all create international enforcement problems. U.S. law enforcement cannot solve these cases alone.
The bill’s international coordination language is therefore essential. [2]
Effective crypto-theft enforcement requires cross-border cooperation through mutual legal assistance, sanctions coordination, Interpol channels, exchange cooperation, and joint operations. But international enforcement is slow. Criminals move at blockchain speed, while legal process moves at government speed.
The task force’s real value may be its ability to pre-build relationships before major cases happen.
Xhandle Publication Rules and Responsible Coverage
For X, this topic should be covered carefully.
X prohibits scam tactics used to obtain money, property, or private information, including social engineering, money-flipping schemes, fraudulent discounts, and phishing. X also prohibits inauthentic media that could mislead people and cause harm. [8]
That means a professional X article about crypto theft should avoid:
Fake recovery-service promotions.
Wallet addresses claiming to track stolen funds without evidence.
Unverified accusations against platforms or individuals.
Guaranteed recovery claims.
Engagement-bait around victims.
Screenshots exposing private victim information.
Instructions that help criminals hide funds.
The safest framing is educational and policy-focused: explain the bill, the enforcement problem, the victim-support gap, the legal limits, and the security implications.
This article should not be used to promote a recovery service, trading platform, token, private investigator, or paid “asset recovery” link.
What the Bill Should Add or Clarify
The bill is useful, but Congress could strengthen it.
First, the annual report should include public, anonymized data on case intake, victim categories, common attack types, recovery outcomes, cross-border challenges, and bottlenecks.
Second, the task force should publish victim-facing guidance in plain English.
Third, it should create standardized intake templates for local police.
Fourth, it should clarify how privacy and due process will be protected when blockchain analytics and exchange data are used.
Fifth, it should define how the task force will coordinate with IC3, FTC, state attorneys general, and consumer-protection agencies.
Sixth, it should include training support for prosecutors, not only investigators. Crypto cases fail when prosecutors cannot explain wallets, keys, tracing, and chain evidence clearly to judges and juries.
Seventh, it should address fake recovery scams as a core secondary harm.
These additions would make the bill more practical.
Final Takeaway
The Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act is not the largest crypto bill in Congress, but it may be one of the most practical.
Its message is clear: the United States does not need to settle every crypto classification debate before improving its response to theft.
People are losing money now.
Attackers are moving faster than victims, faster than local police, and often faster than fragmented federal processes. Crypto theft has become a national enforcement challenge involving fraud, hacking, phishing, scams, wallet compromise, laundering, and cross-border coordination.
The bill’s strongest feature is its narrow focus.
It does not create new crypto crimes. It does not create a new market regulator. It does not expand agency authority over digital asset markets. It focuses on criminal enforcement coordination, best practices, state and local training, victim engagement, international cooperation, and annual reporting to Congress. [2]
That makes it politically realistic.
For crypto supporters, the bill can be seen as a trust-building measure that targets criminals without punishing innovation. For consumer-protection advocates, it is a step toward giving victims a clearer path. For law enforcement, it could create the playbook that many agencies currently lack.
The main risk is that the task force becomes symbolic rather than operational.
To matter, it needs resources, technical expertise, strong private-sector coordination, privacy safeguards, fast response channels, and measurable outcomes.
Crypto theft is not going away.
The question is whether the federal response will remain fragmented or become coordinated enough to match the speed, scale, and sophistication of the threat.
The Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act is an attempt to answer that question.
And for millions of current and future crypto users, the answer matters.
#CryptoRegulation
#CryptoCrime
#DOJ
#BlockchainSecurity
#DigitalAssets
#CryptoTheft
#CyberCrime
#FBI
#FinCEN
#Web3Security
#ConsumerProtection
#CryptoLaw
#Blockchain
#Policy
Source map for the numbered references inside the article:
[1] Reps. Lance Gooden and Josh Gottheimer introduced the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Enforcement and Coordination Act on June 11, 2026, proposing a DOJ-based task force with DOJ, DHS, Treasury, FBI, and other law-enforcement participation.
[2] The bill text establishes the Federal Cryptocurrency Theft Task Force, defines its membership, duties, state/local coordination role, reporting obligations, and limits.
[3] FBI IC3 reported 181,565 cryptocurrency-related complaints in 2025, with $11.366 billion in losses and an average reported loss of $62,604.
[4] DOJ’s April 2025 “Ending Regulation By Prosecution” memo disbanded the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and shifted crypto enforcement toward direct criminal misuse of digital assets.
[5] Chainalysis and TRM Labs reported that stolen crypto, personal wallet compromise, operational infrastructure attacks, and major hacks remained major crypto-crime concerns in 2025.
[6] DOJ guidance on the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and wire fraud explains federal criminal tools already used in cyber and online fraud cases.
[7] FTC consumer guidance warns that scammers use crypto payments, impersonation, fake investment platforms, romance/investment manipulation, and unrealistic profit promises to steal funds.
[8] X’s authenticity rules prohibit scams, phishing, social engineering, money-flipping schemes, fraudulent discounts, and misleading manipulated content.
Solana Unchained Presale Is Now Live Solana Unchained is a Solana-based project focused on AI-powered tools, Web3 utility, and a fixed token supply structure. The project states that its goal is to build practical blockchain tools while maintaining a transparent roadmap for its community. Presale: Live Now Planned Listing Date: July 28, 2026 Website: solanaunchained.com X: @Unchained_Token Telegram: t.me/Solana_unchained Whitepaper: solana-unchained.gitbook.io/whitepaper Dashboard: mydashboard.solanaunchained.com Before participating, users should review the official website, whitepaper, tokenomics, roadmap, and all related risks. This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research. #Solana #Web3 #AI #Blockchain #Crypto
Solana Unchained Presale Is Now Live

Solana Unchained is a Solana-based project focused on AI-powered tools, Web3 utility, and a fixed token supply structure.

The project states that its goal is to build practical blockchain tools while maintaining a transparent roadmap for its community.

Presale: Live Now
Planned Listing Date: July 28, 2026
Website: solanaunchained.com
X: @Unchained_Token
Telegram: t.me/Solana_unchained
Whitepaper: solana-unchained.gitbook.io/whitepaper
Dashboard: mydashboard.solanaunchained.com

Before participating, users should review the official website, whitepaper, tokenomics, roadmap, and all related risks.

This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research.

#Solana #Web3 #AI #Blockchain #Crypto
🚀 Bitcoin Hits $82,000 With Strong Momentum 🟠 $BTC continued its powerful rally today and successfully reached the $82,000 level. Buyers are clearly in control right now, and momentum across the crypto market remains strong. As long as BTC holds these higher levels, the bullish narrative stays intact. The market is heating up again. #Bitcoin #BTC #Crypto
🚀 Bitcoin Hits $82,000 With Strong Momentum

🟠 $BTC continued its powerful rally today and successfully reached the $82,000 level.

Buyers are clearly in control right now, and momentum across the crypto market remains strong.
As long as BTC holds these higher levels, the bullish narrative stays intact.

The market is heating up again.

#Bitcoin #BTC #Crypto
🚨 Institutional Whale Alert Tom Lee’s Bitmine has acquired $237M worth of $ETH. This level of accumulation reflects strong long-term conviction from institutional players. Moves of this scale rarely go unnoticed and can influence broader market sentiment. Is this a signal of continued strength for Ethereum? #ETH #Crypto #Altcoins
🚨 Institutional Whale Alert

Tom Lee’s Bitmine has acquired $237M worth of $ETH.

This level of accumulation reflects strong long-term conviction from institutional players. Moves of this scale rarely go unnoticed and can influence broader market sentiment.

Is this a signal of continued strength for Ethereum?

#ETH #Crypto #Altcoins
Good morning X fam ☀️ $BILL is getting mixed reactions right now. Some are praising the airdrop, others are calling it out hard. I skipped the airdrop but took a small spot entry on BingX 😆 Just playing momentum and watching how price reacts at these levels. The key question: can $BILL hold strength if $BTC shows weakness? If Bitcoin rolls over, low caps usually get hit first. No exceptions. So what’s your plan? Take profit around $0.05 or wait for a push toward $0.10 if momentum continues? #Crypto #BTC #Altcoins #Trading #BingX
Good morning X fam ☀️

$BILL is getting mixed reactions right now.

Some are praising the airdrop, others are calling it out hard.

I skipped the airdrop but took a small spot entry on BingX 😆
Just playing momentum and watching how price reacts at these levels.

The key question: can $BILL hold strength if $BTC shows weakness?

If Bitcoin rolls over, low caps usually get hit first. No exceptions.

So what’s your plan?

Take profit around $0.05
or wait for a push toward $0.10 if momentum continues?

#Crypto #BTC #Altcoins #Trading #BingX
$250K $BTC by 2029 — A full-cycle thesis revisited Veteran trader Peter Brandt points to Bitcoin’s historical 4-year halving cycle: peak → correction → consolidation → expansion. If this pattern holds, the cycle bottom may not form until Sep–Oct 2026. He also notes the possibility of a deeper retracement into the $40K–$50K range before the next major move higher. The key question: Does this cycle repeat, or does Bitcoin break the pattern? Do you see BTC reaching $250K by 2029? #Bitcoin #BTC #Crypto #Markets
$250K $BTC by 2029 — A full-cycle thesis revisited

Veteran trader Peter Brandt points to Bitcoin’s historical 4-year halving cycle:
peak → correction → consolidation → expansion.

If this pattern holds, the cycle bottom may not form until Sep–Oct 2026. He also notes the possibility of a deeper retracement into the $40K–$50K range before the next major move higher.

The key question:
Does this cycle repeat, or does Bitcoin break the pattern?

Do you see BTC reaching $250K by 2029?

#Bitcoin #BTC #Crypto #Markets
🚨 Elon Musk sparks fresh crypto debate $TSLA $SHIB During court testimony, Musk stated that while some digital assets may hold value, he believes many cryptocurrencies lack strong fundamentals. The remarks are likely to fuel broader discussion across the crypto market around legitimacy, speculation, and long-term adoption. High-profile commentary continues to influence sentiment as investors assess market direction.
🚨 Elon Musk sparks fresh crypto debate

$TSLA $SHIB

During court testimony, Musk stated that while some digital assets may hold value, he believes many cryptocurrencies lack strong fundamentals.

The remarks are likely to fuel broader discussion across the crypto market around legitimacy, speculation, and long-term adoption.

High-profile commentary continues to influence sentiment as investors assess market direction.
$BTC attempted a breakout after multiple days of consolidation but lacked strength, leading to rejection back into range. Price is now holding near 78k, with liquidity still sitting above recent highs. Another breakout attempt remains likely, especially if OI rises with stronger momentum. Key upside levels to watch: • 79.5k-80.7k short-term reaction zone • Potential wick higher remains possible • Weekly close above 82.6k would shift broader structure For now, market remains range-bound, but the next breakout attempt could be significant. #BTC #Bitcoin #Crypto
$BTC attempted a breakout after multiple days of consolidation but lacked strength, leading to rejection back into range.

Price is now holding near 78k, with liquidity still sitting above recent highs. Another breakout attempt remains likely, especially if OI rises with stronger momentum.

Key upside levels to watch:
• 79.5k-80.7k short-term reaction zone
• Potential wick higher remains possible
• Weekly close above 82.6k would shift broader structure

For now, market remains range-bound, but the next breakout attempt could be significant.

#BTC #Bitcoin #Crypto
🚀 XRP adoption continues expanding. Integration with Rakuten Wallet reportedly opens access to 44M+ users and millions of merchant locations, strengthening real-world utility beyond speculation. While sentiment reaches multi-year highs, XRP remains in consolidation near key resistance, suggesting fundamentals may be building ahead of the next major move. If momentum confirms, market structure could shift significantly. Is this the kind of real adoption that defines XRP’s next phase? #XRP $XRP
🚀 XRP adoption continues expanding.

Integration with Rakuten Wallet reportedly opens access to 44M+ users and millions of merchant locations, strengthening real-world utility beyond speculation.

While sentiment reaches multi-year highs, XRP remains in consolidation near key resistance, suggesting fundamentals may be building ahead of the next major move.

If momentum confirms, market structure could shift significantly.

Is this the kind of real adoption that defines XRP’s next phase?

#XRP $XRP
Ethereum Foundation has reportedly sold approximately $33.5M worth of ETH to BitMine over the past 60 days. Current holdings are estimated at 92,548 ETH. At this pace, treasury reserves could decline significantly by 2027 if similar sales continue. This raises broader discussions around treasury strategy, institutional accumulation, and the long-term distribution of Ethereum’s foundational reserves. The bigger story is not just the sales, but how major ETH holdings may gradually shift toward larger corporate entities. #Ethereum #ETH #Crypto #Blockchain
Ethereum Foundation has reportedly sold approximately $33.5M worth of ETH to BitMine over the past 60 days.

Current holdings are estimated at 92,548 ETH.

At this pace, treasury reserves could decline significantly by 2027 if similar sales continue.

This raises broader discussions around treasury strategy, institutional accumulation, and the long-term distribution of Ethereum’s foundational reserves.

The bigger story is not just the sales, but how major ETH holdings may gradually shift toward larger corporate entities.

#Ethereum #ETH #Crypto #Blockchain
BNB Chain extends zero-fee stablecoin transfers through May 31. @BNBCHAIN will continue covering gas fees for USDC, USD1, and U transfers across the network, making stablecoin transactions more accessible for users. So far, the initiative has subsidized over $4.5 million in transaction fees, with support across wallets, exchange withdrawals, and cross-chain bridges. This move strengthens BNB Chain’s push for broader stablecoin adoption and smoother on-chain activity.
BNB Chain extends zero-fee stablecoin transfers through May 31.

@BNBCHAIN will continue covering gas fees for USDC, USD1, and U transfers across the network, making stablecoin transactions more accessible for users.

So far, the initiative has subsidized over $4.5 million in transaction fees, with support across wallets, exchange withdrawals, and cross-chain bridges.

This move strengthens BNB Chain’s push for broader stablecoin adoption and smoother on-chain activity.
$DOGE investors often focus on long-term accumulation during lower price periods, positioning ahead of broader market bull cycles or major sentiment catalysts. Historically, price momentum has been influenced by strong community support, macro crypto trends, and high-profile endorsements, making patience and timing key factors in potential returns.
$DOGE investors often focus on long-term accumulation during lower price periods, positioning ahead of broader market bull cycles or major sentiment catalysts.

Historically, price momentum has been influenced by strong community support, macro crypto trends, and high-profile endorsements, making patience and timing key factors in potential returns.
🚨 YFSX & VIN — DeFi Ecosystem Overview Key fundamentals currently gaining attention: 🔐 Reported 100/100 code security score on CertiK Skynet 🔒 Limited supply (19,999 YFSX) ⚙️ Dual-token structure (YFSX + VIN) 📈 4+ years of operation 🔥 Deflationary token model 🌍 Community-driven and decentralized These factors highlight a focus on security, scarcity, and utility within the ecosystem. Always do your own research before engaging with any project. 🔗 Learn more: https://yfsx.vin #YFSX #VIN #DeFi #Crypto #Web3 #BSC #Altcoins #CryptoSecurity
🚨 YFSX & VIN — DeFi Ecosystem Overview

Key fundamentals currently gaining attention:

🔐 Reported 100/100 code security score on CertiK Skynet
🔒 Limited supply (19,999 YFSX)
⚙️ Dual-token structure (YFSX + VIN)
📈 4+ years of operation
🔥 Deflationary token model
🌍 Community-driven and decentralized

These factors highlight a focus on security, scarcity, and utility within the ecosystem.

Always do your own research before engaging with any project.

🔗 Learn more: https://yfsx.vin

#YFSX #VIN #DeFi #Crypto #Web3 #BSC #Altcoins #CryptoSecurity
Everyone is kindly requested to join the AMA session.
Everyone is kindly requested to join the AMA session.
Crypto_Poolz
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[Повтор] Crypto Poolz x AEON
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🚀 Overview: Soli Coin ($SOLI) Soli Coin is a blockchain initiative designed to explore how decentralized technology can support transparent social initiatives while building a broader ecosystem for digital payments and community participation. The project is built on the Ethereum network as an ERC-20 token and focuses on combining blockchain infrastructure with initiatives aimed at improving transparency in charitable and community-driven programs. Project Vision Soli Coin aims to develop an ecosystem where blockchain technology can support social initiatives while also enabling digital financial tools. By using on-chain transactions, the project seeks to provide improved transparency and traceability for community programs and related activities. Key Features • ERC-20 token deployed on Ethereum • Total supply: 202,104,150 SOLI • 10% allocation designated for a medical support initiative • Liquidity lock implemented for security considerations • Planned staking functionality and DAO-based governance • Future NFT marketplace focused on social initiatives Ecosystem Development Plans 🔹 SoliApp – A planned application for cross-border crypto and fiat payments 🔹 SoliPay Gateway – Merchant and charity payment integration system 🔹 NFT Marketplace – A platform where creators may support social initiatives 🔹 DAO Governance – Community participation in certain project decisions 🔹 SoliChain – A proposed blockchain focused on social impact use cases Token Information Network: Ethereum Token Standard: ERC-20 Total Supply: 202,104,150 SOLI Contract Address: 0x0EAdDCBe240d7Eeb1bA21f1EED48E58293969c6e Official Project Links Website: https://solicoin.ai Twitter: https://x.com/solicoinx Telegram: https://t.me/Solicoinchat This post is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Readers should conduct their own research before engaging with any blockchain project.
🚀 Overview: Soli Coin ($SOLI)

Soli Coin is a blockchain initiative designed to explore how decentralized technology can support transparent social initiatives while building a broader ecosystem for digital payments and community participation.

The project is built on the Ethereum network as an ERC-20 token and focuses on combining blockchain infrastructure with initiatives aimed at improving transparency in charitable and community-driven programs.

Project Vision

Soli Coin aims to develop an ecosystem where blockchain technology can support social initiatives while also enabling digital financial tools. By using on-chain transactions, the project seeks to provide improved transparency and traceability for community programs and related activities.

Key Features

• ERC-20 token deployed on Ethereum
• Total supply: 202,104,150 SOLI
• 10% allocation designated for a medical support initiative
• Liquidity lock implemented for security considerations
• Planned staking functionality and DAO-based governance
• Future NFT marketplace focused on social initiatives

Ecosystem Development Plans

🔹 SoliApp – A planned application for cross-border crypto and fiat payments
🔹 SoliPay Gateway – Merchant and charity payment integration system
🔹 NFT Marketplace – A platform where creators may support social initiatives
🔹 DAO Governance – Community participation in certain project decisions
🔹 SoliChain – A proposed blockchain focused on social impact use cases

Token Information

Network: Ethereum
Token Standard: ERC-20
Total Supply: 202,104,150 SOLI

Contract Address:
0x0EAdDCBe240d7Eeb1bA21f1EED48E58293969c6e

Official Project Links

Website: https://solicoin.ai
Twitter: https://x.com/solicoinx
Telegram: https://t.me/Solicoinchat

This post is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Readers should conduct their own research before engaging with any blockchain project.
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