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@James

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Since 30.05.2026

Crypto Clarity Act may not be signed into law this year. What could this mean for the crypto industry?(reddit.com)
Recent reports suggest the Crypto Clarity Act is no longer expected to be signed into law this year. While this could delay regulatory clarity in the U.S., I don't think it necessarily changes the long-term direction of crypto. Institutional adoption, blockchain development, and global regulation continue to move forward, but clearer U.S. legislation could still influence investor confidence and business decisions. Do you think this delay will have a meaningful impact on the market, or is it just another short-term headline? submitted by /u/Mission-Stomach-3751 [link] [Kommentare]
Crypto-backed loan on Bybit - EU regulation from July 1st?(reddit.com)
Hi everyone, I have a question for people following the Bybit Global / Bybit EU changes for EEA residents from July 1. I currently have an active crypto-backed loan on bybit com, not regular margin trading. Does anyone know what will practically happen to existing loans after July 1 for users from Poland / the EEA? I am especially interested in the following: Do existing loans need to be closed/repaid immediately, or can they still be maintained? After July 1, will users still be able to repay the loan manually, for example by selling part of the collateral or using collateral for repayment? Will it still be possible to add collateral, make partial repayments, and manage LTV normally? If the loan needs to be moved elsewhere, what is currently the closest alternative in Europe/EEA — OKX Flexible Loan, or something else? I understand that the official Bybit announcement only says that access to “certain services” on Bybit Global for EEA residents will be progressively limited, and that users will retain access to their assets in order to remediate positions and balances. However, I have not seen a clear loan-specific explanation yet. I would appreciate input from anyone. submitted by /u/TomekGregory [link] [Kommentare]
crypto vs kohls cash(reddit.com)
crypto newb here. i’m not trying to be sarcastic. bitcoin has been around for years, but i still can not wrap my head around its value as a currency. there is the trading aspect, some have made millions and some have lost millions. but outside the trading sphere, what value does it have? how long is it actually going to be around? and what about all the shitcoins? are they NFTs all over again? the best i can understand it, is that it is like kohl’s cash, only traded in one venue. what am i missing? submitted by /u/No_Type1123 [link] [Kommentare]
Daily Crypto Discussion - June 26, 2026 (GMT+0)(reddit.com)
Welcome to the Daily Crypto Discussion thread. Please read the disclaimer and rules before participating. Disclaimer: Consider all information posted here with several liberal heaps of salt, and always cross check any information you may read on this thread with known sources. Any trade information posted in this open thread may be highly misleading, and could be an attempt to manipulate new readers by known "pump and dump (PnD) groups" for their own profit. BEWARE of such practices and exercise utmost caution before acting on any trade tip mentioned here. Please be careful about what information you share and the actions you take. Do not share the amounts of your portfolios (why not just share percentage?). Do not share your private keys or wallet seed. Use strong, non-SMS 2FA if possible. Beware of scammers and be smart. Do not invest more than you can afford to lose, and do not fall for pyramid schemes, promises of unrealistic returns (get-rich-quick schemes), and other common scams. Rules: All sub rules apply in this thread. The prior exemption for karma and age requirements is no longer in effect. Discussion topics must be related to cryptocurrency. Behave with civility and politeness. Do not use offensive, racist or homophobic language. Comments will be sorted by newest first. Useful Links: Beginner Resources Intro to r/Cryptocurrency MOONs 🌔 MOONs Wiki Page r/CryptoCurrency Discord r/CryptoCurrencyMemes Prior Daily Discussions - (Link fixed.) r/CryptoCurrencyMeta - Join in on all meta discussions regarding r/CryptoCurrency whether it be moon distributions or governance. Finding Other Discussion Threads Follow a mod account below to be notified in your home feed when the latest r/CC discussion thread of your interest is posted. u/CryptoDaily- — Posts the Daily Crypto Discussion threads. u/CryptoSkeptics — Posts the Monthly Skeptics Discussion threads. u/CryptoOptimists- — Posts the Monthly Optimists Discussion threads. u/CryptoNewsUpdates — Posts the Monthly News Summary threads. submitted by /u/AutoModerator [link] [Kommentare]
Your opinion on Mantle MNT(reddit.com)
It’s clear that it’s best to focus mainly on BTC, ETH, SOL, etc. It’s also well known that most cryptocurrencies aren’t worth paying attention to. However, sometimes I like to read about various projects and such… And recently I read about Mantle, but there are very few opinions on this project. Do you have any thoughts on MNT? Any predictions? submitted by /u/dannyxdii [link] [Kommentare]
— what's everyone doing about the MiCA cutoff on the 1st?(reddit.com)
So the deadline's basically here (July 1) and I keep going back and forth on how much it actually changes for me day to day. For the people who don't follow the EU stuff: after the 1st, exchanges without a MiCA license can't legally serve EU users. The number that got me was something like 210 of ~3,000 firms actually cleared it. Even Binance is apparently still sorting its license out after the Greece thing stalled. What I can't tell is how hard the cutover actually bites. Like is it "your account is gone July 1," or a slow thing where pairs quietly disappear and withdrawals get clunky over a few months? I've seen people claim both and I don't know who's right. I already pulled most of my stack to a hardware wallet a while back so I'm not too worried about the holding part. It's more the moving-between-things part — if a chunk of the smaller exchanges get cut, I'm probably leaning more on non-custodial swap stuff and DEXs, (eg tokensfund) which I'm fine with but the rates and the learning curve are real. Anyway, curious what people are actually doing. Sitting tight? Moving to a licensed EU platform? Going more self-custody? And if you're actually in the EU and have read more of the fine print than me, genuinely how worried should I be. submitted by /u/b4basit [link] [Kommentare]
Daily Crypto Discussion - June 25, 2026 (GMT+0)(reddit.com)
Welcome to the Daily Crypto Discussion thread. Please read the disclaimer and rules before participating. Disclaimer: Consider all information posted here with several liberal heaps of salt, and always cross check any information you may read on this thread with known sources. Any trade information posted in this open thread may be highly misleading, and could be an attempt to manipulate new readers by known "pump and dump (PnD) groups" for their own profit. BEWARE of such practices and exercise utmost caution before acting on any trade tip mentioned here. Please be careful about what information you share and the actions you take. Do not share the amounts of your portfolios (why not just share percentage?). Do not share your private keys or wallet seed. Use strong, non-SMS 2FA if possible. Beware of scammers and be smart. Do not invest more than you can afford to lose, and do not fall for pyramid schemes, promises of unrealistic returns (get-rich-quick schemes), and other common scams. Rules: All sub rules apply in this thread. The prior exemption for karma and age requirements is no longer in effect. Discussion topics must be related to cryptocurrency. Behave with civility and politeness. Do not use offensive, racist or homophobic language. Comments will be sorted by newest first. Useful Links: Beginner Resources Intro to r/Cryptocurrency MOONs 🌔 MOONs Wiki Page r/CryptoCurrency Discord r/CryptoCurrencyMemes Prior Daily Discussions - (Link fixed.) r/CryptoCurrencyMeta - Join in on all meta discussions regarding r/CryptoCurrency whether it be moon distributions or governance. Finding Other Discussion Threads Follow a mod account below to be notified in your home feed when the latest r/CC discussion thread of your interest is posted. u/CryptoDaily- — Posts the Daily Crypto Discussion threads. u/CryptoSkeptics — Posts the Monthly Skeptics Discussion threads. u/CryptoOptimists- — Posts the Monthly Optimists Discussion threads. u/CryptoNewsUpdates — Posts the Monthly News Summary threads. submitted by /u/AutoModerator [link] [Kommentare]
2026 is on track to be the worst year for crypto hacks ever. AI is a big reason why(reddit.com)
Q2 2026 just set a record: 83 separate crypto hacks, the most ever in a single quarter. over $750 million stolen. april alone was $606 million across just 12 incidents. and we're barely halfway through the year. but the scary part isn't the numbers. it's how the attacks are happening. multiple security firms (TRM Labs, CertiK, Chainalysis) are now saying the same thing: attackers, especially North Korean groups, are using AI to find and exploit vulnerabilities faster than protocols can patch them. here's what that actually looks like in practice: AI-powered vulnerability scanning. attackers are running AI agents that scan smart contracts continuously for exploitable bugs. a protocol's security team might audit their code once or twice. an attacker's AI agent runs 24/7 for weeks, spending $10-20k in compute to find a single crack. the economics are wildly asymmetric: a defender's audit has a budget and a deadline. an attacker's scan has neither. deepfake social engineering. the Zerion hack in april used AI-generated social engineering in a long-term campaign to steal from hot wallets. there are now tools being sold that use voice manipulation and deepfakes specifically to bypass KYC checks on exchanges. this isn't theoretical. it's a service you can subscribe to. automated exploit development. tasks that used to take skilled researchers months, like reverse-engineering contract logic and chaining exploits, can now be done in hours with AI assistance. the barrier to entry for crypto hacking has dropped dramatically. target selection. AI is being used to identify the highest-value targets by scanning TVL, contract complexity, and security posture across hundreds of protocols simultaneously. attackers are picking their targets more intelligently, not just opportunistically. the result: more frequent attacks, more sophisticated execution, and a structural advantage for attackers over defenders. one security researcher put it bluntly: "before AI, the number of elite hackers was limited. now almost anyone could operate like an elite hacker for a subscription fee." the uncomfortable question this raises for defi: most protocols are still running the same security playbook from 2022. periodic audits, bug bounties, maybe a monitoring dashboard. that worked when attackers were humans with limited time. it doesn't work when the attacker is an AI agent that never sleeps and costs almost nothing to run. what actually needs to change? is it just "more audits and bigger bug bounties" or does the entire security model for on-chain protocols need to be rethought from the ground up? submitted by /u/ginete_tech [link] [Kommentare]