Crypto World
AI Deepfake Election Ad Raises Transparency Concerns
The election season is ramping up in the United States, meaning that airwaves and social media are flooded with campaign ads.
Candidates, in addition to the political action committees (PACs) supporting and opposing them, are projected to spend a record-breaking $10 billion in ads this cycle. Some of that is going into AI deepfakes.
At least 15 AI-generated campaign ads have run since November, according to NBC News. Some have used deepfakes to portray a candidate doing or saying things that compromise their campaign’s image.
Transparency advocates say the ads, which are illegal in some states, could harm the integrity of American elections.
Ad runs afoul of local election laws
In the context of campaign ads, AI is mostly governed at the state level. Some 28 states have disclosure laws, while in two states, it is prohibited, though not totally.

In Minnesota, one ad campaign has already bumped up against local legislation. Minnesota Lt. Governor Penny Flanagan posted on BlueSky on June 3 “you might see a TV ad starring something that… kind of looks like me.”
Flanagan was referring to an ad run by a PAC supporting her opponent in the Senate primary race, fellow Democrat and US Representative Angie Craig. The ad shows Flanagan standing atop a large pile of cash, and criticizes her alleged ties to special interest groups.
“My opponent’s super PAC is using an AI deepfake of me to mislead voters. They can’t win with the truth – so they’re resorting to lies.”
“It’s disgusting. Minnesotans deserve better.”
The ad may run afoul of Minnesota campaign laws. In 2023, Democratic State Representative Maye Quade introduced a bill that bans AI deepfakes. It was passed into law, and “anyone who widely shares a deep fake within 90 days of an election” is guilty of a crime. This, provided that the person also:
- Knows or should have known the ad was a deepfake and made without the consent of the depicted person
- Acted with the intent to harm a candidate’s reputation to influence an election
The ads ran after the DFL, Minnesota’s Democratic party, nominated Flanagan, so technically it may have not violated the law. Still, Flanagan’s campaign is reportedly consulting lawyers.
Quade told local media that the ad violated the spirit of the law, and that people in general don’t like AI being used this way. “People don’t like this, broadly […] What campaign on either side of the aisle is going to help voters feel good about their candidate using this?”
Related: Prediction markets legal battles heat up in Minnesota, Rhode Island
On the Democratic side of the aisle, 40 DFL state legislators signed a letter condemning the use of AI deepfakes in campaign materials. They noted that, in 2023, “lawmakers voted nearly unanimously to ban the use of deceptive AI-generated deepfakes in elections, recognizing the threat manipulated AI content poses to voters and public trust.”
“Regardless of party, the use of AI-generated deepfakes in campaign advertising is unacceptable.”
Mark Jablonowski, the CEO of advertising firm DSPolitical, told NBC that he thinks most politicians will rise above it. “I think most campaigns on both sides of the aisle probably want to do the right thing […] There, of course, are going to be examples that you can point to where people are going about it the wrong way.”
The PAC that issued the ad, North Star Dawn PAC, did not respond to Cointelegraph’s request for comment.
What do election laws say about AI deepfakes?
As noted above, some 30 states have laws on the books regarding AI use in elections. The vast majority of these relate to simple disclosure, with many states only having civil penalties for infractions.
The Federal Elections Commission (FEC), the regulator responsible for creating funding, disclosure and other rules concerning elections. Regarding ads, the FEC told Cointelegraph:
“Commission regulations require clear and conspicuous disclaimers to appear on certain campaign advertisements, including public communications that are distributed by a federal candidate’s campaign committee.There is also a prohibition against ‘fraudulent misrepresentation.’”
Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group, submitted a petition for rulemaking before the FEC in 2023, asking the commission to issue rules for AI. Instead, the body “decided not to initiate a rulemaking.”
“The Commission determined that the statute’s fraudulent misrepresentation ban is technology neutral, applying to all means of the specified fraud, including AI-assisted media.”
One may not expect quick action from the federal government, at least not from Congress, on AI. In 2023, Senator Amy Klobuchar and Representative Yvette Clarke, both Democrats, introduced the REAL Political Advertisements Act in their respective chambers. However, the bill failed to pass in either house.
If anything, the US Congress shows a total unwillingness to meaningfully regulate AI. Nearly one year ago, President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law. The final version narrowly avoided including a 10-year ban on any state and local regulation of AI, giving the industry carte blanche for anything from building data centers to how AI would be used in popular media.
Now, two Congressmen are back at it. Democrat Lori Trahan and Republican Jay Obernolte on June 4 introduced a bill that, if passed, would ban states from passing laws “targeting artificial intelligence model development.”
According to the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) “This could include anything from privacy regulations to antidiscrimination requirements to AI safety laws.”
The ACLU noted that the aforementioned 10-year ban was stripped from the Senate file in a near-unanimous 99-1 vote.
Jina John, senior policy counsel for AI, privacy and technology at the ACLU, said, “This draft bill fails to learn from Congress’s previous attempts to block state AI regulations. States must be able to protect their own residents from harm, hold tech companies accountable, and ensure that AI is safe and trustworthy.”
Magazine: Korea probes Polymarket users, crypto PACs sweep primaries: Hodler’s Digest, May 31- June 6
Crypto World
BlackRock and Fidelity Dominate U.S. Bitcoin ETF Flows
TLDR
- BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC account for the majority of recent U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF inflows.
- On January 14, IBIT and FBTC captured over 90% of the $840.6 million total inflows.
- Similar concentration appeared on April 17 and May 1, with the two funds absorbing most new capital.
- Bitcoin is down about 29% year-to-date, yet IBIT and FBTC continue to dominate allocation days.
- Smaller ETFs such as EZBC, HODL, BRRR, and BTCW often record single-digit million daily flows.
BlackRock and Fidelity now command most new allocations into U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Recent flow data shows the two firms absorb the bulk of daily inflows and shape overall direction. The pattern has strengthened through 2026 as other issuers record limited activity.
Bitcoin ETFs Flows Concentrate Around Two Issuers
When U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs launched in January 2024, investors chose from more than a dozen products. However, flow data now shows BlackRock and Fidelity capture most institutional allocations. Farside Investors’ data highlights repeated sessions where the pair dominated inflows.
On January 14, spot Bitcoin ETFs drew $840.6 million in net inflows. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust attracted $648.4 million, while Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund added $125.4 million. Together, they represented over 90% of that day’s total inflows.
On April 17, total inflows reached $663.9 million across all products. IBIT secured $284 million, and FBTC collected $163.4 million. The two funds accounted for roughly two-thirds of new capital entering the sector.
On May 1, the trend continued as total inflows hit $629.8 million. IBIT contributed $284.4 million, and FBTC added $213.4 million. Combined, the pair drew nearly $500 million of the day’s allocations.
Bitcoin has declined about 29% year-to-date, which has pressured the broader crypto ETF complex. Between mid-May and early June, several sessions recorded heavy net outflows. Despite weaker sentiment, IBIT and FBTC frequently absorbed or limited redemptions.
Scale and Liquidity Define the Two-Firm Structure
BlackRock manages over $10 trillion in global assets and maintains wide distribution networks. Fidelity also operates one of the largest U.S. brokerage and retirement platforms. These structures support trading volume, liquidity, and access for advisers and institutions.
Many buyers include registered investment advisers, hedge funds, family offices, and pension consultants. For these allocators, issuer reputation and liquidity weigh heavily in product selection. As a result, many treat IBIT and FBTC as default vehicles for Bitcoin exposure.
Meanwhile, smaller funds post modest daily flow figures. Franklin Templeton’s EZBC, VanEck’s HODL, Valkyrie’s BRRR, and WisdomTree’s BTCW often record single-digit-million inflows. In many sessions, their flows do not alter the total sector direction.
Bitwise’s BITB and Ark’s ARKB also trail the two largest funds this year. Earlier in 2026, Trump Media & Technology Group withdrew plans for a proposed spot Bitcoin ETF. The withdrawal followed intensified competition led by BlackRock and Fidelity.
During volatile sessions, capital shifts primarily into or out of IBIT and FBTC. When investors buy aggressively, most inflows concentrate in those products. When selling increases, their activity often determines whether the sector records net inflows or outflows.
Crypto World
Nigeria Senate advances bill to regulate crypto exchanges
Nigeria’s Senate has advanced a bill that could create formal rules for crypto firms and virtual asset operators.
Summary
- Nigeria’s Senate passed the Virtual Asset Service Providers Regulation Bill, 2026, for second reading.
- The bill would require crypto exchanges and other virtual asset service providers to obtain licenses.
- The proposal now moves to committee review before further readings and possible final approval.
The Virtual Asset Service Providers Regulation Bill, 2026, passed second reading on Tuesday and moved to committee review. The proposal seeks licensing, compliance rules, and consumer protection measures for one of the world’s largest crypto markets.
Nigeria Senate moves crypto bill forward
The Senate advanced the bill, listed as SB 956, after lawmakers debated digital asset oversight. Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin sponsored it, while Senate Chief Whip Mohammed Monguno presented it. The bill now goes to the Senate Committee on Capital Market for further review.
The committee can examine the proposal, consider amendments, and invite public input. Passing second reading does not make the bill law. It must still pass committee review, third reading, and other required legislative stages.
The proposal seeks a legal and supervisory structure for virtual assets, digital assets, and service providers. It would place crypto exchanges and related operators under licensing requirements. The bill also proposes transparency and compliance rules for firms serving Nigerian users. Lawmakers said these measures would help reduce fraud and improve market order.
Bill targets licensing and global standards
The legislation seeks to align Nigeria’s crypto rules with international standards. Its backers cited frameworks linked to the Financial Action Task Force and International Monetary Fund. The bill would require virtual asset service providers to follow anti-money laundering rules. It would also support counter-terrorism financing controls across crypto operations.
Under the proposal, operators of exchanges and blockchain-based investment platforms would need licenses. Other digital asset service providers would also face regulatory standards Lawmakers said the current regulatory gap leaves major activity outside official oversight. They argued that investments, jobs, and revenue remain harder to track without clear rules.
Senate Whip Tahir Monguno said Nigeria trails some African peers on virtual asset laws. He pointed to Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana as countries developing related frameworks. The sponsor said the bill does not seek to block innovation. He framed it as a way to promote order, confidence, accountability, and consumer protection.
Crypto market awaits committee review
Nigeria remains one of the world’s most active crypto markets by adoption. Users rely on digital assets for remittances, cross-border payments, inflation hedging, and global financial access. The country’s crypto policy has changed over time. Banks once faced restrictions on servicing crypto firms, but regulators later moved toward structured oversight.
Recent efforts have included registration pathways for digital asset providers. The new bill seeks to combine scattered rules into a clearer legal framework. Lawmakers linked the proposal to President Bola Tinubu’s $1 trillion economy target. They argued that unregulated crypto activity limits the digital economy’s official contribution.
If passed, the bill would increase compliance duties for exchanges and other operators. However, supporters said clear rules could help legitimate firms attract investment. The next stage will determine the bill’s final shape. Its impact will depend on committee changes, licensing details, and final implementation rules.
Crypto World
Iran closes Strait of Hormuz as US strikes deepen tensions
Iran’s main military command has closed the Strait of Hormuz to all vessels after fresh US attacks.
Summary
- Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya command said the Strait of Hormuz is closed to all vessels until further notice.
- Iranian media reported that Revolutionary Guards forces hit two ships attempting to pass through the waterway.
- US Central Command said it launched fresh strikes on Iran as Qatar sent a delegation to discuss the war.
Iran Iranian media said Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters cited security threats in the waterway. The move came as talks to end the conflict faced new pressure.
Iran warns ships against Hormuz passage
Tasnim News Agency reported that Iran’s military command declared the strait “completely closed to all types of vessels.” The command said “any vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will be targeted.”
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards navy said two ships tried to pass through the waterway. State television IRIB and the Mehr agency reported that Iranian forces hit both vessels. The Guards said the ships attempted to “illegally pass through the Strait of Hormuz.” They also warned ships against leaving anchorages in the Persian Gulf and Sea of Oman.
“Approaching the Strait of Hormuz will be considered cooperation with the enemy,” the Guards said. The warning followed earlier claims of US attacks near Iran’s southern coast. Iranian media also reported explosions near Bandar Abbas, Qeshm, Minab, and Sirik. Iranian sources said “enemy projectiles” hit Qeshm, Kargan, and Sirik.
US launches new strikes in Iran
US Central Command said it launched strikes against multiple Iranian targets on June 10. The command described them as “additional self-defence strikes.” CENTCOM said the strikes began at 5.15pm New York time. It added that the action answered Iran’s “unwarranted and continued aggression.”
As it was reported by crypto.news, the new attacks followed US strikes on June 9 after Iran downed a US Apache helicopter. Iranian media said those earlier strikes hit air defence, radar, and other sites. President Donald Trump accused Iran of delaying talks on an interim peace deal. He told reporters that US forces would “hit them hard” before the strikes began.
“We hit them hard yesterday, and we’re going to hit them hard again today,” Trump said. He declined to name the targets before the military announcement. Iran’s Foreign Ministry accused the United States of striking civilian infrastructure. US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the strikes sought to push Iran toward a deal.
Talks continue as the Qatar delegation arrives
A White House official said negotiations continued, even as Washington increased military pressure. The official said the US would maintain pressure until both sides reach a deal. Trump later said the US military supported the passage of more than 200 commercial ships. He said those movements carried more than 100 million barrels of oil to market.
Trump also claimed the United States controls the Strait of Hormuz, “not Iran.” Tehran’s latest statement directly challenged that claim through its closure order. The semi-official Iranian Students’ News Agency reported that a Qatari delegation reached Tehran on June 10. The delegation planned to discuss the diplomatic process to end the war.
The closure announcement followed claims of repeated ceasefire violations by the “American enemy.” Iran said the Strait of Hormuz will stay closed until further notice. The waterway remains central to oil and commercial shipping between the Persian Gulf and global markets. Iranian media reported the closure after explosions across southern Iran near the strait.
Crypto World
Mastercard Opens Card Rails to AI Agents With 30-Plus Crypto Partners

Mastercard extended its payments network to autonomous AI agents on Wednesday, unveiling Agent Pay for Machines (AP4M) with more than 30 launch partners spanning crypto infrastructure, stablecoin issuers, payment processors and DeFi protocols. The company announced the launch Wednesday morning via… Read the full story at The Defiant
Crypto World
XRP Demand Falls 91.5% As Traders Eye $0.63 Support
XRP’s (XRP) onchain activity has contracted sharply since its 2025 peak. The 90-day network fee average fell by 91.5%, while the realized profit-to-loss ratio dropped to 0.38 from 50, according to Glassnode.
The decline in activity and profitability comes as traders identify the $1.00-$0.65 region as a major area of interest.
XRP profit-taking flips to network capitulation
According to Glassnode, the 90-day simple moving average of total fees paid on the XRP network has fallen to just 500 XRP from 5,900 XRP in February, a decline of 91.5%.
The network fees are often used as a proxy for transaction demand. The drop points to a sharp slowdown in activity following the speculative surge that carried XRP above $3 in the first half of 2025.

XRP total transaction fees. Source: Glassnode
XRP investor behavior has also shifted. Glassnode reported that XRP’s 90-day realized profit-to-loss ratio has fallen to 0.38, meaning market participants are realizing $1 in losses for every $0.38 in profits.
In January and July 2025, when the XRP price peaked near $3.40, the ratio reached 50 as profit-taking dominated the onchain flows. That balance has now reversed. This indicates that a larger share of onchain coins are being sold below their acquisition cost, a pattern commonly seen during capitulation phases.

XRP realized profit/loss ratio. Source: Glassnode
Exchange data offers a different view of holder activity. Crypto analyst Pelin Ay noted that transfers of more than 1 million XRP to Binance have declined since XRP’s 2025 peak.
Historically, major corrections were preceded by sharp increases in both the 100,000–1 million XRP and 1 million-plus XRP inflow cohorts as large holders moved tokens to exchanges.
The current data shows a sustained decline in exchange-bound XRP from large holders, with inflows from the 100,000–1 million XRP and 1 million-plus XRP cohorts decreasing by 15% and 20%, respectively, since October 2025.
The analyst said the latest price weakness appears more closely tied to leverage-driven liquidations and risk-off sentiment than aggressive distribution by large holders.

XRP exchange inflows value bands on Binance. Source: CryptoQuant
Related: Arthur Hayes dumps WLD days after Maelstrom’s AI IPO pitch
$0.63 is the key area for accumulation
XRP’s weekly chart highlights a cluster of technical levels between $1.00 and $0.65.
A large fair value gap spans roughly $0.63 to $1.00, created during XRP’s rapid rally in late 2024. The price has already started moving back toward that zone after losing support near $1.40.

XRP/USDT, one-week chart. Source: Cointelegraph/TradingView
The visible-range volume profile data shows relatively light trading activity below current levels until a high-volume node around $0.50–$0.65. The point of control, which marks the price area with the highest traded volume, sits near $0.52–$0.55.
The same region aligns with XRP’s five-year ascending trendline, projected to intersect near $0.60–$0.65 in the coming months.
Some traders are already treating the zone as an accumulation range. Trader Crypto Patel identified $1.00 to $0.60 as a preferred buying range, while market analyst Javon Marks maintained his long-term breakout target of $15–$18, representing a 1,100% increase.

XRP long-term analysis by Javon Marks. Source: X
Related: ETH crash to $1K looms if key support breaks: Will futures traders step in?
Crypto World
Fold Sells $45M in Bitcoin to Wipe Out Debt and Back Next Growth Phase
TLDR:
- Fold sold ~$45M in Bitcoin at an average price of $71,000 to fund a full balance sheet reset.
- The company repaid $20M in Bitcoin-collateralized debt, eliminating all secured obligations.
- A $25M cash allocation targets Credit Card scaling, new products, and financing partnerships.
- Fold retains a Bitcoin treasury position and keeps its revolving credit facility available.
Fold Holdings has sold approximately $45 million in Bitcoin to eliminate secured debt and fund business expansion.
The Nasdaq-listed Bitcoin financial services company monetized the holdings at an average price of $71,000 per Bitcoin.
Proceeds were split between retiring $20 million in Bitcoin-collateralized debt and allocating $25 million toward growth initiatives.
The move strengthens Fold’s balance sheet ahead of several planned product launches across its consumer and enterprise platforms.
Fold Bitcoin Sale Clears All Secured Debt
The Fold Bitcoin liquidation marks a deliberate shift in the company’s capital strategy. By repaying all Bitcoin-backed secured debt, Fold eliminates monthly cash interest expenses immediately.
This improves the company’s net cash flow position starting in June 2026. Management expects further cash flow gains throughout the year as new products launch and customer activity increases.
Fold retains a meaningful Bitcoin treasury position after the sale. The company also keeps access to its revolving credit facility for future needs.
Management reserves the right to monetize additional Bitcoin holdings when returns justify it. This flexible approach keeps strategic options open as market conditions evolve.
The debt elimination removes a key risk factor tied to Bitcoin price swings. Bitcoin-collateralized loans carry liquidation risk during sharp market downturns.
Clearing that exposure gives Fold more operational stability. It also reduces pressure to make reactive decisions during volatile periods.
CEO Will Reeves positioned the transaction as a forward-looking move. “We believe Fold is poised for near-term growth and investing in that future is exactly what the company needs to do,” Reeves said.
He added that the company has built one of the strongest product roadmaps in its history. The recently launched Bitcoin Credit Card, Bitcoin Gift Cards, and Fold Business products anchor that pipeline.
$25 Million Fuels Fold Bitcoin Credit Card Growth
The $25 million cash allocation is primarily directed toward scaling the Fold Bitcoin Credit Card. Improved liquidity positions Fold to support a larger cardholder base going forward.
The company is also pursuing additional funding relationships to expand the credit program. Management considers the Credit Card among Fold’s highest long-term growth opportunities.
Greater financing flexibility allows Fold to capture more of the economics generated by the card program. As the cardholder base grows, revenue participation from the program increases.
This creates a compounding effect on company revenues over time. The strengthened balance sheet directly enables that participation.
Reeves addressed the strategic rationale directly. “We have reduced financing risk, strengthened our balance sheet, and ensured that short-term market volatility cannot stand in the way of executing our roadmap,” he said.
The statement points to deliberate risk management ahead of several product launches. Fold also plans to introduce additional products in the coming months.
Operating leverage is expected to improve as new products launch and financing partnerships come online. Each factor contributes to a stronger cash flow profile throughout the year.
With debt cleared and cash deployed, Fold Bitcoin operations enter a more stable phase. The company now has the resources to execute its plans without short-term financial constraints.
Crypto World
EU Proposes Ban on 11 Crypto Platforms in Russia Sanctions Push
The European Union is expanding its sanctions toolkit to curb crypto-enabled evasion as part of the 21st package aimed at Russia. A proposed measure would ban transactions on 11 crypto platforms, broadening the bloc’s crackdown beyond traditional banks and energy revenues to the crypto sector believed to facilitate Moscow’s circumvention of existing restrictions.
Kaja Kallas, vice president of the European Commission and the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, announced the move in a post on X, saying the package would tighten bans on crypto-asset services to certain third countries, add new designations, and ban transactions on 11 crypto platforms.
According to her remarks, the aim is to close gaps in enforcement where crypto firms may be used to move money or engage in activities that help sanctioned actors avoid penalties. The Commission, however, did not identify the 11 platforms in its public statements, and Cointelegraph sought clarification on which platforms would be affected; no additional details were provided before publication.
EU President Ursula von der Leyen later underscored that the package also targets 31 additional Russian banks and 20 entities in third countries, including banks, crypto platforms and oil traders, arguing these targets have either supported sanctioned individuals or enabled circumvention of EU measures.
EU proposal follows UK sanctions against HTX
The EU move arrives as the United Kingdom earlier in May targeted HTX Global S.A., the Panamanian entity behind HTX, over alleged support for Russia-linked financial networks. UK authorities said there were reasonable grounds to suspect HTX had provided financial services and funds to the Russian government via sanctioned entities such as A7 Limited Liability Company and Garantex.
HTX has denied the allegations, arguing the sanctioned entity is separate from the online exchange. A Global Ledger report later flagged that HTX processed roughly $21.06 billion in high-risk crypto flows from 2021 through May 2026, with about $7.64 billion tied to Russian high-risk entities and darknet markets, including Garantex, its successor Grinex, A7A5 and Hydra.
Regulatory researchers criticized the UK’s broader “tainting at the exchange level” approach, warning it could freeze legitimate users and complicate the effectiveness of on-chain compliance tools designed to trace illicit flows. The ongoing debate highlights the tension between tightening enforcement and preserving usable pathways for compliant market participants.
The wider context: why this matters for markets and policy
The EU’s proposed action reflects a broader shift in how regulators seek to police crypto activity amid geopolitical tensions and a persistent push to align crypto rules with traditional finance safeguards. By naming crypto platforms among the targeted channels for sanctions, Brussels signals a willingness to hold crypto intermediaries to account for facilitating cross-border flows that could bypass conventional restrictions.
For investors and traders, the development introduces additional friction points in cross-border transfers and fiat-to-crypto or crypto-to-fiat transactions that involve sanctioned jurisdictions or entities. Compliance teams at exchanges and custodians will be pressured to tighten screening, identify potential high-risk counterparties, and ensure robust end-to-end transaction monitoring to avoid inadvertent exposure to sanctioned networks.
The absence of publicly named platforms at this stage leaves a noteworthy element of uncertainty. Markets often react to clarity; when regulators publish a definitive list of designated platforms or counterparties, participants typically adjust risk models, pricing, and liquidity considerations accordingly. In the meantime, the signal from Brussels is clear: crypto rails will be scrutinized more intensely as part of international sanctions coordination.
What to watch next: enforcement, clarity, and industry response
Key questions loom as the EU moves toward formalizing these restrictions. Which platforms will be designated, and how quickly will the bloc—together with its member states—implement the ban on crypto-asset services to the specified third countries? How will this interact with existing anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer requirements, and what definitions will regulators rely on to determine “high-risk” crypto flows?
Observers will also be watching the cross-border dimension: will the UK and EU deliver a synchronized approach that minimizes loopholes for sanctioned actors while preserving legitimate access for compliant customers? The HTX case illustrates the delicate balance regulators attempt to strike when sanctioning entities with complex international structures and multiple affiliates.
In parallel, some analysts argue that the regulatory framework around crypto could increasingly favor tokenized and tradable assets that sit more clearly within centralized compliance regimes. Others note the ongoing debate around MiCA (Markets in Crypto-Assets) and how its architecture might evolve to address DeFi, tokenization, and cross-border settlement more explicitly, a topic that has surfaced in related coverage.
As Brussels weighs its 21st sanctions package, the concrete impact on the crypto landscape will hinge on several moving parts: the list of targeted platforms, the practical mechanics of enforcement, and how industry participants adapt to tighter controls without unduly hamstringing legitimate use of digital assets. The Commission’s remarks point to a comprehensive effort to integrate crypto services into the sanctions architecture, not merely as a matter of punitive action but as a strategic tool to prevent abuse of digital financial rails.
For readers tracking regulatory developments, the immediate next step is to watch for the official release of the 11 named platforms, along with any accompanying guidance from the European Commission or member states detailing compliance obligations for exchanges and custodians operating within the EU with respect to sanctioned counterparties.
According to the UK’s stance, the HTX actions and subsequent data-driven analyses underscore the risk that broad enforcement measures can create cascading effects across the crypto ecosystem—affecting liquidity, on-chain tracing, and the ability of compliant users to operate normally in international markets. The industry’s response will likely shape future policy iterations as regulators seek to strike a balance between deterrence and pragmatic usability for legitimate participants.
Related commentary has underscored a potential shift in EU regulatory emphasis toward tokenization and asset-backed structures as a complement or alternative to DeFi-centric regulation, suggesting that the sector may see a broader menu of tools used to regulate cross-border flows and protect sanctions regimes. The ongoing conversation around MiCA, DeFi, and tokenization will intersect with these developments and help define the next phase of Europe’s crypto policy.
Readers should stay tuned for updates on the list of targeted platforms, the specifics of how the ban will be enforced, and any subsequent designations that clarify the scope of the EU’s cross-border crypto-sanctions strategy.
What happens next will shape how crypto firms plan compliance, how sanctions risks are priced into markets, and how regulators coordinate across jurisdictions to close the gaps that currently exist between traditional finance controls and digital-asset rails.
As the EU advances this agenda, market participants should watch for concrete guidance from Brussels and for any parallel actions from national authorities, which together will determine the practical boundaries of sanctioned activity within the European crypto ecosystem.
Source context: EU sanctions package coverage and related UK actions are referenced through official statements and industry reporting, including comments from Kaja Kallas and Ursula von der Leyen, and UK sanctions coverage related to HTX. For background on the HTX allegations and subsequent data flows, see reports discussing HTX’s linkages to Russian-related entities and the broader debate over exchange-level sanction enforcement.
Crypto World
US Government Moves $768,000 Seized FTX Tokens, Sparks Chainlink Sell-Off Fears
A wallet tied to US government seized FTX Chainlink holdings moved 98,590 Chainlink (LINK) tokens, worth about $768,000, to Coinbase Prime on Wednesday, reviving speculation over a potential sale.
Blockchain trackers flagged the deposit within minutes. However, on-chain data alone does not confirm that the tokens are headed for the open market.
Why the Seized FTX Chainlink Transfer Matters
On-chain tracker Lookonchain first reported the movement, and tracking account Solid Intel flagged the same deposit.
Arkham labels the sending address under its US government entity and has documented earlier movements from the same cluster.
Follow us on X to get the latest news as it happens
The funds originate from assets confiscated after FTX and Alameda Research collapsed in November 2022.
A federal judge later ordered Sam Bankman-Fried to forfeit $11 billion after his fraud conviction, with recovered funds directed toward victim compensation.
The US Marshals Service selected Coinbase Prime in July 2024 to custody and trade its large-cap digital assets.
“After a comprehensive process, the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS), a division of the U.S. Department of Justice, selected Coinbase Prime as its partner to safeguard and trade its “Class 1” (large cap) digital assets,” read an excerpt in a 2024 Coinbase blog.
Therefore, deposits to the platform often precede custody changes, over-the-counter deals, or liquidations.
The agency has managed seized crypto sales for over a decade, beginning with its auction of 30,000 Silk Road bitcoins in 2014.
Historically, it has favored structured sales over open-market dumps.
The transaction also extends a pattern of earlier seized altcoin transfers involving Uniswap (UNI), Render (RNDR), Ethereum (ETH), and The Sandbox (SAND), plus stablecoins.
Meanwhile, the FTX estate keeps repaying customers, with its fourth creditor distribution round delivering $2.2 billion in March.
Analysts See Limited Risk of a LINK Sell-Off
Chainlink’s current price sits near $7.66, down 2% over the past 24 hours. The token holds a $5.57 billion market cap and ranks 21st among cryptocurrencies.
The transferred amount equals less than 0.4% of LINK’s $225 million daily trading volume. It also represents roughly 0.01% of the 727 million tokens in circulation.
Consequently, even an outright sale would barely move market liquidity.
Sentiment around the token remains cautious after a 27% slide over the past 30 days. LINK has also shed 49% over the past year, leaving holders alert to new supply signals.
In contrast, Chainlink’s ETF inflow outlook suggests institutional demand could absorb modest government supply over time.
Whether the tokens move to an over-the-counter desk or stay in custody should become clearer in the coming days.
The wallet’s next transaction will reveal whether the deposit marks routine management or the start of a liquidation.
Until then, the sell-off fears look larger than the numbers behind them.
The post US Government Moves $768,000 Seized FTX Tokens, Sparks Chainlink Sell-Off Fears appeared first on BeInCrypto.
Crypto World
Nightrush.com Responds to the AI Personalization Wave Reshaping iGaming And Raises the Bar
[PRESS RELEASE – Norwich, United Kingdom, June 10th, 2026]
Nightrush.com, an independent iGaming comparison and review platform, today announced a comprehensive restructuring of its editorial operations and platform revamp.
The initiative responds directly to the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, and adaptive personalization technologies by licensed operators, as well as the increasingly fragmented global regulatory landscape.
The goal is to serve intelligence content and provide resources for the players, focusing on responsible gaming advice and education.
The update arrives as data indicates the global iGaming market surpassed $105 billion in 2025 and is projected to exceed $133 billion by the end of 2026 according to the ICRRD Journal.
Market expansion has been accompanied by a shift toward data-driven, compliance-heavy operational environments, where international regulatory bodies are enforcing stricter standards on promotional bonuses, identity verification, and player safety protocols.
To address these market dynamics, Nightrush.com is implementing a modernized scoring and auditing methodology focused on three core operational pillars:
- Advanced Algorithmic Evaluation: The platform’s updated review metrics move beyond standard promotional offerings to analyze the integration of artificial intelligence within casino platforms. The editorial framework now assesses the performance of operator-side technologies, including predictive recommendation engines and responsive user interfaces.
- Behavioral Safety Monitoring: In response to heightened international regulatory standards, Nightrush.com has adjusted its operator qualification benchmarks. The platform now places significant weight on an operator’s deployment of proactive, real-time behavioral monitoring tools designed to detect and mitigate problematic gambling patterns.
- Jurisdictional Compliance Mapping: The editorial team has expanded its regional data coverage across North America, Europe, Scandinavia, and Oceania. This expanded matrix tracks localized licensing updates, legislative shifts, and consumer protection mandates to ensure accurate compliance reporting across distinct jurisdictions.
This operational realignment establishes an independent, verification-based reporting model designed to provide transparent market data for consumers navigating complex digital entertainment sectors.
Olesea Naidion, Brand Manager at Nightrush.com said: “The integration of artificial intelligence is fundamentally changing how platforms interact with users. Our updated editorial infrastructure ensures that our review standards evolve alongside these technical advancements, prioritizing objective transparency and independent validation over superficial marketing metrics.”
About Nightrush.com
Nightrush.com is an independent digital media platform and information resource specializing in the verification, review, and comparison of licensed international iGaming operators. Operating strictly as an informational affiliate platform rather than a gambling operator, the company provides market analysis, compliance tracking, and consumer safety evaluations across North America, Europe, Scandinavia, and Oceania. The platform is dedicated to maintaining high-integrity editorial standards to support informed consumer decision-making within regulated digital gaming markets.
The post Nightrush.com Responds to the AI Personalization Wave Reshaping iGaming And Raises the Bar appeared first on CryptoPotato.
Crypto World
Pennsylvania sets stricter standards for AI data center projects
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro has unveiled standards for large data center projects seeking state support.
Summary
- Pennsylvania’s GRID Standards require data center developers to secure certification before receiving state incentives, fast permits, or tax benefits.
- The rules require developers to pay for new power generation and disclose project size, water use, and efficiency details.
- Separate bills from state lawmakers could change data center tax exemptions, water rules, power requirements, and local zoning powers.
Duane Morris Government Strategies said the GRID Standards set conditions for incentives, fast permits, and tax benefits. The rules come as residents question power demand, water use, and infrastructure costs.
GRID standards tie incentives to certification
The Governor’sResponsible Infrastructure Development Standards require certification before developers receive state benefits. Two state offices will manage certification. Certified projects can access Pennsylvania’s Permit Fast Track Program and sales tax exemptions for computer equipment. They may also qualify for selected tax programs.
The standards do not give permanent approval to any project. Developers must submit compliance reports before operations and file yearly updates. According to Duane Morris Government Strategies, the framework links economic support with more oversight.
The blog called it one of the most detailed state frameworks. Pennsylvania officials now want lawmakers to codify the GRID Standards through legislation. They also want the data center tax exemption tied to certification.
Energy and local input shape project rules
The standards require developers to pay the full cost of new power generation. The rule prevents developers from shifting costs to current utility customers. New power capacity must come from new or incremental generation resources. The resources must sit within the same PJM Locational Deliverability Area.
Facilities larger than 100,000 square feet must support future solar installations. The requirement places energy planning into early design work. The framework also requires developers to identify facility end users and hold public meetings.
Those meetings must occur before major design decisions. Project disclosures must include size, expected water use, and efficiency metrics. Local governments must receive early consultation before final plans.
Lawmakers advance separate data center bills
Developers must commit at least $250 million in investment to qualify. They must also create at least 200 construction jobs. The standards require 50 permanent jobs within four years. Those jobs must pay at least 125% of Pennsylvania’s average wage.
Hiring plans must explain how local workers can access apprenticeships and construction opportunities. The standards connect state support with job targets. Sen. Tracy Pennycuick has proposed a separate data center bill. Her plan would require large facilities to provide power and meet water limits.
Her proposal would create a Pennsylvania Data Center Advisory Committee. It would ban governments from signing nondisclosure agreements with developers. Sen. Jarrett Coleman and Rep. Jamie Walsh have introduced another bill. Their proposal would repeal the current equipment tax exemption.
Their legislation would allow temporary municipal pauses on data center applications. Municipalities could use that time to update zoning rules. Pennsylvania’s tax exemption could cost over $517 million yearly by fiscal 2030-31. State officials want that exemption tied to GRID certification.
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