Crypto World
Friday’s eth.limo Hijack Caused by Social Engineering on EasyDNS
Ethereum Name Service gateway eth.limo has revealed that the domain hijacking on Friday was caused by a social engineering attack directed against EasyDNS, its domain name service provider.
According to a postmortem published by eth.limo on Saturday, an attacker impersonated one of its team members to initiate an account recovery process with easyDNS, granting access to the eth.limo account and allowing them to alter domain settings.
“The NS records were changed and directed to Cloudflare… Once we understood that a DNS hijack had taken place, we immediately notified the community as well as Vitalik Buterin and others. We then began contacting EasyDNS in an attempt to respond to the incident,” the company said.
Eth.limo serves as a Web2 bridge, providing access to around 2 million decentralized websites using the .eth domain name. Hijacking the service could allow an attacker to redirect users to malicious websites. Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin warned users Friday to avoid his blog until the incident was resolved.
Mark Jeftovic, CEO of easyDNS, has publicly accepted responsibility for the incident in its own postmortem report.
“We screwed up and we own it,” said Jeftovic on Saturday.
“This would mark the first successful social engineering attack against an easyDNS client in our 28-year history. There have been countless attempts.”
Both companies have pointed to the Domain Name System Security Extension (DNSSEC) in thwarting the hacker’s attempts to do further damage.
The attacker couldn’t produce valid cryptographic signatures, so Domain Name System resolvers rejected the attacker’s forged DNS responses, causing users to see error messages instead of being redirected to malicious sites.
“DNSSEC was enabled for their domain when the attackers attempted to flip their nameservers, presumably to effect some manner of phishing or malware injection attack, DNSSEC-aware resolvers, which most are these days, began dropping queries,” Jeftovic said.

In its postmortem, eth.limo noted that because the attacker lacked the signing keys, they were unable to bypass the safeguards, which likely “reduced the blast radius of the hijack. We are not aware of any user impact at this time. We will provide updates if that changes.”
easyDNS makes changes since the attack
Jeftovic described the social engineering attack as “highly sophisticated,” and said easyDNS is still conducting a post-mortem on how the breach occurred, and has already begun rolling out changes to prevent a recurrence.

“In eth.limo’s case, we will be migrating them to Domainsure, which has a security posture more suited toward enterprise and high-value fintech domains, TLDR there is no mechanism for an account recovery on Domainsure, it’s not a thing,” he added.
“On behalf of everyone here, I apologize to the eth.limo team and the wider Ethereum community. ENS has always had a special place in our heart as the first registrar to enable ENS linking to web2 domains and we’ve been involved in the space since 2017.”
Related: RaveDAO denies manipulation as Binance, Bitget probe RAVE trading activity
The eth.limo incident is the latest in a series of domain hijackings targeting crypto projects. Days earlier, decentralized exchange aggregator CoW Swap lost control of its website after an unknown party hijacked its domain.
Steakhouse Financial, a DeFi advisory and research firm, similarly disclosed at the end of March that it had lost control of its domain to an attacker.
Crypto World
Kelp DAO blames LayerZero defaults for $290m rsETH bridge disaster
Kelp DAO says a LayerZero “default” single‑validator setup helped enable a $290m rsETH bridge hack, forcing a messy blame game and a rushed security migration.
Summary
- Kelp DAO disputes LayerZero’s post‑mortem on the $290m rsETH bridge hack, saying a risky 1/1 validator setup was LayerZero’s own default
- The exploit drained 116,500 rsETH, around $290–$293m and roughly 18% of rsETH’s supply, in what analysts call 2026’s largest DeFi loss so far
- LayerZero now says it will stop signing messages for any app using a single‑validator DVN and force a migration to multi‑verifier security
Kelp DAO has pushed back against LayerZero’s official explanation of a $290 million bridge exploit, arguing that the “single‑validator” setup that let an attacker walk off with 116,500 rsETH was not reckless customization but a default configuration in LayerZero’s own guidelines.
The liquidity re‑staking protocol told CoinDesk the 1‑of‑1 Decentralized Verifier Network (DVN) used on its rsETH cross‑chain route “followed LayerZero’s documented defaults” and that the validator stack compromised by the attacker “is part of LayerZero’s own infrastructure,” rather than an unvetted third party.
The attack, which hit on April 18, minted or released 116,500 rsETH to an attacker‑controlled address — about 18% of the token’s supply — and translated into losses of roughly $290–$293 million at the time, making it the largest DeFi exploit of 2026 so far.
In its investigation report and follow‑up statements, LayerZero has insisted that “LayerZero’s protocol was not broken,” arguing instead that Kelp DAO “deployed a single‑point‑of‑failure DVN in production” for a token with more than $1 billion in total value locked.
The interoperability firm said “operating a single‑point‑of‑failure configuration meant there was no independent verifier to catch and reject a forged message” and claimed it had previously communicated “best practices around DVN diversification” to Kelp DAO and other partners.
Security researchers and auditors, including SlowMist co‑founder Yu Xian, have confirmed that the rsETH bridge route used a 1/1 DVN — effectively a single signature — rather than a 2/2 or multi‑DVN stack, calling it a “single‑signature single point” vulnerability that may have been aided by social engineering.
A detailed post‑mortem from DeFi tracking site DeFiPrime notes that LayerZero’s OApp model lets applications choose how many DVNs must sign off on a message, with 2‑of‑3 or 3‑of‑5 configurations commonly recommended for high‑value deployments, but says Kelp’s adapter “was configured to accept the attestation of a single verifier” run by LayerZero Labs.
That design meant “one forged signature was enough to make any cross‑chain message look real,” allowing the attacker to feed the bridge a fake instruction that mimicked a valid message from another chain and triggered the release of 116,500 rsETH “out of thin air” to their wallet.
Kelp DAO’s team counters that they implemented LayerZero’s own public code and defaults across multiple networks and that the DVN exploited “was operated by LayerZero itself,” implying that responsibility sits at least partly with the infrastructure provider rather than solely with the application.
LayerZero has now taken the unusual step of promising it “will stop signing messages for any applications using a single‑validator setup” and is forcing a “security migration” that will require all OApps to move to multi‑DVN architectures if they want to keep using the protocol.
The fallout goes well beyond one re‑staking token.
As crypto.news reported in an earlier story on the rsETH exploit and LayerZero’s attribution of the attack to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, the incident has reignited a broader debate over bridge design, default configurations and who ultimately bears responsibility when modular cross‑chain infrastructure goes wrong.
Related crypto.news stories you can link in copy include coverage of the Kelp DAO–LayerZero exploit and Lazarus attribution, analysis of earlier cross‑chain bridge hacks, and reporting on how re‑staking and liquid‑staking protocols concentrate smart‑contract risk across multiple chains.
Crypto World
Bitcoin (BTC) price drops 2.5% as all assets decline
CoinDesk Indices presents its daily market update, highlighting the performance of leaders and laggards in the CoinDesk 20 Index.
The CoinDesk 20 is currently trading at 2085.29, down 3.6% (-78.65) since 4 p.m. ET on Friday.
None of 20 assets are trading higher.

Leaders: BNB (-2.3%) and BTC (-2.5%).
Laggards: AAVE (-22.9%) and ICP (-7.9%).
The CoinDesk 20 is a broad-based index traded on multiple platforms in several regions globally.
Crypto World
Coinbase (COIN), Bybit said to be working together on tokenization, custody and distribution of U.S. stocks
Crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) is working with Bybit, one of the largest crypto trading platforms, to explore ways to tokenize, custody and distribute assets such as U.S. public and pre-IPO stocks, a person familiar with the plans told CoinDesk.
The talks, which are in progress, do not involve any sort of stake acquisition or similar deal for Bybit to enter the U.S., said the person, who asked to remain anonymous because they are directly involved in the discussions, dismissing a report of an investment publicized last month.
Bybit is, indeed, planning to enter the U.S., just not with Coinbase, said the person, who declined to identify the partner. It will create a new entity said to be spearheaded by former Bybit co-CEO Helen Liu. The local partner will provide licensing and compliance while Bybit provides the tech, product and liquidity, the person said.
Discussions between Bybit and Coinbase are more global in nature, leveraging Bybit’s worldwide reach, particularly in places like Asia, where users may want access to tokenized versions of U.S. stocks. As such, the firms are exploring synergies around custody and distribution of these assets going forward.
The U.S. is home to certain assets that global users want, the person said. Bybit is international, while Coinbase is U.S.-focused. Working together, the two can bring U.S. assets to a wider market, according to the person. Within five years, tokenization will bring any asset to users globally through a single app.
“Even if Coinbase becomes a super app in the U.S., they are still only in the U.S,” the person said.
The two companies’ explorations into tokenized stocks come as other market participants explore similar link-ups. Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), the owner of the New York Stock Exchange, in March announced it was taking a stake in crypto exchange OKX. Just last week, Deutsche Boerse, made a $200 million strategic investment into Kraken.
Bybit and Coinbase both declined to comment.
CORRECT (April 20, 14:03 UTC): Corrects spelling of Liu in second bullet point.
UPDATE (April 20, 14:50 UTC): Adds Coinbase-Bybit relation in U.S., Bybit’s U.S. entry plans starting in third paragraph.
Crypto World
Global stablecoin rules slow down as BIS urges cooperation to avoid fragmentation risks
Work on global standards for stablecoins has slowed over the past year, raising concern among central bankers that gaps in oversight could split markets and amplify risk.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, who chairs the Financial Stability Board, said progress on international rules has stalled, Reuters reported last week. That’s a concern, Bank for International Settlements (BIS) General Manager Pablo Hernández de Cos said Monday in Japan.
Global coordination is critical to avoid a patchwork of rules that firms could exploit, de Cos said, according to Reuters. Without international alignment, companies may shift operations to jurisdictions with lighter oversight, a practice known as regulatory arbitrage.
The warning comes as major economies push ahead with their own frameworks, often on different timelines and with different approaches.
The stablecoin sector has expanded over the last few years, and now accounts for $320 billion according to DeFiLlama. Tether’s USDT and Circle Internet’s (CRCL) USDC make up most of that figure. De Cos said their structure can resemble securities more than cash, noting that redemption frictions can push prices away from their intended $1 value.
He also said that sudden withdrawals could ripple through markets. Proposals to reduce risk include limiting interest payments on stablecoins and giving issuers access to central bank lending facilities or deposit-insurance-type arrangements.
Policymakers argue such measures could make the sector safer while preserving its role in digital payments.
In the U.S., lawmakers are working to advance the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, which would set federal rules for digital asset markets.
The bill passed the House last year and is now before the Senate, where Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott and Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman are leading the push. Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks have negotiated a compromise on stablecoin yield that could clear the way for a markup, while Senator Cynthia Lummis, who chairs the Banking Committee’s digital assets subcommittee, has said a hearing could come in the second half of April.
A deal remains contingent on resolving several open questions, including DeFi oversight and ethics provisions.
Crypto World
DeFi sector in $14B meltdown as $290M rsETH hack fallout burns Aave
The DeFi sector is reeling from the effects of a suspected North Korea-linked hack which has spread to multiple protocols and saw DeFi poster child Aave’s TVL drop by a third.
Saturday’s incident saw $290 million worth of Kelp DAO’s liquid staking token, rsETH, stolen via the Layer Zero bridge.
The loot was deposited into Aave and used to borrow $236 million of WETH. But with liquidity drained, and markets frozen, users began to panic, withdrawing collateral where they could and borrowing whatever they could get their hands on.
In all, since Saturday, almost $9 billion has left Aave, with the protocol potentially facing hundreds of millions of dollars of bad debt.
The question of who will foot the bill is still very much to be decided.
The hack
The hack, which Layer Zero suspects was carried out by the Lazarus Group of North Korean state sponsored hackers, exploited rsETH issuer KelpDAO’s “single-DVN setup” for bridging their token.
Layer Zero bridges tokens between blockchains, and uses decentralized verifier networks (DVNs) to validate transactions. The model puts the onus on asset issuers to “define their own security posture,” including DVN thresholds.
In Kelp DAO’s case, they used a 1-of-1 setup relying on Layer Zero’s DVN.
Aside from an initial acknowledgement posted to X, there’s been no further communication from Kelp DAO itself.
Read more: Inside the $280M Drift hack: weeks of setup, minutes to drain
Layer Zero claims its DVN was compromised through a “highly sophisticated… RPC-spoofing attack.” RPCs are nodes which allow external apps to read blockchain data.
The attack presented malicious info only to the targeted DVN, skirting monitoring efforts. In addition, it performed a DDoS attack on uncompromised RPCs to trigger fallback to the “poisoned” ones.
However, pseudonymous veteran DeFi developer banteg pushed back on Layer Zero’s characterization as an RPC poisoning attack, which suggests purely outside interference. With attackers pulling off an “infra breach within the perimeter… the real story is a targeted implant operating inside the trust boundary.”
They disapprove of “such elaborate distancing,” warning “given it doesn’t say how the breach has occurred, I wouldn’t rush re-enabling the bridges.”
Read more: Hyperbridge exploited less than two weeks after April Fools’ day hack prank
The fallout
Aside from the hack itself, the real damage has spread across DeFi, especially on the sector’s flagship lending protocol, Aave.
Rather than selling such a large quantity of rsETH, crashing its price, the attacker chose to borrow against it. Depositing stolen rsETH as collateral into Aave and other lending platforms, they then borrowed $236 million worth of WETH, according to blockchain audit firm Peckshield’s tally.
Read more: KuCoin criticized for helping ‘launder’ $9.5M from fake Ledger app
Aave’s rsETH markets were paused shortly after users were warned to “withdraw now, ask questions later.” In the hours that followed, over $6 billion left the protocol.
The lack of WETH liquidity has also left several stablecoin markets at full utilization. Spark’s MonetSupply explained that unwinding positions and liquidation of unhealthy positions was stalled, with recent changes to Aave’s borrowing rates “significantly increasing the risk of cascading market failure.”
The liquidity crunch spread to other platforms, vaults, and even unrelated ecosystems, such as Solana.
Read more: Tether challenges USDC Solana hegemony with $127.5M Drift bailout
Taking stock
With rsETH estimated to be facing an 18% shortfall in backing, Aave may be facing over $250 million of bad debt. DeFiLlama developer 0xngmi put the worst case at $341 million and best case at $76 million.
The platform’s backstop fund, Umbrella, contains $55 million of ETH, and former contributor ACI has pledged funds from its staking program.
Additionally, Umbrella’s predecessor contains over $280 million, however it’s uncertain whether this, or any DAO treasury funds would be made available to fill the hole.
ACI’s Marc Zeller, estimates a 5-8% haircut for Aave WETH depositors, once the dust settles.
To put the damage caused into perspective, in all, the exploiter’s main address currently holds a total of $245 million worth of ETH, $174 million on Ethereum and $71 million on Arbitrum.
Meanwhile, the value of the wider DeFi market has dropped by $14 billion since Saturday.
Read more: Crypto hack goes political as Grinex blames ‘Western special services’
The path ahead
How the rest of this episode unfolds will depend in large part on how Kelp DAO decides to distribute losses.
CoinDesk reports that Kelp DAO plans to blame “Layer Zero’s documentation, default configurations and team guidance when setting up the bridge.”
Aave has hinted at non-bridged rsETH tokens being fully backed, though this may just be its own preference for now. The alternative, however, isn’t pretty either, and would see WETH depositors on other networks bearing the full burden of the unbacked rsETH.
The fact that this is still unknown belies an embarrassing truth about the immaturity of DeFi. Despite recent reminders in the form of Stream Finance’s November collapse and last month’s hack of Resolv’s RSD, seniority in the event of a shortfall still appears to be an afterthought for many DeFi projects.
Layer Zero’s statement says that, for its part, it will urge any teams using 1/1 DVN configurations to switch to “multi-DVN setups with redundancy.”
It will also not act as the sole DVN for any projects who remain on a 1/1 setup.
Read more: Resolv hack shows DeFi learned nothing from last contagion
Nobody comes out of this looking good.
From the initial alert coming an hour after the hack, to the long-standing concerns around Layer Zero’s default 1/1 validation threshold, to Kelp DAO’s decision to keep it, to Aave’s risk assessment of rsETH.
Many have taken the opportunity to call for rate limits on key pathways such as bridge outflows or collateral supply.
This hack comes during an awful month in a pretty bad year-to-date for the DeFi sector, which has seen its TVL drop by half since the October 10 crash.
On that note, readers should keep their eyes peeled for Protos’ upcoming DeFi hack tracker.
Protos has reached out to Aave, Layer Zero, and Kelp DAO, but hadn’t received a reply by time of publication. This article will be updated in the event we receive a response.
Got a tip? Send us an email securely via Protos Leaks. For more informed news, follow us on X, Bluesky, and Google News, or subscribe to our YouTube channel.
Crypto World
Crypto adoption in the U.S. is increasing with bitcoin (BTC) still dominating: Deutsche Bank
Crypto adoption in the U.S. has staged a comeback, even as sentiment around prices remains cautious, according to German lender Deutsche Bank (DB).
In a new retail survey spanning 3,400 consumers across the U.S., U.K. and EU, the bank said U.S. participation rebounded to 12% in March from a February low of 7%, returning to levels last seen in July 2025. The report’s data suggested adoption has not topped 14% in the survey’s history, dating back to 2023.
Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) saw a resurgence in March, attracting roughly $1.3 billion in net inflows, the report said, signaling renewed institutional demand after a weak start to the year.
“After steadily declining since July 2025, U.S. crypto adoption rates recovered in March,” wrote analysts Marion Laboure and Camilla Siazon in the Monday report.
Crypto prices have shown signs of stabilization after a volatile start to 2026, with last month marking a tentative rebound driven by renewed institutional demand and geopolitical tailwinds.
Bitcoin rose roughly 9% in March, recovering toward the $70,000 level after earlier declines, though it remains down more than 20% year-to-date and well below its late-2025 peak above $120,000. More recently, prices have pushed higher into the mid-$70,000s, briefly topping $77,000 amid easing geopolitical tensions and improving risk sentiment.
The recovery has been uneven. Prices have repeatedly tested resistance around the mid-$70,000 range, with analysts pointing to that level as a key breakout threshold for further upside. At the same time, macro pressures, including higher-for-longer interest rates and energy-driven inflation, continue to weigh on crypto alongside broader risk assets
Elsewhere, trends were more muted. U.K. adoption dipped slightly to 9% but remains structurally higher over the long term, the analysts said, while Europe held steady at 7%.
Despite the rebound in participation, consumer sentiment on bitcoin’s price outlook is subdued.
A majority of respondents across regions expect bitcoin to trade lower than current levels near $75,000 by the end of 2026. In the U.S., 19% see prices landing between $20,000 and $60,000, while 13% expect a drop below $20,000, a level last seen in early 2023. Only a small minority, around 3% in the U.S., anticipate a return to record highs near $120,000.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency was trading around $75,000 at publication time.
Still, bitcoin remains firmly at the center of the crypto market. Roughly 70% of crypto investors across regions hold bitcoin, far exceeding ownership of stablecoins such as USDT or USDC, the report said. It is also the top choice for future investment, cited by 69% of U.S. respondents.
Traditional assets continue to compete for investor attention. Gold and the S&P 500 remain favored overall, though the gap has narrowed in the U.S., where preferences are more evenly split across the three.
Demographically, crypto adoption remains skewed toward men and higher-income households, though the report noted gradual gains among women and lower-income investors. Younger consumers, particularly in the UK, showed the fastest growth in participation.
Read more: Bitcoin may be forming a base at $65,000 as ‘paper hands’ have been flushed out
Crypto World
Little Pepe could be one of the most-watched memecoins this year
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Little Pepe presale nears completion as funding surpasses $28M and tokens sell out rapidly.
Summary
- Little Pepe (LILPEPE) presale surpasses $28.1M, with Stage 13 pricing at $0.0022 and strong demand across all phases.
- LILPEPE gains attention as a Layer 2 meme project with EVM compatibility, zero tax, and staking utility features.
- Investors watch LILPEPE’s rapid presale growth and exchange listing plans as it targets broader market expansion.
The traction behind Little Pepe (LILPEPE) is no longer something that can be ignored. The project has now exceeded $28,101,728 in its ongoing presale, getting close to reaching its $28,775,000 target. With 16,943,966,303 tokens sold out of 17,250,000,000 tokens for this phase, the time for early entry is closing much faster than expected.
Currently at Stage 13, the token is valued at $0.0022. The next stage will see the token move to a valuation of $0.0023. For early entrants who got in at the Stage 1 valuation of $0.001, this is a 120% move on paper, a move that is clearly attracting both retail investors and more sophisticated investors who seek asymmetric returns.
What stands out is not just the speed of the rise, but the consistency of demand across stages. Each price increment has been met with fresh inflows, suggesting that buyers are not waiting around for dips.
Beyond memes: A layer 2 play with real utility
While the memecoin sector is often driven by hype cycles, Little Pepe is attempting to position itself differently. At its core, the project is building a Layer 2 EVM-compatible chain designed to be ultra-fast, low-cost, and scalable. This infrastructure angle introduces a layer of utility that many meme tokens simply do not offer.

The ecosystem is designed with zero transaction tax, which removes friction for traders and aligns with what has historically worked in high-growth meme cycles. On top of that, the roadmap includes staking mechanisms and NFT integrations, features aimed at keeping users engaged beyond speculative trading.
Security and fairness are also part of the pitch. The anti-sniping measures are expected to be in place, helping to mitigate bot-driven manipulation in the early stages of trading. With plans to list on top centralized exchanges as well as Uniswap, it is clear that accessibility as well as liquidity are a priority for this project from day one.
There is also a broader ambition in play. With messaging around a potential “1 billion market cap or bust” and ambitions of entering the top 100 on CoinMarketCap, Little Pepe is leaning into both narrative and execution, a combination that tends to resonate in this segment of the market.
Giveaways, incentives, and community energy driving growth
Community participation has been a major driver behind the presale’s traction. The ongoing $777,000 giveaway has added a strong incentive layer, offering 10 winners $77,000 worth of LILPEPE tokens each. Entry requires a minimum $100 contribution, along with completing social engagement tasks, effectively blending fundraising with viral growth mechanics.

In parallel, the Mega Giveaway campaign is targeting buyers between Stages 12 and 17, where both large and randomly selected participants stand a chance to win over 15 ETH in rewards. These campaigns have significantly amplified visibility, pushing the project across social channels and keeping engagement levels high.
Memecoin market outlook: Timing could be everything
However, if we were to look at the broader memecoin space, it does seem to be entering another period of resurgence. Of course, as blue-chip assets like Bitcoin continue to strengthen, liquidity tends to move towards higher-risk, higher-reward areas, and meme coins have historically seen the greatest benefit from this.
Of course, as can be seen, things have changed somewhat. The environment has become more discerning, with a bias towards projects that at least have some form of utility or differentiation. Yes, there are still projects that are based on pure hype, but they are shorter-lived.
This is where Little Pepe’s positioning becomes relevant. By combining meme culture with a Layer 2 infrastructure narrative, it is attempting to bridge two worlds, one driven by community energy and the other by technological relevance.
Whether or not they are successful in their lofty endeavors remains to be seen. However, from what can be gauged from their current presale performance, it is safe to say that Little Pepe is a meme coin that is definitely worth keeping an eye on.
For more information, visit the official website, X, Telegram.
Disclosure: This content is provided by a third party. Neither crypto.news nor the author of this article endorses any product mentioned on this page. Users should conduct their own research before taking any action related to the company.
Crypto World
5 recommended free cloud mining platforms for 2026: Secure, stable, and beginner-friendly
Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.
Cloud mining platforms attract new users in 2026 seeking simple entry into Bitcoin mining.
Summary
- Cloud mining grows in 2026 as investors seek low-barrier ways to mine BTC, DOGE, and LTC without hardware costs.
- SHRMiner gains attention for renewable-powered mining farms and flexible contract options across multiple countries.
- SHRMiner offers simplified cloud mining access, letting users mine crypto via contracts without managing equipment.
Interested in participating in Bitcoin mining in 2026 but don’t want to purchase expensive mining hardware? Then cloud mining platforms remain one of the simplest and most hassle-free options available.
Nowadays, an increasing number of investors are entering the market through free cloud mining platforms, allowing them to easily mine mainstream cryptocurrencies — such as BTC, DOGE, and LTC — without the need to set up their own equipment or bear the burden of high electricity and maintenance costs.
However, while there are many platforms on the market, few are truly worth considering. A robust cloud mining platform must not only feature a clear and transparent earnings mechanism but also possess stable data centers, an automated payment system, and a sufficiently secure operational infrastructure.
Based on a comprehensive assessment of 2026 market trends and platform-specific features, SHRMiner, BitFuFu, IQMining, Binance Cloud Mining, and CCG Mining stand out as the top five platforms currently worthy of close attention.

1. SHRMiner: The cloud mining platform to watch in 2026
For those who are looking for a service that strikes a balance between security, flexibility, and user-friendliness, SHRMiner is currently a popular choice.
Launched in 2018 and headquartered in the UK, SHRMiner operates over 100 large-scale renewable energy mining farms across locations such as the United States, the UK, Russia, Switzerland, Iceland, Virginia, Georgia, and Vancouver (Canada), utilizing renewable sources — including hydropower and wind power — to enhance mining efficiency.
The platform specializes in mining mainstream cryptocurrencies such as BTC, LTC, and DOGE. Users are not required to purchase any hardware; they simply need to select a suitable contract to get started. The platform offers a wide range of contracts — spanning options from low-entry thresholds to advanced packages — making it suitable for users with varying budgets.
SHRMiner: Core advantages
Sign up to receive a $15 bonus and a free mining trial.
- Supports daily automatic settlement
- No electricity or maintenance fees charged
- Uses advanced ASIC mining equipment
- Connects to green energy sources to improve operational efficiency
- Provides SSL encryption and DDoS protection
- Visualized earnings data, simple and transparent operation
- Simultaneously supports mining of mainstream cryptocurrencies such as BTC, LTC, and DOGE
- Affiliate Program: Join the affiliate program and earn up to 4.5% commission rewards, with a chance to win up to 30,000 in commission rewards.
Whether seeking flexible short-term returns or prioritizing stable long-term yields, users can find options tailored to their needs on the platform. For further details regarding mining contracts, please click here to learn more.
SHRMiner gained popularity in 2026 primarily because it caters equally well to beginners — enabling them to get started quickly — and to advanced users, offering flexible configuration options. From the introductory user experience to contract scalability, its overall performance is well-balanced.
2. BitFuFu: A professional platform backed by Bitmain
BitFuFu has garnered significant market attention due to its affiliation with Bitmain. For users who prioritize mining rig resources and hardware expertise, platforms of this nature hold particular appeal. BitFuFu is well-suited for investors seeking a more mature and sophisticated mining service ecosystem.
3. IQMining: A key option for users seeking long-term contracts
IQMining has been in operation for many years and is distinguished by its offering of longer-term mining contracts. For users who do not seek to capitalize on short-term fluctuations but instead prioritize long-term planning, IQMining is a common choice.
4. Binance Cloud Mining: Integrated trading and mining
The greatest advantage of Binance Cloud Mining lies in its ecosystem integration. Users can manage both their mining activities and asset flows directly within their Binance accounts, eliminating the need to frequently switch between platforms. For investors who are already using Binance, this makes the process even more convenient.
5. CCG Mining: A key platform in the European market
CCG Mining offers a comprehensive range of services, including cloud mining, mining rig sales, and hosting. The platform enjoys a certain level of recognition within the European market and is well-suited for users interested in exploring diverse mining services.
Why are more and more people choosing cloud mining in 2026?
Compared to traditional hardware mining, the greatest advantages of cloud mining are:
- No need to purchase expensive equipment
- No need to bear high electricity costs
- No technical maintenance expertise required
- Get started quickly, immediately after registering
Some platforms also offer free trials and reward mechanisms; for average users, this model is evidently more convenient and better suited for accessing the crypto market with a low barrier to entry.
Conclusion: Which cloud mining platform is most worth watching in 2026?
From the perspective of the overall user experience, SHRMiner remains one of the most competitive platforms in 2026. It excels in terms of platform transparency, mining processes, settlement efficiency, and user-friendliness for beginners, while also supporting multiple cryptocurrencies — including BTC, LTC, XRP, and DOGE — demonstrating strong versatility.
Of course, for those who prioritize exchange integration, Binance Cloud Mining offers greater convenience; however, if someone values long-term, stable contracts, IQMining and CCG Mining are also excellent options to consider.
Overall, when selecting the optimal cloud mining platform, it is advisable to focus primarily on the platform’s background, security mechanisms, contract flexibility, and actual user experience. For users looking to embark on a free cloud mining journey in 2026, prioritizing platforms that are transparent, secure, and feature clear settlement procedures will prove to be the most prudent approach.
Disclosure: This content is provided by a third party. Neither crypto.news nor the author of this article endorses any product mentioned on this page. Users should conduct their own research before taking any action related to the company.
Crypto World
Bitcoin (BTC) to face near-term pressure as liquidity tightens, according to Hilbert Group CIO
Global liquidity is set to deteriorate sharply, according to Russell Thompson, chief investment officer at crypto asset manager Hilbert Group (HILB), who said even a quick geopolitical resolution in Iran is unlikely to sustain a rally in risk assets without policy support.
Liquidity conditions have stabilized in parts of the financial sector following the rollout of the reserve maturity program (RMP), Thompson said, but a broader tightening of 20%–25% is approaching, a significant drag that could leave bitcoin struggling in the near term.
“Even with a resolution quickly in Iran, I do not believe that risk assets will rally for any sustainable time without outside help,” Thompson said in the report published last week.
Thompson said he expects U.S. policymakers to respond. He pointed to likely measures including reform of the supplementary leverage ratio (SLR), a sizable drawdown of the Treasury General Account (TGA) without offsetting Federal Reserve bill issuance, and a series of rate cuts under a potential new Fed chair.
The SLR is a banking regulation that sets how much capital large banks must hold against their total leverage. The TGA is the U.S. Treasury’s main cash account at the Federal Reserve.
When the Treasury draws down the TGA (spends money from it), liquidity is effectively injected into the financial system; when it builds the TGA, liquidity is drained.
Bitcoin’s performance over the past six months has been marked by sharp volatility, a clear shift from late-2025 exuberance to a more fragile, macro-driven market.
After hitting an all-time high above $126,000 in October 2025, bitcoin entered a sustained drawdown through the end of the year and into early 2026. By February, prices had fallen to roughly $63,000, a decline of about 50% from the peak, amid a broader crypto market sell-off and tightening financial conditions. This period was characterized by weaker demand, exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows and a more risk-off macro backdrop, with BTC underperforming equities in some stretches.
Bitcoin is currently trading around $75,600, leaving it significantly off its peak but no longer in freefall. The last six months, in short, have seen a full cycle: from peak euphoria, to a deep correction, to a tentative stabilization phase, with macro liquidity, policy expectations and investor positioning now the dominant drivers.
Advances in crypto regulation could also provide support. Thompson said he anticipates legal clarity on key measures before the summer recess and a faster-than-expected expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet as disinflationary pressures build.
Higher oil prices, he argued, could ultimately weigh on growth, while a softening labor market and emerging stress in private credit may add to the disinflationary backdrop.
Markets remain overly focused on the Federal Reserve as the primary source of liquidity, Thompson said, but the U.S. Treasury has significant capacity to inject funds into both the real economy and financial markets. With Treasury leadership experienced in deploying such tools, he expects a more proactive approach.
The result: short-term pressure on bitcoin, but improving conditions over the medium term.
Thompson said he expects bitcoin to be “significantly higher” by year-end as liquidity dynamics evolve. Even in a more protracted scenario, he sees liquidity bottoming around 2027, a timeline that could coincide with fresh all-time highs.
Read more: U.S. crypto adoption is rebounding, bitcoin still dominates, Deutsche Bank says
Crypto World
Bitcoin jumps, crashes within minutes of Trump moves, and here is why it might happen again this week
Bitcoin and other risk assets have become increasingly sensitive to statements from U.S. President Donald Trump, with markets often swinging upward or downward within minutes of his social media posts or policy announcements to the news media.
This has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers, academics and market experts, as questions mount over whether those price movements have created lucrative opportunities for market manipulation or insider trading.
A recent University of Oxford Faculty of Law study found sharp swings in global markets following rapid changes in U.S. tariff policy, including a sequence in which prices across crypto and stock markets fell after new tariffs were announced, then rebounded after Trump partially rolled them back days later.
The scale and timing of those moves, the author noted, created “fantastic trading opportunities” for anyone with advanced knowledge of the decisions. Also, those back-and-forth decisions by Trump have been widely criticized and called the Trump Again Chickens Out (TACO) dynamic.
‘A great time to buy’
The issue gained further attention after Trump posted “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY!! on Truth Social in April 2025 shortly before announcing a tariff adjustment that sent markets higher, prompting calls from lawmakers, including Senator Adam Schiff, for an investigation into potential insider trading or market manipulation.
Analysts, experts and media reports have highlighted patterns of large, well-timed trades across commodities and prediction markets, in some cases placed minutes before major policy or military announcements.
“Many experts say the Trump administration has engaged in market manipulation,” according to a March episode of CBC’s Front Burner, which pointed to unusually massively profitable trades in oil futures ahead of announcements related to the war with Iran.
Democratic Congressman Stephen Lynch raised similar concerns. He said trading activity tied to major Trump announcements “raised serious concerns about insider trading and market manipulation by government officials in possession of sensitive national security information.”
There is no evidence that Trump or his administration have violated securities laws or purposely manipulated the markets for self gain, but the increasing number of unusually well-timed market moves, combined with the administration’s direct influence over policy, geopolitics and regulation, has fueled a broader debate over whether the line between political decision-making and market impact is becoming increasingly blurred.
Here are five top moments when bitcoin’s price swung either up or down due to a statement or social media post by Trump, from the “Genesis” skepticism of 2019 to the naval blockades of 2026.
The top five BTC price swings
1. July 11, 2019 — The “Not a Fan” Genesis Post. In his first direct broadside against the asset class, Trump posted on Twitter: “I am not a fan of Bitcoin and other Cryptocurrencies, which are not money… and based on thin air.” Bitcoin dropped 7.1% within 45 minutes of the thread.
2. March 3, 2025 — The Strategic Reserve Pivot. Following a year of pro-crypto campaigning, Trump confirmed via Truth Social that his “Strategic National Crypto Reserve” would include a multi-asset basket of cryptocurrencies, most notably bitcoin. Bitcoin surged 8.2% in under 24 hours, jumping from $84,000 to over $91,000.
3. October 10, 2025 — The 100% tariffs on China. In yet another Truth Social post, Trump announced a 100% tariff on all Chinese imports to counter Beijing’s rare-earth export controls. Bitcoin plummeted 12.4% in roughly two hours, crashing from its $124,714 all-time high toward $102,000. And in 24 hours, a $19.38 billion liquidation event had taken place, marking the largest single-day wipeout in the asset’s history.
4. March 3, 2026 — The Anti-Bank “Genius Act” Post. Trump took to Truth Social once again to criticize Wall Street banks for “undermining” the Genius Act and delaying the passage of the Clarity Act over stablecoin yield provisions. Bitcoin rose 5.2% in 10 minutes to $71,000. This moment highlighted the administration’s willingness to go to war with the legacy financial system to protect the crypto sector.
5. April 14, 2026 — The Peace Talks. Following the naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, Trump said that Iran had “reached out” for potential peace talks and that a deal was “very possible.” Bitcoin rose 6.2% within 30 minutes from $70,000 to nearly $75,000.
It might happen again
Bitcoin shot to a more than two-month high above $78,000 on Friday after Trump essentially announced the end of the war and the full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Yet, by the end of the day, there were already questions about exactly what the U.S. and Iran had agreed to.
By Saturday morning, Iran’s military said the Strait was again closed, and there were reports of some ships making U-turns and others being fired upon. Crypto prices were quickly giving back Friday’s gains, with bitcoin sliding back below $76,000.
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