Crypto World
Here Are Four Important Crypto Stories You Might Have Missed This Week
It’s easy to get lost in the sea of news coming daily in the cryptocurrency world, from bitcoin price volatility to regulatory battles in Washington and everything in between. Sometimes, interesting stories are just passed by.
Here are four of the most intriguing news developments that went live in the past week and you might have missed.
North Korea-Linked Dev at MetaMask
According to an internal script obtained by Drop Site News, Consensys, the entity behind the popular Ethereum wallet MetaMask, confirmed that a consultant introduced through a third-party provider was later found to have links to North Korea. The reason for concern is that the country’s authorities have long employed hackers to infiltrate popular cryptocurrency projects, find or insert vulnerabilities, and later exploit them for their own benefit.
The developer in question worked with MetaMask for about a month and contributed to code related to the wallet before their access was terminated. Consensys said it temporarily suspended product releases to investigate the incident but found no evidence that assets or data were stolen, malicious code was deployed, or users were affected.
Knaken Goes Bankrupt
A Rotterdam court declared the local crypto exchange Knaken bankrupt after prosecutors alleged that approximately €7 million ($7.6 million) in customer funds were missing and could not be accounted for. Users were unable to access the platform for approximately a month since it halted operations in June.
The court concluded that Knaken did not have enough assets to repay all customers. This collapse comes at an intriguing time as the European Union just implemented its MiCA requirements, and it raises questions about how effectively the new regulatory framework can protect customers from platforms operating without the required authorization.
Injective Submits TA-1
The team behind the popular blockchain project said they submitted Form TA-1 to the US SEC to register as a transfer agent. If approved, Injective could maintain official ownership records for tokenized securities directly on-chain.
Transfer agents traditionally record ownership changes, process transfers, and help issuers maintain shareholder records. However, Injective’s new approach aims to represent a practical attempt to connect public blockchains with regulated US capital markets rather than simply using unregulated stock representations.
Injective has filed its transfer agent registration with the SEC, marking a major step towards becoming a leading blockchain with a regulated pathway to issue securities onchain.
This advances RWA market infrastructure in the New Internet Economy, right here in the US. pic.twitter.com/u97CMk1rBT
— Injective
(@injective) July 16, 2026
Robinhood Chain Gains ETH Traction
Robinhood Chain’s first couple of weeks of existence have been quite overwhelming, especially for Ethereum. Reports emerged a few days ago that over $70 million worth of the altcoin was already bridged to the newly launched chain.
These significant early inflows suggest impressive interest in the new ecosystem, but the real test will be whether the liquidity remains after this initial hype period and develops into sustained trading and application usage. Is this indeed demand for tokenized assets rather than short-term speculative activity?
The post Here Are Four Important Crypto Stories You Might Have Missed This Week appeared first on CryptoPotato.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login