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As so often in crypto, alpha isn't televised but comes straight to your timeline - delivered by e-girl accounts on Twitter. This time around, it was Taylor Monahan, CEO and Founder of MyCrypto, who found that over 5000 ETH had been drained from wallets since December 2022. Exploits aren't new, but this attack is different. It remains unclear what the attack vector is, and the only thing all the wallets have in common is that they were created between 2014 - 2022. It also seems OGs are impacted more than casual users.
In the meantime, the hacker is swapping all the funds drained to ETH and then moves them through various mixing services to, eventually, cash out.
There is just one silver lining. If you are all in on NFTs, you might be in luck. The attacker hasn't drained any of those precious JPEGs, your anime NFTs are safe.
Key Takeaway: If you keep significant amounts of funds in crypto, store them in multiple places. Make sure not to share your seed phrase and enable 2FA for any exchanges you connect with. Better safe than sorry.
On Sunday, a new episode of Demon Slayer dropped, and it quickly started trending on Twitter. Looks like we all love a good demon. For crypto, one of our demons are memecoins. And they're making a comeback.
It all started with the launch of PEPE, a coin featuring the internet character Pepe the Frog. Within just four days, the value of the currency 500x'd, making some of its early investors quite rich. As tends to happen when trading on Ethereum increases, so did gas fees bringing back the days when people paid $30 for a single transfer.
One individual using the name "JaredfromSubway.eth" took it to a whole other level, spending over
After the launch of Pepe, some entrepreneurial devs took another internet character, Wojak, and turned him into a currency. This speculative currency hit a 10 million marketcap in just a day. [Imagine rocket emoji here - left out because it could be considered 🙈]
Key Takeaway: Memecoins are fun, but at the same time, they tend to be more about gambling than actual value creation. While a few people get rich, most of them will, as the name of the latest memecoin to launch suggests, get $REKT.
When you're asked a question that you don't want to answer in public, do you:
Now imagine the person in question was the chairman of the SEC, Gary Gensler, and the question was if ETH is a security. Gensler chose option three and once again did nothing to provide clarity for crypto businesses operating in the US. For a professor who taught a course on blockchain and crypto at MIT before, that's quite weak.
Once again, having your business in the US seems less attractive. Maybe the next migration of tech companies won't be from California to Miami but to exit the US.
Key takeaway: The SEC isn't very fond of crypto. Apparently, they want to make it as uncertain as possible for crypto companies to operate in their backyard. Fortunately, the US isn't the only country in the world, look to Asia for the total opposite in attitudes.
Hong Kong is set on , and Japan has even floated the . What better place to be during a bear market than the country with a cup noodle museum?
Fact of the week:
Did you know that Instant Ramen was invented in and was back then considered a luxury good? Good thing crypto bear markets didn't exist in the 60s yet.
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