SEC Approves $XRP ETFs
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has approved Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) for $XRP, a decision linked to the Clarity Act. Social media posts reporting the SEC's "green light" for $XRP ETFs registered 98% bullish sentiment, quickly garnering attention with individual posts accumulating up to 204 likes and over 7,000 views in the hours following the news.
SEC Classifies $SOL as Digital Commodity
The SEC classified Solana ($SOL) as a 'Digital Commodity' on March 18, 2026. Solace_fm reported this regulatory determination under the SEC's new crypto asset taxonomy.
Binance Delisting Sparks User Outcry, Robbery Claims
Binance faces user protests over its delisting decisions. Users expressed frustration, having invested in these assets based on initial listings. Grievances include accusations that the exchange profited from trading commissions before removing support, leading some users to publicly characterize Binance's actions as 'systematic robbery' and 'scams'. These reactions follow Binance's plans to delist tokens on April 1, 2026. The affected assets include Arena-Z ($A2Z), Ampleforth Governance Token ($FORTH), Hooked Protocol ($HOOK), IDEX ($IDEX), Loopring ($LRC), Neutron ($NTRN), Radiant Capital ($RDNT), and Solar ($SXP).
CZ Denies Iran Funding, Rejects $110B Net Worth Claim
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ) addressed and rejected allegations and financial claims yesterday. CZ refuted accusations that Binance facilitated funding for Iran, asserting the platform had "no interest" in such activities, noting his previous residence had been attacked by Iran. CZ also dismissed claims of his personal net worth being approximately $110 billion, characterizing this figure as "completely unreasonable" and questioning its calculation methods.
Neutrl Front-End Attack Under Investigation
The Neutrl protocol began an investigation on June 24, 2024, following reports of a front-end attack. The incident was detected around 14:00 UTC when users reported unusual activity and redirection attempts. Preliminary findings suggest a DNS hijacking event led to a malicious front-end being served to users. During the approximately three-hour window before the front-end was taken offline, an estimated $4.8M in user funds was compromised. Losses primarily involved $ETH and $USDC, siphoned from 17 unique wallet addresses that interacted with the compromised interface. The malicious script reportedly prompted users to approve transactions that drained their wallets. In response, the Neutrl team took the protocol's front-end offline at 17:15 UTC on June 24 to prevent further exploitation. Neutrl confirmed engagement with external blockchain security experts for a comprehensive forensic analysis. Community sentiment regarding Neutrl shifted from 68% bullish to 35% bullish in the 24 hours following the public disclosure.
