Crypto
Blockchain.com files confidentially for US IPO amid growing crypto listings – SiliconANGLE
United Kingdom-based Blockchain.com Group Holdings Inc., a cryptocurrency exchange and wallet service, announced Thursday that it has filed confidentially for an initial public offering in the United States.
The details of the IPO remain undisclosed, with the number of shares or expected price range undetermined as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reviews the application.
Founded in 2011, Blockchain.com began as a blockchain explorer, a type of analysis tool that allows visitors to view transactions on the global distributed ledger ecosystem and track them from their origin to their current state. As the company evolved, it became a cryptocurrency wallet and exchange, allowing users to buy, hold, sell and trade tokens on its platform.
A blockchain is a tamper-proof digital database, or ledger. It securely distributes recorded transactions between numerous nodes and cryptographically secures information about the activity without a central authority. This allows tracking financial activity similar to a bank, without the need for a middleman, and enables highly secure transactions that are almost impossible to change retroactively.
Blockchain.com describes itself as a leading infrastructure company with more than 95 million wallets created, facilitating more than $1.1 trillion in volume on its platform across over 20 products. These include consumer trading, wallet services, institutional products and blockchain data tools rather than a classic order-book exchange model.
This IPO filing follows blockchain and crypto leaders entering IPOs, including major firms such as stablecoin issuer Circle Internet Group Inc., cryptocurrency exchange Gemini Space Station Inc. and digital asset platform Bullish Inc.
The IPO of Bullish set an interesting precedent as well, as the company arranged to receive $1.5 million in proceeds from the deal in stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency token that is pegged to another currency, such as the U.S. dollar. This represented the first time a cryptocurrency had been used as part of the payout for an IPO.
Cryptocurrency lending firm Figure Technology Solutions Inc. also filed for IPO last year.
However, it hasn’t all been roses for IPO filers in the crypto industry. Other leading firms, such as cryptocurrency exchange Payward Inc., known as Kraken, paused its IPO, and French crypto hardware wallet Ledger Inc. also delayed its IPO, citing volatile market conditions.
Image: Pixabay
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Crypto
DeFi’s Newest Threat: How Malicious Liquidity Pools Are Trick-Quoting Ethereum and Polygon Users
Key Takeaways
- Enso’s July 16 report exposed “toxic pools” that fake quotes, causing tens of thousands of dollars in losses on a Curve pool.
- The exploit threatens DeFi front-ends, with one malicious Uniswap v4 hook causing a 99.1% failure rate.
- Enso updated its Enso Shield product to detect fake quotes across 2 different blockchain environments.
A ‘Jekyll and Hyde’ Tactic
A newly uncovered class of malicious decentralized finance ( DeFi) liquidity pools is targeting the core infrastructure that cryptocurrency traders rely on to find the best prices, according to new research published July 16 by DeFi infrastructure firm Enso.
The company is calling the deceptive setups “toxic pools.” Unlike typical cryptocurrency hacks that drain funds directly from smart contracts, these pools are engineered to systematically trick transaction simulations. They return attractive, highly competitive price quotes when a crypto wallet or decentralized exchange ( DEX) aggregator runs a simulation, but they alter their behavior the moment the transaction is actually executed on the blockchain.
The result is a subtle, systemic drain: traders receive significantly worse execution prices than they were quoted, or their transactions fail, burning network fees in the process.
“Our investigation leads us to believe this is not simply another isolated smart contract exploit,” said Milos Costantini, co-founder and chief product officer at Enso. “The industry has spent years optimizing price discovery. Our findings suggest the next challenge is verifying execution integrity.”
According to Enso’s report, toxic pools exploit the off-chain “dry-run” simulations that wallets use to preview trades. The malicious contracts detect when they are running in a read-only simulation environment and return an artificially optimized price. Once the transaction is actually broadcast on-chain, the pool alters its mathematical logic to execute the trade at a degraded rate.
To remain hidden from security systems, these pools alternate between honest and malicious states, rendering static code scanners and historical reputation filters ineffective. This bait-and-switch design degrades the user experience and drains user funds through failed transactions. In one case study, a manipulated Curve pool triggered more than 37,000 reverted trades, forcing users to burn nearly $30,000 in gas fees.
Attackers are also exploiting next-generation, modular exchange architectures. On Polygon, a malicious “hook” — a smart contract plugin used in platforms like Uniswap v4 — lured routing systems with fake rates before triggering a 99.1% transaction failure rate.
Findings From On-Chain Forensic Analysis
The research, which spanned roughly two months of on-chain forensic analysis, combined historical archive- node data, transaction trace analysis and smart contract inspections. Enso engineers, with support from contacts at major DeFi protocols Curve Finance and Oku, identified active toxic pools operating across both the Ethereum and Polygon blockchains.
In one documented case study on Ethereum, a manipulated Curve pool processed more than 129,000 swaps. While the pool appeared to be the optimal route, it delivered worse execution than quoted, leading to approximately $225,000 in overstated quotes.
Furthermore, Enso’s team identified multiple blockchain oracle contracts deployed by the same operator to support additional pools, indicating the tactic is likely more widespread than the two documented cases and could represent an emerging template for on-chain extraction.
The findings present a direct challenge to the user-facing layer of the DeFi ecosystem. Popular wallets, consumer-facing interfaces and aggregators depend heavily on automated simulations to guarantee the “best path” for a user’s trade.
Enso’s report highlights that if routing infrastructure cannot distinguish between a legitimate quote and a manipulated one, front-ends will continue to steer users toward these traps. This creates potential legal and financial liability risks for wallet providers and interface operators who promise “best execution” but routinely deliver toxic routes.
In response to the threat, Enso announced it has updated its execution-protection product, Enso Shield, to include dedicated toxic-pool detection. The security tool is designed to bypass standard simulation methods by analyzing live on-chain context, monitoring quote history and using transaction traces to spot execution discrepancies.
Rather than blaming individual decentralized exchanges, Enso has called on the wider cryptocurrency industry to conduct further research into the manipulation of transaction simulations.
“If transaction simulations can be manipulated while real execution tells a different story,” Costantini said, “we need better ways to verify what users actually receive.”
Crypto
New law protects consumers from cryptocurrency kiosk/ATM fraud | Maui Now
July 16, 2026, 5:00 AM HST
Starting Oct. 1, cryptocurrency kiosk/ATMs that accept deposits will no longer be allowed in Hawai’i as a new consumer protection law takes effect.
Hawai’i is now the 35th state to enact a law to protect consumers from losing money in scams involving cryptocurrency kiosk/ATMs and is the first state to ban kiosks that accept deposits. Four other states have completely banned these machines. Other states have imposed transaction limits, mandated refunds for fraud, increased warning signs, required printed receipts and passed other consumer safeguards.
“The use of cryptocurrency kiosks in scams was increasing exponentially in Hawai’i and across the nation. Last year, the FBI said Hawai’i consumers reported losing $3.85 million through fraud involving cryptocurrency kioks. That’s nearly four times the amount reported lost in 2024,” said Keali’i Lopez, AARP Hawai‘i state director. “That’s why AARP fought hard to pass Act 224. We’re grateful to our advocacy volunteers and others who shared fraud stories, testified, called and sent letters and emails to help pass the law. We’re also thankful to lawmakers who acted decisively to protect consumers.”
The FBI said kupuna were especially vulnerable to cryptocurrency kiosk/ATM fraud and accounted for the majority of the losses. The machines look like bank ATMS and could be found in grocery stores, convenience stores, pharmacies, gas stations and other locations.
“Fraudsters use cryptocurrency kiosks like a getaway car in a bank robbery,” Lopez said. “They convince consumers through romance scams, by posing as an IRS agent or other official, or through a technology scam, to take money out of their banks and deposit it in the cryptocurrency kiosk and once the money is put into a scammer’s cryptocurrency wallet, it is gone.”
Crypto
Luno Pushes South Africa to Rewrite Crypto Rules Through Parliament, Not Proclamation
Key Takeaways
- Luno challenged South Africa’s draft capital flow rules in 2026, arguing the executive-led plan is unconstitutional.
- Restrictive rules could penalize CASPs up to 1 million rand, pushing South Africa’s crypto market underground.
- Next, Luno wants Parliament to enact a fair Act of 5 key rules to protect bitcoin and stablecoin innovation.
Strict Enforcement and Steep Penalties
Cryptocurrency exchange Luno has launched a formal challenge against a proposed overhaul of South Africa’s foreign exchange laws, arguing that the National Treasury’s plan to bring digital assets under an apartheid-era capital flow regime is unconstitutional because it bypasses Parliament. The challenge was detailed in Luno’s formal submission to the National Treasury on the Draft Capital Flow Management Regulations.
The draft rules, jointly published by the Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank for public comment, aim to modernize the country’s exchange controls. However, Luno warns that the proposal contains highly restrictive measures that threaten fundamental property and privacy rights.
As previously reported by Bitcoin.com News, the draft regulations seek to replace South Africa’s 1961 Exchange Control Regulations with a risk-based system focused on monitoring cross-border transactions and combating illicit financial flows. Violations could carry penalties of up to five years in prison, a fine of $53,000 (1 million South African rand), or both.
In its submission, Luno raised serious alarms over three specific enforcement provisions: asset seizure without court orders, forced liquidations and business-ending sanctions. Marius Reitz, Luno’s general manager for Africa, argued that changes of this magnitude must not be enacted via ministerial regulation.
“By proceeding through ministerial regulation, the executive branch effectively bypasses the democratic process for changes that will affect the fundamental property and privacy rights of millions of South Africans,” Reitz said. “They should, in our view, have been enacted as a new Act passed through Parliament.”
Luno further charged that the National Treasury is contradicting the central bank’s own policy roadmap, which identifies stablecoins as potential future money capable of facilitating low-cost, borderless payments. Yet, Luno argues, the Treasury’s draft regulations treat all digital assets as identical, bringing bitcoin, stablecoins and tokenized real-world assets under the same restrictive capital flow framework.
“By attempting to capture every digital asset regardless of utility or economic function, Treasury risks unintentionally stifling South Africa’s broader blockchain technology sector,” Luno stated.
Proposed Solutions for Industry Growth
The exchange warned that the proposed reporting requirements for transactions above an unspecified threshold would create an “unmanageable administrative burden” for platforms and the state alike, given that large transaction volumes are processed within seconds.
“Our experience demonstrates that overly restrictive regulation simply pushes digital asset activity underground or offshore, beyond the reach of domestic regulators and tax authorities,” the company added.
Meanwhile, the crypto exchange’s submission also shared several key recommendations to resolve some of the friction points. First, Luno calls for the enactment of the final crypto capital flow framework through an Act of Parliament rather than executive regulation. It also recommends the designation of crypto assets bought and held on South African-licensed exchanges as onshore assets.
Luno wants regulations to distinguish between digital asset classes based on economic function while dropping the proposed forced-sale and warrantless asset seizure mechanisms. Non-resident international trading firms must also be allowed to continue operating in the South African market under appropriate registration to preserve market liquidity.
“South Africa needs a regulatory framework that protects the integrity of the digital asset system without stifling the innovation, investment and economic growth that the digital asset sector is uniquely positioned to deliver,” Reitz said.
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