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4 tips for safely investing in crypto

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4 tips for safely investing in crypto

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Mistrial declared for MIT-educated brothers accused of $25M cryptocurrency heist | Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly

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Mistrial declared for MIT-educated brothers accused of M cryptocurrency heist | Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly
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U.S. District Court Judge Jessica Clarke in Manhattan sent jurors home after they were unable to reach agreement on whether to convict or acquit Anton Peraire-Bueno and James Peraire-Bueno of charges that they carried out a first-of-its-kind wire fraud and money laundering scheme.

The mistrial was confirmed by William Fick, a lawyer for Anton Peraire-Bueno. A spokesperson for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton did not respond to a request for comment.

Both brothers attended Cambridge-based MIT, where prosecutors say they studied computer science and developed the skills they relied on for their trading strategy.

They were indicted in May 2024, before President Donald Trump’s administration came into office, ushering in a new, crypto-friendly approach to enforcement. Despite the shift in priorities, the case against the brothers proceeded to trial.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Nees in his opening statement on Oct. 15 accused the brothers of carrying out a “high-speed bait-and-switch” designed to lure trading bots into a trap and drain the accounts of other cryptocurrency traders.

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Prosecutors said that for months, the Peraire-Bueno brothers plotted to manipulate and tamper with the protocols used to validate transactions for inclusion on the Ethereum blockchain, a public ledger that records each cryptocurrency transaction.

They did so by exploiting a vulnerability in the code of software called MEV-boost that is used by most Ethereum network “validators,” who are responsible for checking that new transactions are valid before they are added to the blockchain, prosecutors said.

“Then they planted a trade that looked like one thing from the outside, but was secretly something else,” Nees told jurors in his opening statement. “Then, just as the defendants planned, the victims took the bait.”

Katherine Trefz, a lawyer for James Peraire-Bueno, countered that the trading strategy they executed was not just novel but legitimate and “consistent with the principles at play in this very competitive trading environment.”

(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; editing by Diane Craft)

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Robinhood CEO Says Once Tokenization Enables 24/7 Markets, Change Is Irreversible

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Robinhood CEO Says Once Tokenization Enables 24/7 Markets, Change Is Irreversible
Tokenization is rapidly reshaping global finance into a nonstop ecosystem, as digital assets and programmable money drive trillions in traditional markets toward 24/7 trading, seamless tokenized credit, and continuous cross-border liquidity that redefines global capital access.
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Is This 1 Cryptocurrency Up 1,160% a Buy? | The Motley Fool

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Is This 1 Cryptocurrency Up 1,160% a Buy? | The Motley Fool

This coin’s wild run probably has more gas in the tank.

The privacy coin Zcash (ZEC 26.18%) is currently leading the crypto market, rising while everything else is struggling. It ripped a gain of 1,250% in the last three months alone, vaulting back into the top tier of coins by market value.

Is this strength the result of durable value creation, or is it a hot stove waiting to burn those who invest?

Image source: Getty Images.

Why Zcash is valuable

Unlike many other cryptocurrencies, Zcash is obviously valuable.

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At a high level, Zcash inherits Bitcoin‘s (BTC 0.79%) supply policies, which is a massive point in its favor. Like Bitcoin, Zcash has an unchanging hard cap of 21 million coins that can ever exist, and a mining-based issuance schedule that halves its reward about every four years, steadily reducing new supply entering the market and creating the conditions for scarcity to boost its price over the long term. Zcash’s second halving arrived in late November 2024; historically, at least in the case of Bitcoin, the 18 months following the halving tend to be very profitable times to be a holder.

It’s undeniable that Zcash’s recent surge has been visible enough to overtake the leading rival privacy coins by market cap, and it may portend a broad revival in privacy-focused assets.

Zcash Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-26.18%) $-172.88

Current Price

$487.56

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On that front, under the hood, the technology of this chain is a major appeal. Zash popularized the use of zk-SNARKs, a form of cryptography that lets the network validate transactions without revealing amounts or counterparties on-chain. In a nutshell, when used properly it’s possible to use Zcash in privacy such that nobody will know who you’re transacting with or for how much. That privacy utility is very different from Bitcoin’s transparency, and it is precisely what some investors are seeking as on-chain activity becomes more surveilled by numerous actors.

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If you squint, the investment thesis for Zcash looks a lot like a privacy-tilted cousin of Bitcoin’s scarcity story, with decreasing new supply and an expanding set of holders who value the asset’s specific use case.

Bitcoin Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-0.79%) $-834.41

Current Price

$105113.00

The policy headwind is probably a dealbreaker

Now, let’s take a look at the devil’s advocate view of this coin.

From that perspective, Zcash’s strongest differentiator, its privacy features, is also its heaviest baggage. Policymakers around the globe have repeatedly targeted privacy coins with new regulations or outright bans, which constrains crypto exchange listings, liquidity, and mainstream adoption, especially among the largest potential adopters like financial institutions.

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These aren’t solely academic concerns. Japan effectively banned privacy coins from domestic exchanges in 2018, leading platforms to pull Zcash. South Korea required exchanges to delist privacy coins in 2021 as part of tightening anti-money-laundering rules. Europe has also dealt with intermittent delistings and shifting regulations, leading to a frustratingly unpredictable access environment. It’s probable that the E.U. will prohibit privacy coins altogether, contingent upon implementing specific regulations.

So whereas Bitcoin has a scarcity narrative that is increasingly institution-friendly, Zcash’s privacy design makes it far more likely to be left out in the cold, especially if regulators continue to aggressively disfavor or attempt to stomp out the privacy coin segment as a whole. That doesn’t negate Zcash’s utility, but it does mean the path to durable adoption depends on a shift in regulatory disposition as a whole, which does not appear to be happening, and might not ever.

Moreover, this asset’s price is obviously on a hot streak right now. Another near-term risk is that buyers today could be stuck underwater for an uncomfortably long time if sentiment suddenly cools or exchange listings tighten again.

Therefore, Zcash probably isn’t the right pick for most investors, even if it will probably continue to gain in value quite quickly for a while longer. A reasonable plan if you are still intrigued but (appropriately) cautious is to treat Zcash as a niche position, sized small, and accumulated gradually on weakness.

If regulators eventually allow access to this coin to widen, Zcash could compound in value significantly thanks to its Bitcoin-like issuance. But if compliance frictions re-intensify or remain prohibitive — as they most likely will — expect long, choppy stretches without much reward once this rally fades.

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