Connect with us

Crypto

Cryptocurrency platforms need better clarity to avoid being a petri dish for antisemitism – opinion

Published

on

Cryptocurrency platforms need better clarity to avoid being a petri dish for antisemitism – opinion

Since the infamous October 7 attacks, antisemitism has exploded and adapted in its virus-like tendencies, finding new ways to achieve popularity by infecting and leeching onto other elements of emerging pop culture. Cryptocurrency, as explained below, is just the latest example. 

As cryptocurrency platforms ascend in popularity, they must exercise better moral clarity to avoid becoming a petri dish for bigotry and violence, particularly against Jews.

Cryptocurrency remains a relatively new phenomenon, yet one that is becoming increasingly integrated into monetary markets around the world. 

In 2021, El Salvador became the first country to adopt a cryptocurrency as legal tender when it embraced Bitcoin as a source of official currency. As Bitcoin has risen to prominence, other cryptocurrencies have emerged into the mainstream conscience, including meme coins.

Advertisement

While some meme coins are relatively harmless (such as the world-famous Dogecoin), others have sought to capitalize on blatant antisemitism, racism, and violence in their titles and accompanying thumbnails. Also concerning is that some of these coins are even receiving heightened exposure from large platforms such as pump.fun, which reportedly commands a net valuation estimated at over a billion dollars.

Representation of cryptocurrency bitcoin is seen in this illustration taken November 29, 2021 (credit: DADO RUVIC/REUTERS)

Pump has clear terms and conditions that prohibit abusive and obscene messages and reserve the company the right to remove such content. Nevertheless, it continues to platform it. Normalizing malign antisemitism, racism, and violence has severe and deadly consequences. As one of cryptocurrency’s largest trading platforms, Pump has a moral duty. It must discontinue its practice of capitalizing off tokens that normalize bigotry and violence. 

According to Article 3.2 of Pump’s Terms and Conditions, users “must not post, upload or publish to the Pump Platform any abusive, defamatory, dishonest, or obscene message” and may face “termination of or restrictions on the availability of the Pump Platform” for any violations. Article 20.2 also affords Pump the “sole and absolute discretion to remove, modify, or reject any content.”

Advertisement

Despite having the mandate and authority to combat bigotry and promotions of violence on its platform, Pump is arguably helping monetize them. Many of its controversial tokens have achieved King of the Hill (KH) status. Tokens with KH status are tokens with the highest market cap. As a result, Pump rewards KH tokens with heightened visibility, featuring them on its homepage.

Tokens with antisemitic conspiracies

Many tokens that have appeared on Pump’s homepage with KH status include antisemitic themes and conspiracies. These include the following: “JewNazi” (accompanied by a thumbnail of a Star of David and a swastika inside), “Dirty F***ing Jew” (accompanied by a thumbnail of the Happy Merchant on a coin); “Jews did 911;” and “Jew” (captioned with Jews in Control). 

Other tokens deploy Hinduphobic themes. One token, for example, titled “Jews vs. Hindus,” appears alongside a thumbnail of two Happy Merchants – one dressed in Jewish attire and the other in purported Hindu garb with a Nazi armband – chained to one another. The token is captioned with the following description: “They’re both literally the same, they s*** on everything, invade everything, destroy the economy and housing.” 


Stay updated with the latest news!

Subscribe to The Jerusalem Post Newsletter

Advertisement

Racism expressed against Black people is also prevalent throughout the platform. Multiple tokens explicitly invoke the “N-word,” and some call for the death of Black people or call upon users to “pump” tokens to kill them. 

Other coins, such as “Monkey Wars,” employ other derogatory, anti-Black themes. Some coins even glorify the Ku Klux Klan, bearing thumbnails depicting a clansman alongside a description, “We are still here to protect you. Protect yourself and support us today.” The effect of these coins is clearly to gamify, glorify, and even normalize expressions of violence against black people.

Pump has also platformed tokens that appear to promote extortion and torture. One token, for example, reads, “LIVE REAL TORTURE UNTIL 100M MC (TORTURE).”

Advertisement

By allowing such tokens to feature on its platform, and occasionally on its very homepage, Pump has become tacitly complicit in promoting their obscene messaging. As one of the biggest cryptocurrency trading platforms, Pump must clear its portfolio once and for all of the bigoted and violent content, especially antisemitic vitriol, within its ranks.

The writer is an attorney and the director of policy education at StandWithUs, an international nonpartisan education organization that combats antisemitism and misinformation about Israel. 



Advertisement

Crypto

Ethereum’s 12 Biggest Wallets Expose 6 Exchanges Controlling 6.6 Million ETH

Published

on

Ethereum’s 12 Biggest Wallets Expose 6 Exchanges Controlling 6.6 Million ETH

Key Takeaways

The list spans staking infrastructure, a token wrapping contract, five exchange wallets, two layer two ( L2) bridges, and one address unlabeled on Etherscan but identified through Arkham Intelligence. Together, they show where concentrated ETH sits across the network, and why two of the top spots are not “holders” in the traditional sense.

Beacon Contract Tops the List, But It Is Not a Whale

As of this weekend, the Ethereum Beacon Deposit Contract holds 88,289,814 ETH, equal to 73.16% of the top 12 wallets combined. The contract does not belong to a person, fund, or company. Every validator staking ETH to secure the network through proof-of-stake (PoS) sends funds through this single address, which functions as protocol-level escrow rather than discretionary holdings.

Curiously, the Beacon Deposit Contract also holds $109,690 worth of the ERC-20 token PIKA, after 7.112 trillion of the coins found their way into the address. It also holds roughly $8,500 worth of USDT for reasons that remain unclear, alongside dozens of largely meaningless ERC-20 tokens.

The Wrapped Ether contract ranks second with 2,443,063 ETH, or 2.02% of the total. It works the same way. ETH gets locked as collateral so it can circulate as an ERC-20 token called WETH across decentralized exchange ( DEX) platforms and lending platforms. Neither the Beacon Contract nor Wrapped Ether represents an entity with control over how the funds move. Wrapped ether (WETH) is simply an ERC-20 representation of ether.

Binance Holds Three Spots on the List

Binance controls more separate addresses than any other exchange. The wallet dubbed “Binance 7” ranks third with 1,996,008 ETH and around 2,481 transactions, a pattern consistent with a wallet used for large, infrequent transfers rather than daily retail flow.

Another address labeled “Binance Hot Wallet 20” holds 739,595 ETH with 20,981 transactions, supporting active withdrawal liquidity. A third address known as “Binance-Peg Tokens” holds 454,999 ETH, collateral backing wrapped versions of ETH that Binance issues on other chains such as BNB Chain.

Advertisement

Combined, Binance’s three wallets hold 3,190,602 ETH, worth roughly $5.9 billion at $1,860 per coin. That makes Binance the single largest exchange holder among the top 12 wallets by a wide margin.

Robinhood, Upbit, Bitfinex and Gemini Round Out Exchange Custody

Robinhood holds ETH across two separate wallets. Its main operational address ranks fourth with 1,220,494 ETH. A second wallet, unlabeled on Etherscan but identified by Arkham as Robinhood’s cold storage, ranks 12th with 368,050 ETH. Combined, the two addresses hold 1,588,545 ETH, worth about $2.9 billion.

Upbit, South Korea’s largest exchange by volume, holds 1,046,015 ETH in a wallet tagged as “Upbit 41.” That address logged 54,671 transactions, the highest transaction count of any exchange wallet among the top 12, pointing to heavy retail deposit and withdrawal activity from its user base.

Bitfinex holds 450,118 ETH in the address known as “Bitfinex 19.” It is worth noting that the aforementioned exchanges listed among Ethereum’s largest holders also rank among bitcoin’s largest holders. In 11th place, Gemini keeps 385,262 ETH in a cold wallet that recorded just 945 transactions, a low figure typical of offline storage that moves infrequently for security reasons.

L2 Bridges Lock Over 1.6 Million ETH

Presently, two Ethereum scaling networks also made the top 12. Arbitrum Bridge holds 819,716 ether, backing ETH that circulates on the Arbitrum network. Base Portal, operated for the Coinbase-incubated L2 network, holds 807,076 ETH and logged 1,140,867 transactions, the second-highest transaction count on the entire list behind only the WETH contract.

Advertisement

The size of these bridge balances tracks growing activity on both networks, as traders and applications continue moving funds off Ethereum’s base layer in search of lower fees and faster settlement.

What the Concentration Means for Traders

Setting aside the Beacon Contract and Wrapped Ether as network infrastructure, the remaining 10 wallets hold 8,287,337.60 ETH combined. Of that, exchange-controlled wallets alone account for 6,660,544 ETH, or roughly 5.52% of a 120,682,850 ETH reference supply.

The top ten wallets (not including the Beacon and WETH contracts).

For traders who track exchange reserves as a signal of selling or accumulation pressure, the data shows custody split across multiple addresses per exchange rather than concentrated in one. Binance and Robinhood both operate separate hot and cold wallets, meaning analysts need visibility into all of an exchange’s tagged addresses, not just the most active one, to draw accurate conclusions about reserve trends.

The bridge wallets add a separate signal. Rising balances at Arbitrum and Base point to sustained L2 activity, a trend that has shaped trading volume and gas costs across the Ethereum ecosystem.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Crypto

This Group of Four Now Dominates Over 70% of a Key Blockchain Resource

Published

on

This Group of Four Now Dominates Over 70% of a Key Blockchain Resource

Key Takeaways

Bitcoin mining is looking less like a wide-open competition and more like a tight club. A CryptoSlate partner article published on 07/08/2026, citing miningpoolstats.stream data as of 06/23/2026, says Foundry Digital, AntPool, ViaBTC, and F2Pool together account for more than 70% of the network’s hashrate. The shift is fueling what the coverage calls a “two-tier market,” with the biggest pools increasingly tuned for institutional clients while independents and mid-size operators get squeezed. Some smaller miners are already quietly reconsidering where they point their machines, especially as ViaBTC faces added regulatory scrutiny in 2026.

Bitcoin mining is often talked about like a wide-open frontier, but mid-2026 looks more like a handful of toll roads. A July 8, 2026 CryptoSlate article (partner content) points to a June 23, 2026 snapshot showing just a few pools taking an outsized role in where blocks get made, and what kind of miners get served best.

The rise of four dominant players in Bitcoin mining

As of that June 23 snapshot, four pools controlled more than 70% of Bitcoin’s hashrate: Foundry Digital, AntPool, ViaBTC, and F2Pool. The estimated split was stark: Foundry at 31%, AntPool at 18%, ViaBTC at 13%, and F2Pool at 10%, per 31%, 18%, 13%, 10% figures cited in the coverage.

One detail that matters for US operators is that Foundry is US-based and backed by Digital Currency Group. The pool is described as being built primarily for large-scale, institutional operators and publicly traded mining companies, with strict KYC requirements baked into how it onboards clients.

A two-tier market takes shape

CryptoSlate frames the concentration as a “two-tier market,” where the biggest pools increasingly optimize for institutional miners. That kind of optimization is usually invisible until you are the one fighting for responsiveness, predictable payouts, or account support, and it is why independent and mid-size miners are described as quietly rethinking where they point their machines.

The key shift is less about any single pool’s branding and more about what scale buys you. When a pool’s business is tuned for fleets and compliance-heavy customers, smaller miners can end up feeling like edge cases instead of the core product.

Advertisement

Scrutiny, switching costs, and the search for alternatives

ViaBTC, which held 13% in the mid-2026 share estimates, has faced increasing regulatory scrutiny this year that has particularly affected miners tied to Russia and other CIS countries. The reporting describes account restrictions, sudden KYC demands, and temporary fund freezes, the kind of friction that can make even loyal miners reconsider their setup.

In the same coverage, EMCD is positioned as an alternative: it claims over 30 EH/s of hashrate, with fees starting at 1.5% under FPPS, compared with roughly 4% charged by many comparable pools. EMCD was founded in 2017 and made its first pool available in February 2018.

What centralization looks like in the metrics

In D-Central’s H1 2026 snapshot (data as of June 19, 2026), Bitcoin mining pools had a Nakamoto coefficient of 3, meaning only 3 pools were needed to exceed half of all blocks mined, with Foundry USA at roughly 27% of blocks, per Nakamoto coefficient data.

And the leaderboard keeps moving. In the latest 7-day window posted on July 16, 2026, Simple Mining’s rankings list Foundry USA at 27.0%, with F2Pool and AntPool both at 17.2%, ViaBTC at 9.5%, and SpiderPool at 5.5%.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Crypto

Kaspersky uncovers OkoBot framework targeting crypto wallet users

Published

on

Kaspersky uncovers OkoBot framework targeting crypto wallet users

Global cybersecurity firm Kaspersky has identified a malware framework called OkoBot that targets crypto users by stealing wallet seed phrases, credentials and other sensitive data through a collection of more than 20 malicious components.

The campaign, first identified in January 2026, has compromised hundreds of victims across more than 25 countries, with Brazil, Vietnam, Canada, Mexico and Türkiye among the most affected.

During the investigation, researchers found that attackers distribute the malware through ClickFix social engineering schemes and fake software downloads hosted on GitHub, allowing the framework to infect devices and deploy additional malware, including the Rilide browser stealer.

The framework consists of more than 20 payloads capable of stealing crypto wallets, harvesting credentials, recording video, downloading malicious browser extensions and executing remote commands.

Among OkoBot’s components are TookPS, which exfiltrates wallet seed phrases, OkoSpyware, which monitors Chromium-based browsers and records user activity, and SeedHunter, which injects malicious code into Trezor and Ledger wallet software to display phishing pages requesting recovery phrases.

Advertisement

Kaspersky said the campaign is still active and while its operators have not been identified, its techniques and code artifacts suggest links to Russian-speaking cybercriminals.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending