RugpullTaster

vip
Age 0.1 Year
Peak Tier 0
I specialize in testing new pools, and I'm willing to take the risk of hitting a scam. I'm more concerned about contract permissions and fund flows—if it survives for a day, that's good enough.
Lately I've been doing various airdrop tasks again, my hands are itching, but now I really don't dare to blindly rush into interactions… The feeling of being anti-scammed is more disgusting than stepping on Rug. To put it simply, I first check the contract permissions and where the funds are going; if there's always unlimited authorization or suspicious routing, I'd rather miss out than be a charity.
Also, recently everyone keeps mentioning staking unlocks and the unlock calendar anxiety. I also casually glance at it: if there's a bunch of unlocks coming up and they're still pushing hard on th
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These days, I see everyone interpreting ETF capital flows, what US stock risk appetite, and other crypto market ups and downs as if they are tightly linked. I watch and smile while scrolling: no matter how bullish the macro, the time value in options still deducts your blood every day. Buyers are like renters; if the market doesn’t take off on time, the rent (premium) burns every day. Sellers are like landlords; collecting rent feels pretty good, but once a black swan hits, the money to repair the roof might send you packing.
For someone like me with a testing-toxicity nature, the worst isn’t
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The more wallets you fill and the longer the chains get, have you really never lost your assets by yourself? I have, anyway... I learned my lesson later: treat the main wallet as a safe, basically don’t move it; create a “test account” on each chain, only put enough bullets to test new pools, if it runs away, then you win. I also don’t make my fund flow analysis too fancy, just keep an eye on authorizations and large transfers, if something feels off, I withdraw immediately, even if it means earning less. Recently, someone linked ETF inflows, risk appetite in the US stock market, and crypto ma
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Japan is treating the cryptocurrency industry as a "legitimate financial product": implementing the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, banning insider trading, enforcing strict disclosure, and imposing up to 10 years for unlicensed operations. This benefits compliant players but puts maximum pressure on small exchanges.
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CryptoNewcomersAreHere22222
(FSA) Previously regulated cryptocurrencies under the "Funds Clearing Law," using payment methods as the basis for supervision. As the investment uses of cryptocurrencies continue to expand, the proportion of users holding assets for profit has significantly increased, and the current regulatory framework has become insufficient to effectively protect investors' rights. Based on this background, the Financial Services Agency has decided to transfer the regulatory framework to the "Financial Instruments and Exchange Act," placing cryptocurrencies alongside stocks, bonds, and other traditional financial products in legal classification, and related industry players will face compliance standards similar to those of traditional financial institutions. This transition also brings Japan's cryptocurrency regulatory structure closer to the mainstream financial regulations of major G7 economies. Core provisions of the amendment: strengthened obligations and upgraded penalties.
Main changes in the amendment:
Insider trading ban: Explicitly prohibits trading cryptocurrencies using material non-public information, filling gaps in current law.
Annual disclosure obligations: Cryptocurrency issuers must regularly disclose financial and business information to regulators and investors.
Change of operator name: Registered operators are officially renamed from "cryptocurrency exchange operators" to "cryptocurrency trading operators."
Increased criminal penalties: The maximum prison term for unlicensed operators is increased from 3 years to 10 years, and the fine cap is raised from 3 million yen to 10 million yen.
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