[Uniswap Treasury Burns 100 Million UNI]
According to monitoring by Lookonchain, the Uniswap treasury burned 100 million UNI approximately 4 hours ago, valued at around $591 million, following the approval of the fee burn proposal.
On chain data shows that five months ago, the address 0x4B0d3273B75AA15715be2e36E111f4cA8AB6c9f8 sold 662600 UNI units at a price of $8.82, with a cost of $5.99 and a profit of $1.875 million; Since September 2020, the address has accumulated a profit of $23.415 million through three UNI band trades, with a 100% win rate. (Auntie Ai)
[Silver's Market Cap Surpasses Apple to Become the World's Third Largest Asset]
According to 8marketcap data, silver's market cap has surpassed Apple, becoming the third largest asset by market cap globally.
[A Whale Deposited 1.926 Million ASTER into OKX]
According to Arkham monitoring, approximately six hours ago, a whale transferred about 1.926 million ASTER tokens to the cryptocurrency exchange OKX through an intermediary wallet. This whale accumulated these tokens about two months ago and would currently incur a loss of approximately $600,000 if sold, with a return on investment of -30%.
[Flow Foundation Protocol Fix Approved by Validators and Successfully Deployed]
The Flow Foundation announced that its proposed protocol fix, Mainnet-28, has been unanimously approved by network validators and successfully deployed. Currently, the Flow network is online and has started producing blocks, but it remains in 'idle/read-only' mode, with regular transaction submission still suspended.
[TRM Labs Tracks Stolen Assets from LastPass Breach, Links to Russian Criminal Group's Money Laundering Activities]
TRM Labs reported that it has tracked the stolen crypto assets from the 2022 LastPass breach on-chain, uncovering that a Russian cybercriminal group is suspected of laundering funds using mixing tools like CoinJoin. Despite the hackers' use of mixing tools, TRM linked the flow of funds to the same group of attackers through demixing and behavioral continuity analysis. The stolen funds ultimately flowed into high-risk Russian exchanges Cryptex and Audi6, with the total amount estimated to exceed $28 million.