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US Treasury via FinCEN and OFAC Release Proposed Rule Implementing Key Anti-Money Laundering from GENIUS Act 

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The US Treasury via FinCEN and OFAC released a joint proposed rule implementing key anti-money laundering (AML), countering the financing of terrorism (CFT), and sanctions provisions from the GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act), signed into law in 2025.

The proposal treats permitted payment stablecoin issuers (PPSIs) as financial institutions under the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA). It requires them to: Establish and maintain effective AML/CFT programs, including risk assessment, customer due diligence, suspicious activity reporting, and internal controls. Implement a sanctions compliance program.

Maintain technical capabilities, policies, and procedures to block, freeze, and reject specific transactions or funds that violate federal or state laws — including those involving sanctioned persons, countries, or other illicit activity. This applies not just at issuance but potentially to secondary market transactions as well.

The rule emphasizes that stablecoins must allow intervention when needed for compliance, while aiming for a tailored regime that supports innovation and minimizes unnecessary burdens. It promotes use of tools like blockchain analytics and APIs for monitoring. Public comments will be accepted before finalization.

This aligns with existing practices by major issuers, but it makes such capabilities a formal, ongoing obligation rather than voluntary or ad-hoc cooperation. Separately, the White House Council of Economic Advisers released an analysis on the same day (April 8) addressing the ongoing debate over stablecoin yield (interest-like rewards or returns paid to holders, often by exchanges or platforms holding stablecoins on behalf of users).

Banks have argued that allowing such yields via platforms like Coinbase could siphon deposits from the traditional banking system, reducing lending capacity—potentially by trillions in extreme scenarios—and harming community banks. The White House report pushes back, estimating that a ban on stablecoin yields and rewards would boost overall bank lending by only about $2.1 billion roughly 0.02% of total loans.

It concludes this would provide negligible protection to banks while forgoing consumer benefits from competitive returns. This analysis bolsters the crypto industry’s position in negotiations around follow-on legislation, such as the Clarity Act, where yield restrictions have been a sticking point. President Donald Trump has previously expressed support for the crypto side in this banks-vs.-crypto tension.

The GENIUS Act created the first comprehensive federal framework for payment stablecoins, including reserve requirements; 1:1 backing with safe assets, oversight; federal for larger issuers, with state options for smaller ones under substantially similar regimes, and now these compliance layers. Pro-compliance angle: Brings stablecoins more in line with traditional finance for illicit finance risks, potentially increasing legitimacy, institutional adoption, and national security alignment.

Critics of fully decentralized or unfreezable designs see this as necessary guardrails. The Treasury frames it as promoting American leadership in stablecoins while being fit for purpose. However, requirements for freezing capabilities could raise technical and decentralization concerns for some blockchain-native projects, as they necessitate issuer control over tokens post-issuance.

Highlights tensions between crypto; seeking competitive features like yields on stable holdings and banking incumbents. The White House study’s minimal-impact finding may ease passage of pro-yield provisions but won’t eliminate lobbying pushback. These are proposed rules open for comment, so details could shift. The GENIUS Act itself already included some AML/sanctions mandates, with this rulemaking fleshing them out.

Overall, the developments reflect a maturing US regulatory approach: layering traditional financial compliance onto stablecoins for risk management, while the administration appears pragmatic and somewhat pro-crypto on features like yields that could drive growth without major systemic harm to banks.

Khaby Lame’s $975m Stock Deal Faces a Credibility Crisis as Trading Curbs, Filing Gaps, and Valuation Questions Deepen Market Doubts

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What was once celebrated as a landmark moment for the creator economy is now rapidly evolving into a cautionary tale about hype, thinly traded stocks, and the dangers of paper wealth.

The much-publicized $975 million all-stock transaction involving Khaby Lame and Rich Sparkle Holdings has hit a critical inflection point, with multiple major brokerages restricting trading in the stock and fresh questions emerging over whether the deal has, in fact, fully closed.

At first glance, the headline number suggested a near-billion-dollar payday for the world’s most-followed TikTok creator. But the structure of the transaction tells a much more complicated story.

This was never a cash acquisition. Instead, Rich Sparkle agreed to issue 75 million new shares to acquire Step Distinctive Limited, the company tied to Lame’s commercial rights and intellectual property. The $975 million valuation was based entirely on the market price of those shares at the time of announcement.

That distinction has now come into play. Paper valuations built on micro-cap stock prices can unravel very quickly, and that is precisely what appears to be happening. After surging sharply in January as retail traders piled in, Rich Sparkle’s stock has now collapsed more than 90% from its peak, erasing much of the implied value behind the transaction.

The market’s reversal has been severe enough that several major brokerages have moved to either block or restrict access. According to recent reports, Interactive Brokers has marked the stock as non-tradable, while platforms including E*Trade, Merrill Lynch, Fidelity, Charles Schwab, and Vanguard have imposed various restrictions on online trading.

Business Insider quoted a spokesperson for Interactive Brokers as saying that the company “periodically reviews the securities it makes available for its clients to trade and restricts those it has determined are not appropriate to offer.”

That is highly unusual and sends a strong signal to the market. Brokerages typically take such steps when they believe a security poses heightened risks tied to liquidity, operational processing, extreme volatility, corporate uncertainty, or compliance concerns.

In this case, all of those risks appear to be present. However, the most troubling issue remains the absence of clear filings confirming the transaction’s completion.

While Rich Sparkle had previously described the acquisition as “completed,” later disclosures reportedly continued to describe the deal as conditional as of March 31, despite an earlier filing stating the transaction could become void if conditions were not met by February 28.

That contradiction goes directly to investor confidence. There is still no definitive evidence in public filings that the 75 million shares have actually been transferred, nor that Lame’s company has formally received the stock that underpins the entire valuation.

This is where the story becomes larger than a celebrity deal. It now touches on fundamental market-structure concerns. Rich Sparkle is a relatively small company, historically associated with financial printing and corporate services. The abrupt pivot into becoming a vehicle for a global creator brand has raised skepticism among analysts and market participants.

Some experts have been unusually blunt. A number of financial commentators and legal observers have described the structure as raising “red flags,” with comparisons being drawn to classic speculative micro-cap setups and possible stock-promotion dynamics.

Some brokers limit trading in low market-cap stocks because they may not stick around for long and can create logistical headaches for a firm’s back office if they disappear, said James Angel, a finance professor and FINRA program director at Georgetown University.

“Brokers feel they are doing their customers (as well as their back offices) a favor by not letting customers buy them,” Angel said.

The stock chart itself has intensified those concerns.

The pattern of a dramatic price spike following a high-profile announcement, followed by a steep collapse and restricted trading access, is precisely the kind of market behavior that often attracts scrutiny from traders and compliance desks.

Whether or not there is any formal regulatory issue, the perception damage is already significant, and the creator economy angle makes the story even more consequential.

For months, this transaction was seen as proof that digital creators could command public-market scale valuations comparable to venture-backed companies. It was supposed to mark a new phase where influence itself becomes a tradable asset. Instead, it is now exposing the structural fragility of that model.

Unlike businesses with stable recurring cash flows, creator-led companies are heavily concentrated around one personality, one audience, and one relevance cycle. That means if engagement declines, brand partnerships weaken, or audience migration accelerates, valuations can deteriorate rapidly.

Public markets tend to punish that uncertainty. In addition, there are also significant questions around the AI commercial strategy that underpinned Rich Sparkle’s projections. Part of the transaction thesis involved the creation of an AI digital twin of Khaby Lame, designed to handle brand campaigns, e-commerce selling, and multilingual content generation at scale. The company had projected that this model could generate $4 billion in annual product sales.

That forecast now appears increasingly difficult to defend. Even within China’s advanced live-commerce ecosystem, those revenue assumptions look exceptionally aggressive. The notion to convert a human creator into an endlessly scalable commercial infrastructure was strategically ambitious. But it also raises profound questions about licensing, control of likeness rights, and the long-term monetization of personal identity.

Meanwhile, Lame’s silence has only deepened uncertainty. Reports indicate he has removed Rich Sparkle’s ticker from his social profiles and has made no recent public mention of the transaction.

In markets, his silence itself becomes a signal. The immediate issue is whether the transaction is legally and financially complete, what the actual value of the stock consideration now is, and whether the entire structure can withstand scrutiny.

Privy Partners with Uniswap for Native In-Wallet Swaps, As Tether Developes Decentralized Search Engine Called Hypersearch

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Privy has announced native in-wallet swaps powered by the Uniswap API, Privy, a popular wallet infrastructure platform for web3 apps and Uniswap Labs introduced built-in token swaps directly into Privy’s wallet stack.

This means apps built with Privy can now offer seamless asset conversions like digital asset FX as a native wallet feature, without developers needing to build or integrate separate swap logic, routing, or liquidity layers. It taps into Uniswap’s deep liquidity, competitive pricing, fast ~200ms routing, and support for 10M+ assets across 18+ chains. Uniswap has processed over $4.3T in cumulative volume historically.

Swaps become part of the wallet infrastructure via a single API call. No custom trading infrastructure required — it’s baked in rather than bolted on. End users in Privy-powered apps can swap tokens directly in-wallet, making onchain asset movement simpler and more accessible.

This integration was announced jointly by Privy and Uniswap, with both sharing blog posts and updates on X. It positions Privy-powered wallets as more complete DeFi experiences out of the box. Swaps become a native wallet feature via a single API call. No need to build or maintain custom routing, calldata generation, quote engines, liquidity sourcing, or execution logic.

This shifts swaps from a bolt-on integration to infrastructure that’s baked in. Teams building payments, remittances, gaming, consumer apps, or any onchain product can add seamless asset conversion without stitching together multiple services. This is especially valuable for Stripe-backed or embedded finance applications.

Access to battle-tested scale: Immediate, out-of-the-box access to Uniswap’s deep liquidity (>$4.3T cumulative volume), competitive pricing, ~200ms routing, and support for 10M+ assets across 18+ chains. Asset conversions like digital FX happen inside the wallet layer where users already are, leading to simpler apps and more consistent experiences.

Swap tokens directly in-app without leaving the wallet, approving complex transactions elsewhere, or dealing with fragmented interfaces. This lowers barriers for everyday onchain activity. Users benefit from Uniswap’s liquidity and pricing without developers having to shop around for aggregators.
Makes DeFi-like functionality feel more like traditional finance tools helping onboard less crypto-native users.

Wallets are no longer just custody and onboarding tools — they’re becoming full execution layers. Swaps are shifting from a premium or optional feature to baseline functionality in modern onchain apps. The API becomes the default and native swap provider for the thousands of apps and 120M+ wallets built on Privy which processes billions in monthly volume. This quietly expands Uniswap’s reach across consumer and enterprise onchain products.

By removing UX and dev friction, it supports trillions moving onchain in areas like payments and remittances. Commentators note this removes common excuses for poor onchain experiences.
Pairs well with existing tools like embedded yield, custodial and self-custodial options, and fiat on-ramps for more complete money movement stacks. Increased overall onchain volume and liquidity utilization, as more apps enable frictionless swaps.

Competitive pressure on other wallet providers or swap aggregators to offer similar native integrations. Helps normalize embedded DeFi in non-crypto-native applications. This is viewed as a pragmatic step toward making onchain asset movement feel seamless and production-ready, rather than a developer headache. It particularly benefits teams focused on real-world use cases beyond pure trading.

Tether Developing A Decentralized Search Engine Called Hypersearch

Tether; the company behind the USDT stablecoin is developing a decentralized search engine called Hypersearch.

Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino publicly shared this on X, stating that the company’s engineering team is actively working on it. He described it as: hypersearch: a decentralized search engine, DHT based. The project builds on a Distributed Hash Table (DHT) architecture—specifically mentioned as HyperDHT in multiple reports. This design allows searches to run across a peer-to-peer network without relying on centralized servers.

Key Features

Decentralized and serverless — Queries route directly through the distributed network, reducing single points of failure, censorship risks, and surveillance potential. P2P-focused — Aligns with Tether’s broader freedom tech initiatives, similar to their earlier work on P2P tools like the Keet messaging app which also emphasizes no servers and direct connections.

No release date, detailed roadmap, or technical whitepaper has been shared yet. Ardoino framed it as part of ongoing engineering efforts for future products and services. Tether has been diversifying beyond stablecoins using its substantial profits reportedly in the billions. Other recent moves include: Decentralized AI efforts e.g., QVAC AI assistant running locally on user hardware.

Open-source tools like MiningOS for Bitcoin mining. A general push toward peer-to-peer infrastructure to counter centralized platforms. Hypersearch fits this pattern of building unstoppable or censorship-resistant alternatives in web infrastructure. Reactions on X have been mixed: Some see it as an exciting step toward infrastructure sovereignty and decentralized alternatives to Google-style search.

Others are skeptical, questioning whether a company primarily known for USDT can deliver a truly decentralized product or raising concerns about potential centralization risks despite the DHT claims. This is still very new, so expect more details as development progresses, it could enable more resilient, privacy-oriented web search.

By using a Distributed Hash Table (DHT) like HyperDHT, searches route peer-to-peer without centralized servers. This reduces the ability of governments, corporations, or intermediaries to censor results, log queries, or de-index content. It aligns with tools like Tether’s Keet and QVAC aiming for greater user sovereignty and reduced surveillance.

Could appeal to users in regions with heavy internet controls, journalists, or privacy advocates. Existing decentralized search efforts have struggled with adoption, but Tether’s massive resources from USDT profits might accelerate development and user onboarding.

A truly functional P2P search engine could challenge the dominance of centralized players by offering an alternative without data harvesting or algorithmic bias controlled by one company. Community reactions describe it as torrent-powered Google or part of building infrastructure sovereignty.

Decentralized systems often face slower speeds, poorer relevance ranking, spam and vulnerability issues, and lower coverage of the web compared to Google’s massive centralized index. Success would depend on solving indexing, ranking, and incentive problems that have limited prior projects.

Tether is leveraging its enormous profits; billions annually to move beyond stablecoins into decentralized infrastructure. This follows patterns seen with QVAC AI and other P2P tools. It positions Tether as a broader freedom tech player rather than just a financial service. Positive for crypto enthusiasts seeking alternatives to Big Tech.

Skeptics question whether a stablecoin issuer can deliver high-quality search or if hidden centralization risks remain. No clear revenue model mentioned yet. If successful, it could indirectly boost USDT usage or create new token and utility layers, but many view it as experimental with uncertain ROI.

Rekt Drinks Rolls Out into Waitrose UK as Inscription-Based Launchpad Went Live on MegaETH

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Rekt Drinks, the energy and sparkling drink brand tied to the $REKT memecoin on Base has rolled out into Waitrose stores across the UK and online this April.

You can now pick up products like Rekt Moon Crush White Peach Sparkling Water (4x330ml packs) in physical Waitrose locations or via their website. The big hook is the on-chain rewards: buy a 4-pack, peel the sticker for a code, and claim $REKT tokens directly through the Base app. Users are already posting about their first in-store purchases and easy claims.

This continues Rekt’s push into mainstream retail, they’ve been in places like Amazon US, and there are collabs with brands like Moonbirds. It’s a real-world bridge for the crypto community—turning drink purchases into on-chain utility on Base.

Inscription-Based Launchpad on MegaETH

The first inscription-style launchpad on MegaETH; the high-performance Ethereum L2 aiming for real-time speeds with 100k+ TPS, went live today. It’s BTC-OG-inspired inscriptions but runs on an EVM-compatible chain. You need an EVM wallet + bridged ETH to MegaETH.

Mints are cheap ~50-cent level entry, though exact pricing can vary by project and supply. Tokens can trade right after mint-out on platforms like Kumbaya. Public mint is open with bulk options up to 100x, and the contract is verified. The launchpad itself supports inscription-style fair launches with liquidity allocation. MegaETH positions itself as real-time Ethereum with ultra-low latency, so this brings the fun, accessible vibe of Bitcoin inscriptions like Ordinals to a fast EVM environment.

This is a meaningful step in mainstream retail adoption for a crypto-native brand. Waitrose is a premium UK supermarket chain known for higher-end shoppers, so placement alongside established drinks signals legitimacy beyond crypto circles. Early user reports show quick in-store purchases and seamless claims. Similar past rollouts drove strong promotional sales, sometimes 30x industry benchmarks during campaigns.

Users are already posting photos of first buys and claims, creating organic buzz. Rewards tie physical purchases directly to $REKT on Base. This lowers the barrier for non-crypto users to interact with blockchain. Rekt has a history of drink-to-earn mechanics turning buyers into holders and advocates—past drops generated millions in views, community growth, and points that fed into $REKT distribution.

Rekt already hit 1M+ cans sold in its first year, with rapid sell-outs. UK expansion + rewards could accelerate this, especially if it leads to more shelf space or repeat buys. Revenue share reportedly funds $REKT repurchases. Past performance showed massive community-driven growth. Demonstrates how memecoin and brand projects can bridge IRL products with on-chain rewards, potentially inspiring others.

Early community chatter shows interest in the BTC OG feel on a fast chain, with some defensive responses to FUD around supply, fees, and platform incentives. On MegaETH: As one of the first notable primitives launching, it could drive initial test transactions, wallet onboarding, and awareness for the L2. MegaETH aims for consumer, gaming and DeFi use cases where speed matters.

Successful launchpad activity could help bootstrap liquidity, projects, and TVL on a chain still building momentum post its own mainnet phases. If it delivers low-fee, high-speed inscriptions + trading, it differentiates MegaETH from other L2s. The team emphasizes it’s a platform with fees supporting buybacks and burns and creator allocations. Early mint dynamics and supply discussions could influence token value.

Positive if it leads to sustained project deployments; risk of dilution or hype fade if volume doesn’t follow. Brings inscription culture to high-throughput EVM, potentially enabling new primitives. Could test MegaETH’s claims on performance under load. New launchpads often see initial hype followed by volatility; technical hiccups; and competition from established launch tools.

Rekt and Waitrose partnership is a real-world adoption win—turning crypto culture into supermarket shelves and everyday claims, which could compound $REKT’s brand strength and utility. Etch/MegaETH is an on-chain experimentation play—testing accessible launches on a speed-focused L2, with potential to grow the ecosystem if it gains traction. Both exemplify crypto bleeding into mainstream and technical innovation.

Hermes Agent v0.7.0 Makes Open-Source AI Agent More Reliable and Ready for Long-running Automation

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Nous Research released Hermes Agent v0.7.0 tagged as v2026.4.3. It’s described as the resilience release, with a strong focus on making the open-source AI agent more reliable, persistent, and production-ready for long-running automation and workflows.

The biggest update turns memory into an extensible plugin system. Instead of resetting context at the end of every session; a common pain point for agents, you can now: Swap in different backends easily. Share memory across agents or sessions. Build custom memory providers. Keep persistent, evolving knowledge that makes the agent grow with you over time.

Options include: A built-in local (searchable) memory with no extra setup. Third-party plugins like Honcho, MEM0, Hindsight, Open Viking, RetainDB, and ByteRover supporting features like graph recall, human-like consolidation, auto-loops, unified files, or local Markdown.

This addresses AI amnesia — agents no longer start from zero each time, reducing repeated instructions and improving consistency in complex workflows e.g., SEO automation, content pipelines, or multi-agent setups. Many users and reviewers call it a game-changer for long-term learning and agent collaboration.

Credential pool rotation and gateway hardening; fixes race conditions, approval routing, and security issues. Camoufox anti-detection browser integration for more stealthy web automation. Inline diff previews for better visibility into changes. Deep stability and security fixes across 168 PRs and 46 resolved issues.

Migration tools like hermes claw migrate for easy imports from tools like OpenClaw, including memories and skills. Self-improving skills that refine based on experience. The release emphasizes resilience for real-world, sustained operation rather than just benchmark-chasing intelligence.

Community reaction has been very positive, especially around the memory overhaul making agents feel more like persistent systems that learn and coordinate better. It’s positioned as a strong open-source option for developers building reliable, self-improving agents.

The pluggable memory system stands out as the headline impact. Previously, agents often reset context between sessions, forcing users to repeat instructions and losing progress on long-term tasks. Now memory becomes extensible via plugins; built-in searchable memory + third-party options like Honcho, MEM0, Hindsight, Open Viking, RetainDB, ByteRover.

Agents maintain persistent knowledge, preferences e.g., write short emails or brand voice, and evolving skills across sessions or even devices (CLI ? Telegram continuity). This enables true self-improvement loops: the agent learns from experience, refines its own skills, and grows more capable over time without constant human intervention.

Real-world effects reduce friction in automation pipelines. Users report 2–3x faster workflows in areas like data analysis, content ideation, and vulnerability triage. Long-running tasks; SEO automation, research, creative pipelines become far more reliable and set-it-and-forget-it. Many describe this as fixing one of the core frustrations holding back practical AI agent adoption.

Gateway hardening and credential pool rotation fix race conditions, stuck sessions, and API key burnout — making 24/7 operation more stable. Camoufox anti-detection browser improves stealthy web automation; useful for research or scraping without easy blocks. Inline diff previews and security fixes across 168+ PRs enhance usability and safety.

The release shifts Hermes from promising prototype toward a more robust, production-grade tool for sustained automation. Fewer crashes, better uptime, and safer credential management — especially valuable for developers running agents on VPS, Docker, or local servers. Hermes is frequently positioned as a strong open-source alternative to tools like OpenClaw.

Emphasis on self-evaluation, skill creation, and layered memory differentiates it. Some users are switching or running both, citing Hermes’ learning loop and persistence as advantages for long-term use. Easy migration tools from OpenClaw lower switching costs. Community notes it as more focused on growing with you rather than just task execution. GitHub momentum remains strong with active Discord and skill-sharing ecosystems.