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Coinbase

Coinbase status: access issues and outage reports

Problems detected

Users are reporting problems related to: transactions, website and mobile app.

Full Outage Map

Coinbase is a digital asset broker headquartered in San Francisco, California. They broker exchanges of Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin and other digital assets with fiat currencies in 32 countries, and bitcoin transactions and storage in 190 countries worldwide.

Problems in the last 24 hours

The graph below depicts the number of Coinbase reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.

July 8: Problems at Coinbase

Coinbase is having issues since 12:40 AM AEST. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!

Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Coinbase users through our website.

  • 25% Transactions (25%)
  • 25% Website (25%)
  • 25% Mobile App (25%)
  • 25% Login (25%)

Live Outage Map

The most recent Coinbase outage reports came from the following cities:

CityProblem TypeReport Time
Leipzig Transactions 23 days ago
Maquoketa Website 28 days ago
West Liberty Login 1 month ago
Houston Mobile App 2 months ago
Louisville Mobile App 3 months ago
Guayaquil 3 months ago
Full Outage Map

Community Discussion

Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.

Beware of "support numbers" or "recovery" accounts that might be posted below. Make sure to report and downvote those comments. Avoid posting your personal information.

Coinbase Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • AleksanderBen1
    Abbon (@AleksanderBen1) reported

    @coinbase Fix your ******* sol transfers. What is this

  • dee_e6
    Dee 🏕️ (@dee_e6) reported

    🚨 CRYPTO MARKET UPDATE BITCOIN ETFS REBOUND 💰 | BINANCE BACKS $2B STARTUP 🚀 | PARADIGM GOES BIG ON HYPE 🔥 🔹 Bitcoin ETFs Bounce Back U.S. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a $221.72M net inflow, signaling renewed institutional demand. BlackRock's IBIT was the only major ETF to post a net outflow. 🔹 eToro Invests in On-Chain Perpetuals Trading giant eToro led a $12.5M strategic funding round for Extended, an on-chain perpetual futures exchange, reinforcing confidence in DeFi trading infrastructure. 🔹 Binance Backs $2B Crypto Payments Firm Crypto payments startup Mesh is raising a new funding round led by Binance, targeting a valuation of up to $2 billion as digital payments continue to expand. 🔹 Upbit Lists MPLX & NEX South Korea's largest crypto exchange Upbit will list MPLX and NEX trading pairs against BTC and USDT, opening access to millions of traders. 🔹 Whale Withdraws $45M in Bitcoin A newly created wallet withdrew 733 BTC worth approximately $45.18 million from Binance, suggesting another major accumulation move. 🔹 Paradigm Stakes $66.75M in HYPE Two wallets linked to Paradigm staked 1,000,000 HYPE tokens valued at $66.75 million, underscoring strong confidence in the Hyperliquid ecosystem. 🔹 Tim Draper Moves 1,000 BTC A wallet associated with billionaire investor Tim Draper transferred 1,000 BTC (around $61.82 million) to Coinbase Prime, attracting attention from the market. 🔹 Ripple Co-Founder Makes New Investment Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen reportedly participated in funding a company founded by the son of a U.S. senator, highlighting continued venture activity in the crypto sector. 🔹 Hinkal Suffers $800K Exploit Privacy protocol Hinkal detected suspicious transactions that resulted in the theft of approximately 800,000 USDC. The incident is currently under investigation. 🔹 Riot Platforms Moves 500 BTC Bitcoin mining company Riot Platforms transferred another 500 BTC (worth approximately $30.72 million) to NYDIG Custody, fueling speculation about treasury strategy. $ANSEM currently trading at 240 million MC. Community are worried waiting for a pump to 1billion.. @blknoiz06 @MarketBubble

  • phtevenstrong
    Stephen | DeFi Dojo (@phtevenstrong) reported

    @0xVishnya @MikeSilagadze I was in the first round of Coinbase card users, so I used it way back in the day and then it randomly stopped working, so I stopped using it. The cash back was pretty good and spending USDC was great. I'm not sure where Coinbase is now with their card, I think they also have USDC yield for their "checking" equivalent, but AFAIK they don't have the same sort of "campaigns" that EtherFi does, so no random months where I make more cashback for spending on particulars or referring.

  • merccante
    mercante (@merccante) reported

    Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong: "I gave every engineer at Coinbase a week to start using AI in their workflow. The ones who did not are no longer at Coinbase." 40 minutes from the CEO of a public company that made AI adoption a hard requirement, not a suggestion. The companies still framing AI as "optional tooling" are about to be out-shipped by the ones who treat refusal to use it as a performance issue. bookmark & watch today ↓

  • DjaniWhaleSkul
    Djani (@DjaniWhaleSkul) reported

    Daily Market Report #789 It is Wednesday, and I am running around thinking about how absolutely crazy yesterday was. After all my favorite nations got knocked out, we still had Switzerland here, and for the first time in 60 years, they made it to the next round. The whole city was out last night, horns going until the early hours, flags everywhere, complete madness. And before I headed to the office, everything was clean again, like nothing had happened. That is celebration. It was worth getting almost no sleep. People here know that the world moves on, everyone goes to work, and life continues. But we also had dramatic things happening yesterday. After the US got knocked out of the World Cup, they started bombing Iran again. It almost feels like, for them, the World Cup is over, so there is no need to cover it anymore. Instead of the Strait of Hormuz situation calming down, we saw fresh strikes, oil jumped again, and we will follow what happens over the next few days. The Japanese 10-year yield hit 2.83%, the highest level in 30 years, and hedge funds are the most negative on the yen since 2007. Gold is sitting at $4,127. The Chinese central bank bought the most gold since 2023 in June, extending its buying streak to 20 straight months. China is adding more and more gold. But let’s come to digital gold. Bitcoin is sitting at $62,737, and dominance is still at 56%. We had a good start to the week, but then we found out that Strategy sold almost 3,600 Bitcoin to fund dividends. We have been talking about why they are doing that and what the goal behind it is. Michael Saylor wants to fund his own Ponzi with it, and he needs to sell his Bitcoin. Ethereum is sitting at $1,755. It is down 1%, but on the other side, TVL is growing. The Ethereum Foundation granted Argot Collective $4.3M in staked ETH funding to rebuild. The 87% of all stablecoins living on Ethereum is the number we have to look at. Talking about Ethereum and L2s, we have Robinhood, which is going absolutely crazy with memecoins. Their CEO comes out and says that people should come and bet on memecoins on Robinhood. Yes, it is a big company. Yes, there have been memecoins on Coinbase and also on Base, but most of them had a short life. So be cautious with all of these things. We have HYPE sitting at $68. It is down 3%, but they have over $10B in open interest. If we go deeper into HYPE, we can see that they are building more and more. But there is also rising competition from all around, which will be interesting to follow into Q4 this year. ZEC, Zcash, is up 8% to $482. Zcash is nearing a mathematical proof against hidden counterfeit bugs in its new Ironwood shielded pool, closing the exact vulnerability that caused the crash a few weeks ago. Monero is sitting at $333. When we have red days, we see privacy tokens running. We also have Bloomberg coming out again and saying that up to $500B in Bitcoin could be at risk when quantum comes. We do not know if we will ever really see quantum, but it is something to keep watching. Solana is sitting at $78.50. It is down 3%. The memecoin ANSEM, the Black Bull, is down 30% after its run. Usually, the casino takes back what it gives. People were laughing when I said that, yes, it could go higher, but like all these other memecoins, at one moment it will go down. We have Robinhood saying that the future of crypto is in real-world assets. We will see. Then we have BonkDAO, with the $20M governance attack. That drain is still something that keeps me thinking about how serious our industry really is. The attacker took enough BONK to vote and drain the treasury. And now it seems like BONK is dead, right? How they survive this and come back from it, I do not know. Then we have YGG, Yield Guild Games, shutting down its crypto-gaming arm to pivot to AI data training. Absolutely crazy. Let’s be honest, it was the biggest guild in crypto gaming, and they shut it down. On the AI side, everyone is running and using Claude, same as me. I used my Fable for the week, and it helped me secure my applications everywhere I had problems. So I am using it like crazy. Then we have SpaceXAI and Cursor launching their first model today. Let’s see where we go from here. What are you watching today?

  • xalphaone_
    XAlphaone (@xalphaone_) reported

    @J0se @coinbase dog **** company that shouldn’t even exist .. you couldn’t pay me enough to put up with anything relating to this company.

  • CryptoPulseGLBL
    CryptoPulse (@CryptoPulseGLBL) reported

    🔔#Today's Headlines 1. SpaceX IPO Drives Record-Breaking Tokenized Stock Trading; On-Chain Trading Volume Reaches $3.86 Billion in June 2. Coinbase Adds Grvt (GRVT) to Its Listing Roadmap 3. BitMine Reportedly Increases Its Holdings by 40,000 ETH, Worth $71.62 Million 4. James Fickel Staked 20,000 ETH 6 Hours Ago, Worth Approximately $36.09 Million 5. On-Chain Liquidation Platform KOR Protocol Completes $7.5 Million Series A Funding Round, with 1kx and Others Participating 6. Anthropic: Claude Cowork to Launch on Mobile and Web 7. Zcash Nears Completion of Mathematical Proof to Fix Hidden Issuance Vulnerability; ZEC Rises 12% 8. Pioneer Group is publicly recruiting a Head of Digital Assets, despite having previously stated that crypto assets are inconsistent with its long-term investment philosophy 9. Naver and Dunamu’s $9.9 billion stock swap deal has been postponed again until the end of the year, as South Korea’s digital asset law remains unresolved 10. The probability that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates unchanged in July is 73.3%

  • I4NFTS
    👀 🐂🀄️ (@I4NFTS) reported

    Do you guys want to know how the Robinhood story will play out as if you haven’t lived through it on 10,000 chains already? 1 runner spawns ( $cashcat ), it may be being pushed by Robinhood because green candles are marketing so it gets people talking about their chain and trading on their chain That’s the good part… for about a day Then we all know what happens from there. Dilution occurs because it’s where the volume is, liquidity gets spread thin, everything slow bleeds together until the chain is irrelevant This has happened with every single chain to ever launch in the existence of my time in crypto We know how this goes, don’t fool yourselves into thinking this time is different “Oh but it’s Robinhood don’t underestimate” cmon. Binance is big. Coinbase is big. It’ll all end the same.

  • notEezzy
    Eezzy 🧸 (@notEezzy) reported

    @crypto_bitlord7 Monad scammed you with a Presale in partnership with Coinbase Then gifted their CT faves a 5 figs airdrop for doing nothing Those CT faves dumped their airdrops on dumb retail that bought the presale Robinhood chain is nothing like that **** And Robinhood chain will save us all.

  • jamesc559
    James carver (@jamesc559) reported

    @coinbase Pretty hard to move your crypto when you don’t know when your system is down because you don’t let people know before they make purchases

  • sofie9142
    Sofia Reed (@sofie9142) reported

    @CoinDesk @coinbase so when do UK users get access to margin trading on this thing

  • zebriez
    Brie Wolfson (@zebriez) reported

    The Kool-Aid Must Flow When Apple launched Think Different in 1998, Steve Jobs wrote this in an address to employees: “The most admired companies in the world have one thing in common: They stand for something. The world can change. Their products can change - but their core beliefs remain the same.” How many startups would you claim to know the core beliefs of? Try to name them and you realize the list is actually quite short. Everyone agrees who makes the list and who doesn’t. OpenAI and Anthropic. Any Elon company. Midjourney. Ramp. Palantir. Stripe. Figma. Notion. Coinbase. Anduril. Like them or not, these companies stand for something. And they’re impossible to ignore. Startups should be working very hard to get on this list. If you're not, your company feels soulless. Toothless. Spineless. Boring. Launches are forgettable. Talent bumbles. It’s all just spaghetti on the wall. In the long run, no one cares who invested or where you worked before. People care when they feel something. This is why the world erupted with hope for the future when a bootstrapped image generation company announced their medical imaging device and accompanying spa. Midjourney stands for something. This is why when a payments company funds a cure for the common cold, publishes books, or puts a team on climate action, we celebrate the breadth of their ambition. Stripe stands for something. This is why two 21-year-olds could convince the world’s best chip designers to come out of retirement to build a new one from scratch. In the most supply-constrained environment in history. Going up against the most valuable companies in the world. When most experts said it couldn’t be done. Etched stands for something. Founders, do you know what your company stands for? Does your team? Candidates? Customers? If not, it’s time for everyone to find out. Now here’s the open secret about belief: it isn’t automatic. It’s constructed. Ask any of the teams on the list and they’ll tell you the same thing; serving up company Kool-Aid isn’t about perks like it used to be. It’s about giving people reasons to commit to your mission and each other. Steve Jobs constantly told the Macintosh team they were rebels. He put a sign up in their office that said “it's better to be a pirate than join the Navy" and flew a skull and crossbones flag over their building. Elon Musk posted rocket launch schedules above the urinals in every bathroom. A bunch of artists at Facebook built a studio and churned out posters that went up in every office (they’re the reason there are posters on the walls of your startup). Most of us know about “Move Fast and Break Things.” Fewer people know about the one that was hung on Mark’s door the day of the IPO that said “Stay Focused and Keep Shipping.” The desks at Valve have wheels on them because “you should always be considering where you could move yourself to be more valuable.” This is not symbolic. People literally move to be close to the teams they’re working with. When there’s density around a project, everyone knows there’s magic brewing. Netflix employees were told “adequate performance gets a generous severance package.” Everyone could work with confidence that the person across the table was excellent at their job. Etched moved half their team to Bangalore to be closer to a critical vendor. Dario shares his contemplations about our future with AI in Anthropic’s Slack for the entire team to read. When a new post appears, employees huddle around laptops to read the latest together. One employee told me “it’s the closest I’ve been to church.” This is how your team loves their jobs so much they can’t stop talking about it. This is how you compete for talent with companies that can pay them 50x as much. This is how people root for you. This is how you get to do it your way with your people. And if we aren’t doing that, what’s the freakin’ point? The Kool-Aid must flow.

  • CryptoStar2000
    cryptoStar2000 (@CryptoStar2000) reported

    @SizeChad @vladtenev Base? Coinbase is garbage pal

  • notEezzy
    Eezzy 🧸 (@notEezzy) reported

    Monad scammed you with a Presale in partnership with Coinbase Then gifted their CT faves a 5 figs airdrop for doing nothing Those CT faves dumped their airdrops on dumb retail that bought the presale Robinhood chain is nothing like that **** And Robinhood chain will save us all.

  • arayyye
    Raye (@arayyye) reported

    Agree on distribution, but I think Robinhood also won on customer trust. Coinbase had the burden of being crypto-first in a regulatory gray area, which meant users often experienced friction like account reviews, locked access, and compliance-driven restrictions. Robinhood started with stocks, where the rules were clearer and consumer trust was easier to build, then layered crypto on top once it already had distribution. The other difference is focus. Robinhood appears to be building a more integrated financial platform, with crypto as one component alongside stocks, options, and cash management. Coinbase often feels like it is chasing too many directions at once: Base app keeps shifting, the main Coinbase app keeps adding features, and some of those products still seem to have less real customer demand and volume than focused crypto-native products like Hyperliquid. So I agree both are converging, but Robinhood’s path may be stronger because it started with trust and distribution before crypto. $HOOD $COIN

  • goodguyaugust
    LIMITLΞSS 🐺👑 (@goodguyaugust) reported

    @cryptodadnc @ChainLinkGod @mysteriouz_goal Lmfao this overweight chinbeard Mike Baker is a good two comments from having a heart attack from working himself up. All because he’s too incompetent to understand why Coinbase/FTX would market to the masses while a financial infrastructure company wouldn’t. Clown world.

  • Leonardo_3200
    Leonardo da Vinci (@Leonardo_3200) reported

    @J0se @coinbase I would have applied if it was for lead customer support.

  • lvprism
    Louis Vuitton ×̷̷͜×̷ ₉⁹₉ (TROLL arc) (@lvprism) reported

    @coinbase fix it

  • cometwtf
    Comet (@cometwtf) reported

    A 25 year old British hacker breached the Pentagon, Apple, Europol, and the personal data of every member of the US Congress. Stayed untraceable for 2 years by only accepting Monero. Got caught because an FBI agent talked him into accepting $250 in Bitcoin just once. > Kai West was a 25 year old from the UK operating under the name IntelBroker on the dark web's biggest stolen data marketplace called BreachForums. > His victim list reads like a directory of the most powerful organisations on earth. > Apple, AMD Cisco, Nokia, General Electric, Europol, The US Pentagon. A database containing the personal information of every single member of the US Congress. > He sold everything exclusively in Monero, a privacy coin specifically designed to be untraceable. For two years nobody could touch him. > He was so confident he created a fake LinkedIn profile under the name Kyle Northern claiming he worked at HackerOne and the UK's National Crime Agency. Both publicly stated they had never heard of him. > He watched YouTube videos about his own hacks and then reposted those same videos on the hacking forum under the IntelBroker name. Using the same personal email address for both. > In January 2023 an FBI undercover agent reached out to buy stolen data. The agent talked him into accepting $250 in Bitcoin just this once. > That $250 went into a wallet traced to a Ramp exchange account registered with his real UK driver's licence under his real name Kai Logan West. > That same email address was linked to a Coinbase account, his YouTube account, his university emails, and his personal invoices. > Everything tied together under one email he had been using for years. > The FBI spent the next two years quietly building the case. Matching his YouTube watch history to his posts on the hacking forum. Piecing every thread together. > In January 2025 he posted on the forum that he was stepping down. Said he was too busy. > French authorities arrested him at his home in France in February 2025. > $25 MILLION in damage. 40 plus companies. 2 years running the biggest stolen data operation on the dark web. > He is currently in French custody awaiting extradition to the United States. > Two of the four charges carry a maximum sentence of 20 years each. The FBI never broke his encryption, they just spent $250 and waited two years for him to get comfortable enough to make one human mistake.

  • F1GHT3R7
    Fɪɢʜᴛᴇʀ ⚠︎ (@F1GHT3R7) reported

    Coinbase supporting native $INJ was one of the most useful updates I saw recent Time. It makes getting into the @injective ecosystem much simpler. July 20–22, 2026 During the migration: > $INJ deposits and withdrawals on Coinbase will be temporarily paused. > ERC-20 $INJ will be converted to native INJ at a 1:1 ratio. > Users don't need to do anything, and the migration is free. > After the upgrade, Coinbase will support native $INJ only. For me, this update is all about making the onboarding process much smoother. Until now, buying $INJ on Coinbase often meant dealing with bridges, Ethereum gas fees, and extra steps before using the Injective ecosystem. Once the migration is complete, users will be be able to withdraw $INJ directly to Injective. No wrapped tokens. No extra bridge. Just a smoother onboarding experience. I don't expect this to change everything overnight, but making access easier usually encourages more people to explore an ecosystem. I'll be watching to see whether more $INJ moves on-chain, staking participation increases, and Injective apps attract more activity over the coming months. $INJ

  • vbkotecha
    Vivek Kotecha (@vbkotecha) reported

    In 1995, the HTTP 402 status code was written into the specification. "Payment Required." Nobody implemented it. In 2025, Coinbase revived it. In 2026, Cloudflare, AWS, and the Linux Foundation all built production infrastructure around it. x402 has now processed 169 million payments across 590,000 buyers and 100,000 sellers. Not projections. Settled transactions. A 31-year-old placeholder in a protocol document became the payment layer for machine commerce. The infrastructure was always there. It waited 31 years for a customer that wasn't human.

  • YieldForceOne
    YieldForceOne 🛡️ (@YieldForceOne) reported

    @thepowerfulHRV This is how the government takes down $BTC. We need to support BIP-110 or the entire chain becomes toxic. How long until @coinbase says.. sorry, you can't deposit because your blocks contain questionable content?

  • AlexGFU
    John (@AlexGFU) reported

    @coinbase is the worst exchange during rising trading activity. They continue to have "swap issues" and hold your funds in "escrow" for HFT but will never admit to this.

  • mitchellek89573
    roman.poly (@mitchellek89573) reported

    coinbase told me the wrong team won. this is exactly why i don't trust anything except my own anxiety and a polygon rpc. proof problem indeed.

  • amircrypto82
    amircrypto82 (@amircrypto82) reported

    I remember sitting in a hotel room in Denver during EthDenver 2023, watching a demo of two AI agents trying to negotiate a compute rental. They were both running on the same framework. Both had clear instructions. Both had access to on-chain payments. The handshake was flawless. The payment went through instantly. Then one agent delivered a result the other one said was incomplete. And the whole thing just... froze. No dispute mechanism. No fallback. No way to escalate. The demo ended with a human stepping in and saying "we'll figure it out later." That moment has been eating at me ever since. Because we are shipping the agentic economy right now and we are shipping it with a missing limb. The stack is actually pretty impressive when you squint. Coinbase built x402 to handle agent-to-agent payments. That works. ERC-8004 gives agents an on-chain identity so you know who is who. The Linux Foundation threw its weight behind A2A for interoperability so these things can actually talk to each other. Every piece is engineered for the happy path. Every single standard assumes the counterparty behaves. None of them includes a function to resolve a disagreement. That is not a minor oversight. That is the entire failure mode. The agents are coming and they are not going to be polite about it. By 2030 they will outnumber human transactors by multiple orders of magnitude. They will negotiate deals across jurisdictions that do not legally recognize them. They will move capital at a velocity that makes high-frequency trading look like a horse carriage. They will disagree about deliverables, about quality thresholds, about whether a clause was satisfied, and they will need to resolve those disagreements in minutes, not months. No courtroom. No mediation. No "we'll figure it out later." This is where @GenLayer enters the chat. They are building something the rest of the stack forgot: adjudication. Not oracles. Not arbitration. Adjudication. The difference matters. A smart contract only works when an outcome reduces to deterministic code. Most disputes do not. Whether a job was delivered or a clause was satisfied or a result is close enough to count, none of those are binary. Code cannot judge it. Courts are too slow. What handles it at machine speed is a system where a randomly selected set of validators, each running a different LLM, evaluates the outcome and reaches consensus. When they disagree, the validator set rotates and anyone can appeal to expand it. No intermediaries. No single point of failure. No oracle dependency. Just a mechanism to substitute trust. Think about the trilogy for a second. Bitcoin made money trustless. You do not need a bank to verify a transaction. Ethereum made computation trustless. You do not need a server to run your code. GenLayer makes adjudication trustless. You do not need a judge or a corporate backend to settle a contract. That is the missing leg of the stool. I am not saying this is going to be easy. There are real questions about how LLM-based consensus holds up under adversarial pressure. There are open debates about validator incentives and slashing conditions that are not fully settled yet. And I am skeptical about any system that claims to handle subjective judgment at scale because subjectivity is where everything breaks. But I am even more skeptical of the alternative, which is doing nothing and watching the agent stack stall out the first time two machines disagree over something that matters. That is going to happen soon. Probably within the next two years. Some agent is going to deliver a result, another agent is going to reject it, and the whole infrastructure will grind to a halt because nobody thought to build a function for it. At that exact moment, @GenLayer stops being an interesting experiment and starts being the only thing that works. The bet is simple. The agent economy cannot scale without adjudication. Every other piece of the stack is already in production. The last piece is the one nobody wants to build because it is hard, because it touches judgment instead of math, because it requires admitting that code is not actually law, it is just a very good set of instructions when nothing goes wrong. But things go wrong. They always go wrong. And when they do, you need a system that can handle it at the same speed as the transaction that triggered it. I think we are about to find out whether the industry actually believes in autonomous agents or just likes the idea of them. Because if you really believe in agents, you have to believe in adjudication. You cannot have one without the other. And @GenLayer is the only project I have seen that is building the latter with the seriousness it deserves. What happens when two agents you own disagree with each other? Who do you appeal to then?

  • slayasolana
    slaya. (@slayasolana) reported

    Waiting 2 hours now for @coinbase to transfer my funds to gmgn so i can trade on robinhood, you’d think with this many users and this big of an exchange it wouldn’t take hours to solve this ****. so useless

  • soburr_af
    so🥶AF (@soburr_af) reported

    Typical ****.. @coinbase struggles to keep up #Solana transfers pending for 6 hours

  • seiflaroussi
    KAIDO ☀️ (@seiflaroussi) reported

    As for Base chain it s already dead volume/traders wise as of now but it does have a decent reputation for being the fa chain of coinbase decide to show more support to it s top builders it ll likely still be relevant Basically as long as coinbase is relevant so will it s chain

  • tushant_suneja
    Tushant Suneja (@tushant_suneja) reported

    @J0se @coinbase social support at scale for crypto isn't just about building trust, it's about mitigating the constant erosion from broken fiat rails. the real test is how quickly they can escalate and resolve payment-related blocks.

  • Luigi1010101
    Luigi | Solana DeFi (@Luigi1010101) reported

    Just checked again an hour later, now it says 8 hours left. What the sctual **** @coinbase ???