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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 2: Problems at Coinbase

Coinbase is having issues since 07:00 PM 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 17 days ago
Maquoketa Website 22 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:

  • VictoriaMorantX
    VIX (@VictoriaMorantX) reported

    @CoinMarketCap That’s why Coinbase was up Elons ***. They are working with the government to scam and freez peoples assets. It’s a KNOWN FACT IN CRYPTO community. You do NOT HOLD COINS on exchanges ESPECIALLY COINBASE. they will FREEZ YOUR ASSETS.

  • leetifaa
    Jean-Luc (@leetifaa) reported

    @RockwaterEQ This is a feature, not a bug. Coinbase loves holding user funds hostage under the guise of "security compliance" while their customer support is non-existent.

  • owoweb3
    Temitope Owoseeni💎 (@owoweb3) reported

    📊 #USDT CeFi lending experienced its first contraction since Q3 2024, declining 6% QoQ to $23.3B. Tether still holds 68% of the market despite a 7% pullback. Nexo, Maple, and Coinbase were the only lenders that saw growth. Galaxy and Ledn faced significant losses, down 21% and 19%, respectively.

  • LucaProsperi
    Luca Prosperi (@LucaProsperi) reported

    @nic_carter @LorenzoARK As usual the truth is in the middle but makes no clicks. 100% retained NIM is probably not market equilibrium, as 0% isn’t. Circle has been bleeding NIM vs distributors from day 1 (see Coinbase) and continues to do so vs distributors/ app with large holdings. See Hyperliquid, Polymarket, Squads, Safe, and others. I’ve been on the losing side as talking horse of this often enough to know, as Bridge has been on HL with Native Markets. The announcement from Stripe is today just an announcement, and the market is the market. There’s no substance in it beyond the obvious signal that a monopoly of a single digital money issuer in an open market is no equilibrium either and others want in. But until now is a pompous announcement with everyone in it - including competitors that won’t support this project most likely (Anchorage, SoFi, Brale, etc). We always knew your margin is my opportunity and NIM alone is not a sustainable moat, but this announcement does nothing to add to this debate. Evidence does.

  • BruceBa56071641
    Ol’ Timey (@BruceBa56071641) reported

    @zavanchy @WNBA sucks @coinbase ... can you help?

  • VictoriaMorantX
    VIX (@VictoriaMorantX) reported

    @CoinMarketCap @JDVance is a scanner now working with Coinbase to freeze people’s assets. There’s a special place in hell for scum like you. You scanned people of billions it’s not enough. **** you.

  • AdamBLiv
    Adam Livingston (@AdamBLiv) reported

    Nobody warns you. That's the sick part. Nobody sits you down and says, hey, if you spend one weekend actually reading about money, you will lose the ability to enjoy anything for the rest of your life. Your brother-in-law just mentions it at a barbecue. That's how it starts. Some guy holding a hot dog says "you should look into Bitcoin" and you laugh at him. You laugh AT him. You make the tulip joke. You feel superior for eleven more days. Then it's 2:47 in the morning and you're on your fourth Saylor podcast and your wife thinks you're having an affair. And in a way, you are. You're cheating on your entire worldview. ou came in to debunk it. That's the trap. Everyone comes in to debunk it. You wanted to find the flaw, dunk on your brother-in-law, and go back to your Vanguard target date fund like a respectable adult. Instead you found out what happened in 1971 and now you can't make eye contact with your 401k. Because here's what actually happens. Bitcoin is cool and all, but you REALLY learn about the dollar. Bitcoin is fine, Bitcoin is twenty-one million and a schedule, you understand it in an afternoon. The dollar takes months, because every time you think you've hit the bottom of that thing there's a trapdoor. The Fed just... prints it? And they gave how much to the banks in 2008? And the banks did WHAT with it? And the guy who ran that got a MEDAL? You're up at 4am reading about the Cantillon effect like it's your kid's toxicology report. Then comes the phase where you're insufferable. Everyone goes through it, nobody admits it. You ruin Thanksgiving. You genuinely ruin it. Your aunt says turkey prices are crazy this year and you see your opening like a lion seeing a wounded gazelle. Forty-five minutes later you're drawing the M2 money supply on a napkin and your mother is crying and your uncle is saying "it's not backed by anything" for the ninth time while his pension is backed by the promises of a government that's thirty-seven trillion in debt. He's worried about YOUR risk profile. He has unit bias so bad he'd rather own a whole Shiba Inu coin than a fraction of the hardest asset ever created, because his brain, poisoned by seventy years of fiat, thinks "whole thing cheap" beats "piece of thing good." And the prices. God, the prices. You can't turn it off. You're in the grocery store repricing eggs in sats. The eggs are getting cheaper in sats. Everything is getting cheaper in sats except your will to explain that to anyone. You look at a house and you don't see a house, you see the number of Bitcoin it costs, and that number falling forever, and you realize the housing crisis is a measuring stick crisis, and you say this out loud at a dinner party, once, and now you're not invited to dinner parties. Then the anger burns off and something worse arrives. Clarity. You realize nobody is coming to fix this. The people in charge KNOW. That's the part that breaks you. They're not stupid, they're incentivized. The debt can't be paid, only inflated, and every serious person in a suit on television knows it, and their plan is to be dead before the invoice arrives. So you buy. Coinbase, first time, hands shaking like you're doing something illegal, and the fee annoys you, and that annoyance is the last normal financial emotion you will ever feel. You set up the DCA. You learn what a hardware wallet is. You write twelve words on steel like a doomsday prepper, because that's what you are now, except your bunker is math. And then the loneliness. Nobody tells you about the loneliness. You've seen it. You can't unsee it. And you're surrounded by people you love who are working forty years to fill a bathtub with the drain open, and when you point at the drain they get mad at YOU. So you stop pointing. You just stack quietly, in the dark, waiting for the day one of them comes to you, at a barbecue, holding a hot dog, and says the words. "Hey... you were into Bitcoin, right?" And you smile. Because it's their turn in the barrel. Welcome. Nobody warned me either.

  • __VitruvianMan
    Brandon (@__VitruvianMan) reported

    @brian_armstrong @ErikVoorhees Beware of Coinbase. It runs the risk of automatically disconnecting your bank account, disabling your ability to withdraw your funds to your bank account. This happened to me and their engineers have been unable to fix the problem after a month. Best to use a different exchange.

  • icreatetokens
    i.create.tokens (@icreatetokens) reported

    My interest in crypto actually started with the stock market. Back in high school, my economics class gave each student $1 million in fictional money and a copy of the newspaper's stock listings. The goal was simple: invest every last dollar and track your portfolio over the next few weeks. I bought companies like Nike and Pepsi, but the majority of my money went into Wells Fargo. During the exercise, Wells Fargo climbed significantly, and my portfolio took off. Even though the money wasn't real, I was hooked. I loved the idea of owning a tiny piece of a company and watching the market decide what it was worth. The problem was that investing in the mid-'90s wasn't easy. You needed a broker, trades happened during market hours, and getting started felt intimidating. Years later, crypto changed that. Suddenly, markets were open around the clock, and anyone with a smartphone could participate. I knew for years that I wanted to learn crypto. I just didn't know where to begin. Then, in 2020, I downloaded Coinbase. That's where my crypto story really starts.

  • On_Chain_Notes
    On Chain Notes (@On_Chain_Notes) reported

    ❌ Stablecoins made it worse. Tether : $13B in profit in 2024. $10B+ in 2025. Earned from US Treasury reserves. Kept by the company. Circle : $2.7B in revenue in 2025. Mostly from reserve income. Pays roughly $1.6B in distribution costs — including $908M to Coinbase alone in 2024. The user gets a dollar-pegged token. The issuer and its distribution partners get the economics. Stablecoins scaled the problem. ———— ステーブルコインはそれを悪化させた。 Tether:2024年に130億ドルの利益。2025年に100億ドル以上。 米国債リザーブから得た。会社が保持。 Circle:2025年に27億ドルの収益。ほとんどがリザーブ収入から。 流通コストとして約16億ドルを支払い — 2024年だけでCoinbaseに9億800万ドルを含む。 ユーザーはドルにペッグされたトークンを得る。 発行者とその流通パートナーが経済的利益を得る。 ステーブルコインはその問題をスケールさせた。

  • 0xSisyphus
    Sisyphus (@0xSisyphus) reported

    Both of these companies, Circle and Coinbase, routinely issue more stock based compensation to employees per quarter than they generate in cash flow. It has led to a lot of people getting paid well to do nothing

  • JamesDula82
    Iso Ledger (@JamesDula82) reported

    XLS-65/66 Most people don't realize how much of this is already real. Let's connect three things most people are tracking separately. Right now, today, you can borrow against your XRP without selling it. Coinbase added XRP as collateral for crypto-backed loans earlier this year. Pledge your XRP, borrow up to ~$100K in USDC, no taxable event triggered on the loan itself. So let's use a hypothetical. XRP at ~$100. You hold ~10,000 XRP, worth ~$1M. You pledge ~2,500 of it, worth ~$250K. At a ~49% loan-to-value cap, you could borrow somewhere in the ballpark of ~$120K, no sale, no capital gains hit, full upside on your position intact. I know, 120k wont buy you a mansion, I'm using this as an example. Stick with me. Now here's the nuance that changes everything. In June, Better Home & Finance and Coinbase closed the first Fannie Mae-backed mortgage in US history using Bitcoin as collateral. Two loans at closing, one standard mortgage, one secured by the pledged crypto for the down payment. The structure requires roughly 250% collateralization on BTC, so it's not 1:1, but here's the part that matters: even if Bitcoin's price drops, nothing changes on the loan as long as the borrower keeps making payments. No margin call. No forced liquidation from price swings alone. The crypto just sits pledged until the loan is paid off, then it's returned. That's not how most crypto-backed lending works today. This is the first time a government-backed mortgage channel has built in a structure where your core position doesn't get touched by volatility, only by missed payments. XRP isn't part of that product yet, Bitcoin and USDC only for now, but it's a real signal of where the rails are heading. It's not a stretch to picture a structure like this extending to XRP down the line. Now bring in XLS-66d, and watch the loop close. The ~7,500 XRP you didn't pledge doesn't have to sit idle. Once the lending protocol activates, deposit it into a Single Asset Vault and it earns yield as institutions borrow from that pooled liquidity. At ~4-7% annually, ~7,500 XRP at ~$100 is generating somewhere around ~$30K-$52K a year. Your loan against the pledged 2,500 XRP, at a typical XRP-backed rate of around ~3.2%, runs roughly ~$3,800 a year in interest. The yield on the XRP you kept covers the cost of borrowing against the XRP you pledged, several times over, with room left over. You're not selling XRP to make payments. You're not pulling new cash from your job to do it either. The XRP working in the background pays down the XRP working in the foreground, and then some. Borrow against it without selling. Pay it back without touching your core position, and without it costing you anything out of pocket. That's the loop the infrastructure is quietly building toward. With no taxable event on the borrowing side. We see billionaires and we're catching onto your game! ISO Ledger 🛡

  • DenisDandara
    Dandara Denis 💹🧲 (@DenisDandara) reported

    🔥🔥#DayInReview🔥🔥 📉 Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw their worst month since launch: investors withdrew $4.5 billion in June, surpassing the previous record outflow by 29%. 👨‍💻 Ethereum has launched "Ethereum Institutional," a platform designed to attract large-scale investors to the Ethereum ecosystem. 📈 Santiment: Aave recorded its biggest day of network growth in nearly five years as interest in DeFi returns. 📊 Circle is losing 8% of its market share as Stripe, Coinbase, and BlackRock re-enter the competitive stablecoin landscape. 😳 Bitcoin closed the second quarter of 2026 with a 14.1% drop, marking its third consecutive losing quarter. 💻 Grayscale Research: Solana currently hosts over 1,000 applications and processes an average of more than 100 million transactions daily. 🏦 Citigroup lowered its 12-month price targets for Bitcoin and Ethereum to $82,000 and $2,240, down from previous forecasts of $112,000 and $3,175. 🇬🇧 A group of crypto investors in the UK has filed a $200 million lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng Zhao. 📑 The SEC has initiated a review of ETF registration rules. 👨‍💻 Public token sales have cooled to a four-year low: only 47 ICOs, IDOs, and IEOs took place in Q2 2026, raising a total of $40 million. NEWS

  • __VitruvianMan
    Brandon (@__VitruvianMan) reported

    @coinbase Beware of Coinbase. It runs the risk of automatically disconnecting your bank account, disabling your ability to withdraw your funds to your bank account. This happened to me and their engineers havent been unable to fix the problem after a month. Best to use a different exchange

  • umar_xbt
    Umar (@umar_xbt) reported

    Ansem breaks down the exact portfolio makeup to hit a 100x without nuking your account. [2024 Throwback] If the crypto space marks up 5x and you gambled your entire bag on 100k market cap coins, you will have absolutely nothing to show for it. That is why so many people are angry right now. The best strategy for anyone new is a 70/30 split. Put 70% in safe plays you do not touch, like Solana, Bitcoin, Ethereum, or Coinbase stock. The other 30% is where you can be as degen as you want. Memecoins are the obvious speculative play, but the real alpha is hidden elsewhere. Right now, literally all the attention is on memes. Crypto investors run completely on momentum, pivot super quickly, and rarely do their own research. Because of this, there is massive opportunity in finding altcoins that are down from their highs or completely new this cycle with zero attention. If you do the fundamental research and take the trade before the crowd pivots, you win. It is exactly what happened with Solana post-FTX when everyone thought it was dead. Find the play before the momentum hits.

  • LVaulkner
    XRP Enthusiast (@LVaulkner) reported

    @BitrueOfficial @nesaorg I was looking to buy some bitrue but I couldn't find it on Coinbase! Please help!!

  • gather_punt
    Joaco (@gather_punt) reported

    Honestly didn't see Robinhood launching their own chain coming this fast. UK crypto access is cool but the L2 play is the real story here imo... they're going full Coinbase mode. Bullish or overreach? #Robinhood

  • valueandtime
    Value (@valueandtime) reported

    RobinHood - 28M customer base Coinbase - 9M customer base. Not saying to go bridge and get ***** bidding but a few memes on Base AFTER initial launch did $100M + like Brett, Normie & more Probably worth paying attention too lol

  • 247FrontRunners
    Front Runners (@247FrontRunners) reported

    📉 BERNSTEIN IS STICKING WITH A $190 CIRCLE TARGET AFTER THE 17% CRASH Even with $CRCL down 17.5% on the OUSD launch, Bernstein held its Outperform call and $190 target, implying more than 200% upside from here. The selloff wasn't really about OUSD the coin, it was the backer list. Coinbase, BlackRock and Visa, some of Circle's own partners, lined up behind a rival that pays them a cut of the yield USDC currently keeps. Bernstein's bet: Coinbase won't actually walk, since it earns roughly half of USDC's reserve income and has too much riding on it to defect. Two ways to read $62: a moat that just cracked, or a stock the market oversold on the fear.

  • charlesbatens
    Charles B (@charlesbatens) reported

    @RobinhoodApp why is $CFG still not listed? Major global exchanges have already moved. Coinbase ✅ Binance ✅ Kraken ✅ Upbit ✅ Bithumb ✅ @Centrifuge is building serious RWA infrastructure with names like Apollo, Janus Henderson, New York Life Investment Management and Coinbase/Base involved. Robinhood users deserve access to real RWA infrastructure too. Time to add $CFG.

  • dinosaurteef
    Marklar 🍳 (@dinosaurteef) reported

    @lex_node In this case, it's not nuanced. $VVV is unsecured debt that yields zero. The debtor controls the value of your principal, an illiquid centralized low-float instrument. In order to earn yield in $DIEM, you have to take additional smart contract risk on a Coinbase server. The debtor controls the variable rate in more ways than one. Burniske, anyone? The yield is in the form of future credits for middleware service. The debtor is not obligated to redeem these credits. The middleware credits have no rights to the underlying AI: services have already been denied. Congratulations, you've just added another layer of counter-party risk! Ultimately, Venice has a service to offer that has nothing to do with blockchain. They can and do charge in fiat. That's all that is needed. Yet they managed to wedge a KOL blasted pool 2 right into that. On single server Base. Mathematically, at present, the yield is negative. You are paying them to become an unsecured lender with a variable redemption and interest rate the debtor controls. We know how this ends. Everyone should stop making excuses for Erik and call him out for what this is: a disgusting grift. If you see him, tell Erik to say hello to Iron Finance for me.

  • RockwaterEQ
    Rockwater EQ (@RockwaterEQ) reported

    I have spent over a month trying to get my cash out of Coinbase and transfer my crypto. Massive fees because of continuous rejections and account lockouts followed by the app failing to process my verifications to unlock my account. I will never use Coinbase again. Apparently this is a known issue.

  • TBSSparkEN
    𝗧.𝗕.𝗦 | 𝗡𝗲𝘄𝘀 & 𝗘𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗶𝗻𝗺𝗲𝗻𝘁 (@TBSSparkEN) reported

    Terrible News For XRPL 140+ companies like BlackRock, Coinbase, Mastercard, Stripe and Visa just teamed up to launch Open USD, a new fee-free stablecoin run by an independent group. It’s launching late 2026, Stripe will use it by default, and it’s rolling out on Base and other EVM chains. That’s rough for XRPL because all the liquidity, merchants, and big partners are building on Base/EVM instead. Less reason for businesses to use XRPL rails, which makes it harder for XRP’s stablecoins to compete. #cryptonews #latestupdate

  • Robert_Xrpl
    Robert Albert (@Robert_Xrpl) reported

    Buddy, XRP is already mirrored in the QFS on each persons "Quantum Access Account." That is those that "hold the keys" and it's not sitting in an exchange of platforms "Master Aggregated Account" like Uphold, Binance, Coinbase, Kracken. Playing around with creating all this while there will be no income taxes for gain under the QFS/NESARA Protocols, you are creating a ticking time-bomb just to get paid to create LLC's and the like. It is not NECESSARY at all. Plus, any tax entity documents being created based on the Temple-Bar Legal System are not accepted on the QFS. 38 years as a Tax Professional shows me your ADVISE or SALES AGENCY tactics are suspect, and are not going to serve you well in the end.

  • charlesbatens
    Charles B (@charlesbatens) reported

    @RobinhoodCrypto @RobinhoodApp why is $CFG still not listed? Major global exchanges have already moved. Coinbase ✅ Binance ✅ Kraken ✅ Upbit ✅ Bithumb ✅ @Centrifuge is building serious RWA infrastructure with names like Apollo, Janus Henderson, New York Life Investment Management and Coinbase/Base involved. Robinhood users deserve access to real RWA infrastructure too. Time to add $CFG.

  • Morpheu5Watcher
    Morpheu5 Stock Watcher (@Morpheu5Watcher) reported

    STATELESS MONEY WAITS ON PAYROLLS: Bitcoin $BTC at $60,432, up 2.63% over the past 24 hours, has strung together a second straight day of gains above $60,000 - and the asset designed to ignore governments spends this morning waiting on a government jobs count, due at 8:30am ET. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, sits at $1,623, up 2.83% over the same stretch, moving in lockstep. Whether this two-day rebound survives the week is barely a crypto question at all. It is a rates question, and the answer prints on a Bureau of Labor Statistics release. Here is why a payroll count reaches an asset with no payroll. A coin pays no interest, no dividend, and books no earnings, so owning it always costs you something invisible: the interest your money would have earned sitting somewhere safe instead. When rates are high, that invisible rent is expensive, and assets that pay nothing get sold first; when rate fear eases even a little, they bounce first. That makes the price of money - interest rates - crypto's landlord, and the monthly jobs report is the loudest single input into where the Federal Reserve sets that price. Stateless money, government clock. The hole this bounce is climbing out of is deep and freshly dug. Bitcoin fell 20.5% in June, its worst month since June 2022, and the US spot bitcoin ETFs - funds that hold actual bitcoin and trade like a stock, so any ordinary brokerage account can own the coin's move - bled a record $4.5 billion of net withdrawals, their worst month since they launched in January 2024. The coin touched a 21-month low near $59,000 late Tuesday before turning. The turn has a name attached: Kevin Warsh, chair of the Federal Reserve, told the European Central Bank's annual forum in Sintra, Portugal this week that inflation risks have come down, and an asset that lives on rate hope crossed back over $60,000 within hours. It has held that line for two days now. Today's test arrives on a moved-up clock. At 8:30am ET the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the June jobs report - the government's count of how many workers employers added to payrolls last month, published a day early because US markets close Friday, July 3 for Independence Day. Economists expect about 114,000 jobs added, a step down from the 172,000 added in May, with unemployment holding near 4.3% - the share of people who want work but cannot find it. For crypto the number cuts both ways. A hot count feeds the case that the Fed's next move is a HIKE - rate futures already price real odds of one as soon as September - and more expensive money is exactly what sold this asset all June. A very cold count reads as the economy stalling, and fear sells everything speculative first. The rebound needs the middle. For a stock investor, the brokerage-account doors into this market are already voting in the premarket, and they line up like a ladder. The iShares Bitcoin Trust, ticker IBIT, at $34.23 (premarket), +$0.23 / +0.7% - BlackRock's spot bitcoin ETF, the fund that simply holds the coin and absorbed roughly $3.55 billion of June's withdrawals on its own - sits closest to flat. Coinbase, ticker COIN, at $161.43 (premarket), +$2.19 / +1.4% - the largest US crypto exchange, which earns fees when people trade - carries twice that. Strategy, ticker MSTR, at $96.98 (premarket), +$3.59 / +3.8% - formerly MicroStrategy, the company that borrowed billions to pile up a bitcoin treasury - carries five times it. Same coin, three different doses: the fund tracks it, the exchange leans on its trading traffic, and the leveraged treasury multiplies it - in June's direction just as faithfully as in this week's. One quirk of the calendar deserves its own line, because it is about to matter twice. Crypto never closes: the coin will trade straight through Friday's holiday and the weekend. Its stock-market proxies will not - US exchanges are shut Friday, so the ETF, the exchange and the treasury company all go dark for three and a half days while bitcoin keeps printing around the clock. Whatever the coin does between Thursday's close and Monday's open, the proxies settle it all at once at Monday's bell. That gap cuts both ways, and it belongs in any plan for watching this market across a long weekend. The checkable list from here is short: the 8:30 payroll count; the daily ETF flow tallies published each evening, because June's record withdrawals pausing for a day is not the same as stopping; and whether $60,000 is still underneath the coin come Monday morning. Crypto remains volatile and speculative, and two green days after a 20% month prove nothing by themselves. What they have bought is a hearing. The witness takes the stand at 8:30. Not investment advice.

  • alfah0lic
    ItaloIrlandese - non mi rompere le scatole! (@alfah0lic) reported

    @ColmALombard @martypartymusic @Revolut **** that ****. kraken only. revolut & coinbase will suspend your account the minute you try to cash out anything over 5k. cashed out 170k via kraken with 0 problems

  • manteo_websites
    venussystems (@manteo_websites) reported

    @Steph_iscrypto THIS IS NOT GOOD NEWS! Figures (as of the end of June 2026): Authorized providers (CASPs with MiCA licenses): approx. 244 (according to the ESMA register and reports). Many of these are based in Germany (approx. 57), France, and the Netherlands. Major platforms such as Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, Bybit, Bitpanda, and Revolut are included. Pre-MiCA (national licenses/VASPs): Estimates suggest there were between 1,200 and approximately 3,000 registered crypto firms in the EU/EEA. This means: Around 80% or more of the existing providers (numbering in the hundreds to over 2,000) have had to—or still must—cease or severely curtail their EU operations. Many have withdrawn, merged with others, or relocated to countries outside the EU. Probably only the one where the communist EU has access to the owners' coins in a worst-case scenario.

  • teecantell
    Myra (@teecantell) reported

    The biggest issue with the @base airdrop isn't just who qualifies—it's that many eligible users may still be unable to claim because Coinbase isn't available in their region.

  • Jpgs_eth
    Jpgs.eth (@Jpgs_eth) reported

    2/ Venice's structure maps exactly: Series A equity = preferred stock (Dragonfly, Coinbase Ventures) $VVV = common stock with worse legal rights but BETTER liquidity $DIEM = prepaid service credits (not equity at all) $VVV $DIEM @askvenice