The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has initiated legal action against Rari Capital, a decentralized finance platform, and its founders.
The SEC’s charges focus on accusations of deceiving investors and operating without proper registration.
At the core of the case are two crypto investment platforms that Rari Capital managed, which at one point controlled more than $1 billion in assets.
These platforms, identified as Earn and Fuse pools, allowed users to invest digital assets and earn returns in the form of tokens. These tokens provided investors with a share of the profits, yet the SEC claims the company offered these investment opportunities without registering them as securities, violating U.S. law.
Additionally, Rari’s founders allegedly misrepresented how the Earn pools functioned, promising automatic rebalancing for optimal returns when, in reality, manual adjustments were often required.
Further scrutiny was placed on Rari Capital Infrastructure LLC, the entity that took over operations of the Fuse platform in 2022. According to the SEC, this group was involved in offering unregistered securities and engaging in broker-dealer activities without proper oversight.
The case highlights the SEC’s ongoing efforts to regulate DeFi platforms that operate outside the bounds of traditional financial regulations.
A recent cyberattack targeting a UK government official’s social media account has highlighted ongoing concerns over digital impersonation and crypto scams.
A former NFT trader is facing potential prison time after admitting to hiding millions in profits from the IRS through undeclared sales of high-value digital assets.
Cybersecurity researchers are sounding the alarm after discovering a new and increasingly sophisticated attack targeting the crypto community.
Australia’s efforts to combat crypto-related fraud have intensified, with the country’s Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) targeting 95 companies allegedly involved in deceptive schemes like pig butchering scams.