Another reminder that privacy infra built around fragile coordination layers will keep breaking.
We need:
* permissionless privacy
* decentralized infrastructure
* programmable finance
* compliant interoperability
* privacy-native execution
Not just patched escrow systems around old architectures.
Monero - $XMR solved digital cash.
But the next era needs:
assets, RWAs, AI payments, programmable flows, compliant privacy rails.
That’s why projects like @salvium_io $SAL are so interesting.
Privacy is entering its disruption phase.
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BREAKING:
7,000 XMR gone. $2.7 million.
RetoSwap was drained through a flaw in the Haveno protocol. Trading is halted. The team says the issue has identified and fiat traders are unaffected.
RetoSwap is the largest Monero DEX since LocalMonero shut down. Developing. https://t.co/P5gRSyilv5
🇮🇳 India just busted a ₹226 crore crypto network allegedly linked to drugs, money laundering & terror financing.
And the craziest part?
Investigators say the network heavily used Monero ( $XMR), the privacy coin governments struggle to track.
According to Gujarat Cyber officials:
• Funds moved through dark web marketplaces
• Cross-border hawala channels were involved
• Wallets allegedly linked Ahmedabad, Mumbai & international syndicates
• Transactions reportedly traced back to an illegal drug platform on the dark web
This is exactly why governments worldwide remain nervous about privacy coins.
CT loves saying: “Crypto can’t be stopped.”
But stories like this guarantee regulators will push even harder on surveillance, KYC, wallet tracking & exchange controls.
The battle between privacy and regulation is only getting started.
🇮🇳 India has reportedly uncovered a massive ₹226 crore ($27M+) crypto network allegedly linked to drugs, money laundering, and terror financing.
And at the center of it all?
Privacy coin Monero ($XMR) — the one regulators fear the most.
Here’s how the network allegedly operated 👇
• Funds moved through dark web marketplaces and cross-border hawala channels
• Wallet trails connected Ahmedabad, Mumbai, and overseas syndicates
• Investigators reportedly traced transactions back to an illegal narcotics marketplace on the dark web
This is exactly the kind of case regulators point to when pushing for tighter crypto controls.
While CT keeps saying “crypto can’t be stopped,” incidents like this are likely to accelerate:
• stricter KYC rules
• heavier transaction surveillance
• tighter exchange regulations
• increased scrutiny on privacy-focused coins
The bigger story here isn’t just crime.
It’s the growing clash between financial privacy and government oversight.
And that battle is only getting started.
