#Altseason
Who exactly are we planning to sell our altcoins to,
if retail is already parked in gold and silver?
Are they supposed to sell their metals at a loss
just to buy shitcoins?
On January 10, 2026 at around 11 pm UTC a victim lost $282M+ worth of LTC & BTC due to a hardware wallet social engineering scam.
The attacker began converting the stolen LTC & BTC to Monero via multiple instant exchanges causing the XMR price to sharply increase.
BTC was also bridged to Ethereum, Ripple, & Litecoin via Thorchain.
Theft addresses (2.05M LTC, 1459 BTC):
bc1qluxw46r55wf3dnk9c652vrt4duadm3hpuktf86
bc1qpsmh26ja0fzzf286zulmt9eywujc2pggj40wzm
ltc1qly43c2prj4c2e85dcspzpjd36jnapnenldnr70
I actually like the https://t.co/56kkTLQUfm app a lot.
The Visa card, conditions, and range of products are solid.
It’s one of the few crypto ecosystems that really works at scale🛸
@cryptocomnft#CroFam
Why does the https://t.co/0mJqcRMIDU website still perform so poorly?
Constant lag, heavy pages, frequent slowdowns.
It’s been years.
Does anyone inside the company actually use this product on a daily basis?
When a project is truly successful or genuinely interesting,
it gets copied.
That’s a basic law of business — in every industry.
If someone creates something that actually matters,
others replicate it quickly.
@chia_project launched in what, 2021?
How many projects copied its concept?
Zero.
That’s also why $XCH keeps drifting toward zero.
The startup didn’t take off — that happens.
There’s nothing unusual about it.
But it’s important to look at things realistically.
Even if a short-term pump happens,
it won’t be driven by technology.
People don’t actually use this blockchain or its solutions.
And where there are no users,
there is no future.
@flow_blockchain Bull markets make these projects look fun.
Everything goes up. Everything feels justified.
Outside of a bull market,
they turn into a financial liability.
Words like “DYOR” exist for a reason.
🛸
@flow_blockchain is just another clear example of what happens
to investments in projects that sell you “future technology”,
but are never actually used by their own investors.
Yesterday’s price drop of @flow_blockchain can be called anything:
a scam, a rug, or a “security incident”.
The name doesn’t matter.
Money does.
Projects like this usually have only two real sources of funding:
1) investors
2) token sales
Fees from actual blockchain usage?
In reality, they’re negligible —
not enough to cover salaries, infrastructure, or team costs.
When external money runs out,
an “incident” suddenly appears.
And this isn’t just about Flow.
It applies to most projects that don’t generate real revenue.
@Nara_Hodge If you have a degree in Russian philology, throw it away. Either you’re deliberately talking nonsense, or you don’t know the language. Saying “suka” in the Oval Office is extremely rude and offensive.