Binance sued by families of Hamas victims / Germany's DZ Bank to pilot crypto trading service this year / Celsius Network officially exits bankruptcy [EN]
Families of Hamas attack victims have sued Binance for allegedly facilitating the group's violence, while the crypto exchange previously admitted to allowing transactions by terrorist groups and agreed to a $4.3B fine and leadership changes after U.S. charges; Ether experienced significant price volatility, reaching a 20-month high; Celsius Network exited bankruptcy, transforming into a Bitcoin mining company; the U.S. will track crypto mining companies' electricity consumption; DZ Bank in Germany plans to pilot a retail crypto trading service; and Bybit applied for a license in Hong Kong to offer crypto trading services to retail investors.
Families of Hamas attack victims have sued Binance for allegedly facilitating the group's violence, while the crypto exchange previously admitted to allowing transactions by terrorist groups and agreed to a $4.3B fine and leadership changes after U.S. charges; Ether experienced significant price volatility, reaching a 20-month high; Celsius Network exited bankruptcy, transforming into a Bitcoin mining company; the U.S. will track crypto mining companies' electricity consumption; DZ Bank in Germany plans to pilot a retail crypto trading service; and Bybit applied for a license in Hong Kong to offer crypto trading services to retail investors.