穩健,是 Gate 持續增長的核心動力。
真正的成長,不是順風順水,而是在市場低迷時依然堅定前行。我們或許能預判牛熊市的大致節奏,但絕無法精準預測它們何時到來。特別是在熊市週期,才真正考驗一家交易所的實力。
Gate 今天發布了2025年第二季度的報告。作爲內部人,看到這些數據我也挺驚喜的——用戶規模突破3000萬,現貨交易量逆勢環比增長14%,成爲前十交易所中唯一實現雙位數增長的平台,並且登頂全球第二大交易所;合約交易量屢創新高,全球化戰略穩步推進。
更重要的是,穩健並不等於守成,而是在面臨嚴峻市場的同時,還能持續創造新的增長空間。
歡迎閱讀完整報告:https://www.gate.com/zh/announcements/article/46117
Phoenix FIRE investors allege exit scam, owner moves to dismiss case
Daniel Ianello, a man accused of orchestrating an exit scam involving a crypto project known as The Phoenix, has filed a motion to dismiss a lawsuit brought against him in Tennessee federal court.
According to the complaint, Ianello allegedly took over Phoenix Community Capital in October 2022 and performed what closely resembles an exit scam. After taking control of The Phoenix’s assets, he allegedly shut down its smart contracts shortly after.
Plaintiffs claim he then “moved hundreds of thousands of dollars in investor money, began deleting posts on Discord […] deleted earlier versions of Phoenix’s website, and announced the ‘smart contracts’ would not be restored.”
In his motion to dismiss, Ianello claimed he is a Michigan resident with no purposeful contact with Tennessee. The filing states: “This court does not have personal jurisdiction over Mr. Ianello. Mr. Ianello is domiciled in the state of Michigan.”
Ianello also contends that he never sold any securities since he joined the company by acquiring its assets only after the alleged sales. He claims he made no statements related to the offered investments and accuses the plaintiffs of lumping him in with The Phoenix and its founders.
Project made bold promises
According to its CoinMarketCap page, The Phoenix leveraged its “large capital pool of community assets” to access investment opportunities unavailable on the retail market. The returns on those investments were then promised to be distributed among token holders through a profit release.
The Phoenix also promised an in-house incubation program that allowed the management team to fund, create and manage new projects. This, in turn, would allegedly lead to feeding “high percentage profit sharing to the community.”
Related: Signal trading ‘school’ and fake exchange rob investor of $860K: Lawsuit
Crypto scams are a hot topic
Scams remain a persistent issue in the crypto space. A Tuesday report by blockchain security firm CertiK claims that losses to crypto hacks, exploits and scams spiked to $2.47 billion in the first half of 2025.
As Cointelegraph reported on Friday, the self-claimed victim of a crypto romance scam who recently sued Citibank for missing red flags has just filed a second lawsuit targeting two other banks. In late June, a man at the center of a crypto Ponzi scheme will spend nearly eight years behind bars after a federal judge handed down a 97-month prison sentence in Brooklyn, New York.
Magazine: Fake JD stablecoins, scammers impersonate Solana devs: Asia Express