稳健,是 Gate 持续增长的核心动力。
真正的成长,不是顺风顺水,而是在市场低迷时依然坚定前行。我们或许能预判牛熊市的大致节奏,但绝无法精准预测它们何时到来。特别是在熊市周期,才真正考验一家交易所的实力。
Gate 今天发布了2025年第二季度的报告。作为内部人,看到这些数据我也挺惊喜的——用户规模突破3000万,现货交易量逆势环比增长14%,成为前十交易所中唯一实现双位数增长的平台,并且登顶全球第二大交易所;合约交易量屡创新高,全球化战略稳步推进。
更重要的是,稳健并不等于守成,而是在面临严峻市场的同时,还能持续创造新的增长空间。
欢迎阅读完整报告:https://www.gate.com/zh/announcements/article/46117
Across Protocol DAO under fire over $23M fund misuse claims
The founders of the crosschain bridge Across Protocol have been accused of siphoning $23 million of funds to their own for-profit company.
In a Friday X thread, Ogle — the pseudonymous founder of layer 1 project Glue and onchain sleuth — accused the founders of Across Protocol of covertly manipulating decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) votes to fund their for-profit company, Risk Labs. Ogle accused the project of being among the “DAOs that are DAOs in name only.”
Hart Lambur, who founded both Risk Labs and Across, denied the claims in a separate post. He said that Risk Labs is a Cayman Islands-based nonprofit with no shareholders. He shared a certificate of incorporation and claimed that the company operates under fiduciary obligations.
“If the funds are misused, you can sue the directors (me!),” he said.
Related: Solana DEX Jupiter suspends DAO voting until 2026 to focus on DeFi growth
Nonprofit status called into question
Talking to Cointelegraph, Lambert also shared the company’s certificate of incorporation. The document describes the firm as a “foundation company.” Cointelegraph was able to independently verify the company’s registration with Cayman Island’s online general registry.
Cointelegraph was unable to verify Risk Labs’ claimed nonprofit status, with its name not included in the list of registered nonprofit organizations.
Cayman Islands-based foundations are not permitted to pay dividends and are generally regarded as “ownerless” entities. That being said, legal firm Ogier explained that for-profit Cayman Islands-based foundation companies allow “distributions to beneficiaries, rather than to shareholders.”
Related: Yuga Labs looks to replace ‘unserious’ ApeCoin DAO with new ApeCo entity
DAO vote manipulation claims emerge
“It seems the Across/Risk co-founders and insiders orchestrated governance proposals that let them secretly subvert the ‘democratic’ process of the DAO, and extract ~$23m (at today’s value) from the treasury they were meant to protect,” Ogle said.
The first DAO proposal was approved two years ago and saw 13.1 million worth of tokenholders voting in favor, approving the proposal with over 97% of the vote. The second DAO proposal saw Risk Labs ask the DAO for 50 million ACX tokens for “retroactive funding” a year later.
“Had the team not voted on this proposal, it wouldn’t have reached quorum — meaning that it wouldn’t have had enough votes to pass at all,” Ogle claimed. At the time of writing, the 150 million tokens involved would be worth over $22 million after ACX lost around 9.3% of its value in the last 24 hours to currently trade at $0.1362.
Still, Ogle claims that “the proposal did not guarantee the money would be used for Across, there were no formal agreements between the two companies.” He also said that onchain analysis reveals that many Risk Labs team members covertly approved the proposal.
“The second largest voting wallet in the entire proposal, accounting for almost 14% of the total vote, was initially funded by Hart Lambur,” Ogle claimed.
Risk Labs denies misuse allegations
Lambur denied the accusations, saying the token has been live for almost three years and team members have acquired it with their own funds. “My team is free to buy tokens and privately vote in proposals, just like every other DAO out there,” he said.
Lambur further confirmed that Chan voted for the proposal. Still, he denied the secret nature of the addresses used, noting that they “are publicly disclosed and publicly linked.”
Lambur answered all allegations in his thread, describing them as “categorically untrue.”
In a separate post, after criticizing Ogle for anonymity and raising issues with his credibility, Lambur highlighted Ogle’s connections to competing projects like LayerZero and Stargate as potential conflicts of interest.
“Funny enough, Bryan Pellegrino, the founder of Stargate and LayerZero, retweeted Ogle’s post almost immediately after he posted it,” Lambur said.
Cointelegraph reached out to Ogle for further comment but did not receive a response by publication.
Magazine: ‘Raider’ investors are looting DAOs — Nouns and Aragon share lessons learned