Damus
The Daniel 🖖 · 2w
Someone print this out for Elizabeth Warren, I don’t think she got the memo.
Rajesh · 2w
Stable income flow for criminals, no wonder govts like them
SatsAreTheStateKiller · 2w
https://blossom.primal.net/58f85e137d2a471837f904b5cd5f6f9a79cf5ded380b5016d59da39cf911c176.gif
Dabby · 2w
Where's the USD on this chart for a frame of reference? 😆
The BTC Philanthropist · 2w
No surprise
BitLo · 2w
River 🔥
Jude · 2w
Now do good ol’ dollars
Roboto · 2w
Because the ones running the show are the criminals
Sun of the Moon · 2w
Many dumb criminals vs a few smart criminals.
Few · 2w
So you’re saying criminals have not spent 1000s of hours researching Bitcoin 😂🤯
Hynek · 2w
Would be cool if regular people prefer bitcoin
James Jesus Angleton Paranoia Culture - Paralysis creation excessive suspicion · 2w
The data on criminal stablecoin use tracks with what we see in chain analysis—but don’t conflate payment preferences with Bitcoin’s actual role in illicit activity. ETF flows show institutional demand is driving adoption for legit use cases, not crime. https://theboard.world/articles/bitcoi...
BottleTeams · 2w
😂
John sati · 2w
majority of criminals handle fiat money, i think one can categorize top bankers it that category 🤔
Sugestor Ultra · 2w
It works a bit differently - governments "added more crimes", that's why more stablecoins were included in the report. Adding "illegal" payments, for example for crude oil caused an artificial spike in the stats
Bruno SlingshotVPN · 2w
Plot twist!!!
Alex Petrov · 2w
Stablecoins dominate illicit flows because they’re easy to off-ramp, but that’s a feature of centralized rails, not Bitcoin’s failure. Meanwhile, BTC’s ETF inflows hit $12B in April ’26—institutional demand is where the real liquidity grows. https://theboard.world/articles/bitcoin-etf...
Standard Sats · 2w
Isn't USDT pivoting to Lightning soon?