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
US probes negotiator suspected of taking crypto ransomware money
The US Justice Department has launched a probe into a former ransomware negotiator, accused of striking deals with hackers to take a cut of the crypto used to pay the extortionists.
In a statement to Cointelegraph, DigitalMint President Marc Grens confirmed that one of the firm’s former employees is the target of an ongoing criminal investigation and was “immediately terminated” when the allegations came to light
The Chicago-based company assists victims with ransomware negotiations and payments to hackers. The story was first reported by Bloomberg on Thursday, citing a person familiar with the matter
DigitalMint is not in the firing line
Grens also said, “DigitalMint is not a target of the investigation and has been ‘cooperating fully with law enforcement.”
He added that once discovered, DigitalMint “acted swiftly to protect our clients. Trust is earned every day. As soon as we were able, we began communicating the facts to affected stakeholders.”
DigitalMint said on its website that it specializes in securely handling ransomware incidents and facilitating secure payments to hackers.
Its client base includes Fortune 500 companies and is registered with the US Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, it said
Ransomware payments down
Fewer companies are giving in to criminals’ demands, with a February report from cyber incident response firm Coveware finding that only 25% of companies hit with extortion demands in the last quarter of 2024 paid the ransom
In the third quarter of 2024, 32% of companies that received ransom demands paid, compared to 36% in the previous quarter, according to Coveware data. This was down significantly compared to the first quarter of 2019, when 85% paid the ransom when demanded.
Coveware said the drop “suggests that more organizations are improving their cybersecurity defenses, implementing better backup and recovery strategies, and refusing to fund cybercriminals.”
However, the firm also said the decline could be because of “increased law enforcement efforts” and “stronger regulatory guidance discouraging ransom payments.”
A separate report by blockchain analytics provider Chainalysis on Feb. 5 also found that payments extorted through ransomware attacks decreased by 35% to $815 million in 2024 compared to $1.25 billion in 2023
Ransomware negotiators not always helpful
James Taliento, chief executive of the cyber intelligence services company AFTRDRK, told Bloomberg that ransomware negotiators don’t always act in their clients’ best interests
Related: Crypto losses hit $2.5B in first half of 2025, but hacks fall in Q2: CertiK
“A negotiator is not incentivized to drive the price down or to inform the victim of all the facts if the company they work for is profiting off the size of the demand paid. Plain and simple,” he said
Meanwhile, a 2019 report from investigative news outlet ProPublica found two other US firms were paying hackers to retrieve stolen data and then charging clients extra under the guise of using specialized recovery methods
Magazine: Should we ban ransomware payments? It’s an attractive but dangerous idea