The Crypto Radio Live quickfire newsround on 26th January:
 ⢠Thailand prepares crypto ETF rules and ramps up anti-scam enforcement  ⢠Binance applies for a MiCA license in Greece ahead of the EU deadline  ⢠Former Olympic snowboarder Ryan Wedding arrested over cartel-linked crypto laundering  ⢠Indonesiaâs crypto user numbers rise even as trading volumes fall  ⢠Spacecoin launches SPACE token days after Trump-linked DeFi partnership  ⢠Brazil tightens crypto entry rules with audits, reserves, and fund segregation
PGA Tour Rise brings blockchain to mobile gaming without the crypto learning curve. The officially licensed golf strategy game rolls out mini-games first, with a full 2026 launch planned. Players build courses, manage golf operations, and trade tokenized gear using credit cards or crypto, powered by Skale Network on Base. The focus is smooth gameplay, in-game ownership, and future real-world perks.
AI hiring lawsuit â Two job seekers are suing Eightfold AI, alleging it secretly used AI to score and reject candidates before any human review.
The case claims applicant data from LinkedIn and job boards was used to generate hidden âMatch Scores,â without disclosure or a way to correct errors. With AI now widely used in hiring, the lawsuit questions how transparent these systems really are.
Stablecoins and payments donât mean the same thing â at least not yet. A new report shows over $35 trillion moved on blockchains last year, but only around 1% was tied to real-world uses like payroll, remittances, or paying suppliers. Most activity still happens behind the scenes in trading and internal transfers, even as Visa and Stripe test stablecoin rails. The gap highlights how early stablecoin payments still are â and how much work remains before they show up in everyday money flows.
Zcash price volatility is back in focus after a sudden leadership shake-up at the Electric Coin Company. The privacy coin is down double digits this month, despite a strong 2025 rally, as investors react to executive departures, falling network activity, and uncertainty around future direction. New offshoot projects and fresh funding may help stabilize the ecosystem, but analysts say long-term confidence depends on whether new leadership can deliver growth without weakening Zcashâs privacy-first identity.
Solana meme coin drama đ Publicly traded DeFi Development Corp. launched an experimental token that briefly turned a $4,000 buy into a seven-figure position before insider trading questions exploded online. The firm says it identified an early sniper, clawed back profits, and burned the tokens â but unanswered questions remain around how the trade happened and how the funds were recovered.
đ¨The malicious actor who swiped $40M+ from U.S. government seizure addresses is the son of CMMDS owner, a company contracted to assist USMS with handling confiscated crypto assets.
Knut Svanholm: Living freely in the inverse of clown world
'Every single Satoshi that exists is just someone keeping a secret from everyone else,' says the author and podcaster
What does it mean to live in the inverse of âclown worldâ? For Knut Svanholm, the answer begins with money â specifically, the rules that quietly shape behavior across entire societies. âItâs about how everything on a Bitcoin standard is literally the inverse of how it is on a Fiat standard,â he told Guardians of Bitcoin. From that inversion flows a critique not just of modern finance, but of politics, incentives, ownership, and power itself. Svanholm, a Swedish author and longstanding voice in the Bitcoin community, sees todayâs dominant monetary system as a distorted mirror â one that rewards proximity to power over merit, quantity over quality, and short-term gains over long-term responsibility. Bitcoin, in his view, flips those incentives on their head. From âclown worldâ to broken money When Svanholm talks about âclown world,â he isn't pointing to culture or aesthetics, but to outcomes. In his view, fiat money quietly reshapes behavior by constantly losing value. âFiat currencies are inflationary, meaning that people more and more prioritize quantity over quality and political connections, instead of excellence,â he said. Inflation, in this framing, is not just rising prices but a moral hazard. When money steadily depreciates, saving becomes irrational and consumption accelerates. By contrast, Svanholm describes Bitcoin as structurally deflationary.â "Because itâs absolutely finite,â he said. That scarcity, he argued, changed how decisions were made. âIf things get cheaper, we buy more of them,â he said, pushing back on the idea that deflation was inherently harmful. âYou will think twice before you choose to buy anything, meaning that you will prioritize quality over quantity. And I think this is a very beautiful thing.â For Svanholm, fiat money was not a neutral tool but an extractive one. âFiat money is created by banks and governments. They have a license to counterfeit your money, which is theft, straight up like this.â He did not soften the claim. âIt is theft, and itâs on a massive scale.â Politics without merit
That same incentive distortion, Svanholm argued, extends beyond money into politics. In his telling, âthe clownsâ are politicians operating in systems that reward popularity and signaling rather than competence. âThings get very clownish, when merit is not rewarded, but political connections and virtue signaling becomes more and more important,â he said. Democracy, as practiced today, in his view incentivizes short-term appeasement. Politicians, he argued, do âwhat you think people want in order to get votes,â rather than what serves long-term societal health. While acknowledging that conditions differed between countries, he pointed to recurring patterns. âThe UK is a bit of a mess at the moment,â he said, describing rising costs and social unrest as symptoms rather than isolated failures. His critique extended to taxation itself. âAll taxes are involuntary, we live under gun threat,â he said. âOur property is taken away from us, and we cheer for it, because we think it comes to good use.â What remains unknown, in his view, is what societies might look like under genuine market coordination rather than permanent intervention. Property, speech, and incentives The same logic, Svanholm argued, applies to rights. Observing migration patterns, he pointed to the UAE as an example of revealed preference. âPeople still choose to move to UAE because of lower taxes,â he said, despite more limited speech protections. âBy their actions, they show that they prioritize property rights over freedom of speech laws.â Drawing on philosopher Murray Rothbard, he added, âFreedom of speech is only necessary where a property violation has happened before in a so called public space.â The statement is deliberately provocative, but the argument remains rooted in incentives. Systems protect what they economically value. That view carries over into the digital realm. âIf I own a social media platform, and I want it to be successful, I have an incentive to care about freedom of speech,â he said. Market pressure, not regulation, ultimately determine openness. Disagreements inside Bitcoin
Svanholm rejected the idea that Bitcoin itself is free of conflict. In fact, he sees disagreement as essential. Without leaders, the system advances through argument. âThatâs what happens in a leaderless system," he said. "There is no authority here that can decide this or that.â One ongoing debate concerns whether Bitcoin should allow more non-financial data to be stored on its blockchain. Expanding a feature known as OP_RETURN could theoretically enable spam or even illegal content. âIf you increase OP_RETURN too much you could potentially store a small video in it and stuff and really nasty stuff that no one wants to see,â he said. At the same time, he acknowledged that such abuses were already possible. âYou can do that now. You will still be able do that in the future too.â The disagreement, he argued, was not about perfection but trade-offs. What worries him more is imbalance within the community. âYou have the more 180 IQ Silicon Valley types that are often very technically competent [but] are not as economically literate,â he said. âYou want Bitcoiners to be both technical and economically literate.â Bitcoin, ownership, and a gradual shift For Svanholm, Bitcoin is as much culture as code. His own path led him into writing, publishing, and even music as ways to process its impact. He helps run a Bitcoin-focused publishing company in Estonia and plays in the band Toshiro Moto, arguing that entertainment and humor are part of spreading ideas. âIf the audience is not entertained, they wonât care,â he said. Philosophically, his most distinctive claim concerns what it means to own Bitcoin. âEvery single Satoshi that exists is just someone keeping a secret from everyone else,â he said. âThe ability to move [Bitcoin] is strictly in your head.â Because ownership rests on information rather than institutions, he argued, it âchanged the profitability of violence,â making coercion less effective over time. Svanholm expects change to be gradual, likening Bitcoin to a new language of value. Ultimately, he said, âthe real currency of the future is integrity and your reputation. Honesty and sincerity will be rewarded more and more.â
đ¨Tether $USDT led crypto protocol revenue in 2025 with around $5.2B, making up 41.9% of total revenue throughout 168 protocols.
âŞď¸Stablecoin issuers dominated âŞď¸Four entities contributed 65.7%, around $8.3B âŞď¸The remaining were trading protocols âŞď¸Tron $TRX comes second at ~$3.5B, due to its role as a large USDT transaction network.
American Bankers Association stablecoin yield push is becoming a major policy fight for 2026. Banks warn that interest-paying stablecoins could pull trillions out of deposits and weaken lending, especially at community banks.Â
Crypto leaders say yield benefits users and keep the US dollar competitive. Congress now faces a key decision on who gets to pay interest in the digital economy.
Trump-linked crypto meets satellite internet. World Liberty Financial has partnered with Spacecoin to explore DeFi over space-based connectivity, combining satellite internet with the USD1 dollar-linked stablecoin.Â
The goal is to enable payments and financial access in remote areas beyond banks and broadband. Spacecoin has already launched three satellites, but questions remain on timing, access, and regulation.
Gen Z crypto trust is rising â and itâs starting to show up in real financial decisions.
New data suggest younger Americans value control and transparency more than traditional banking, with many choosing crypto to manage and verify their assets. That shift is now reaching housing, as U.S. lenders begin factoring Bitcoin and Ethereum into mortgage assessments, while regulators take a closer look. A clear trust gap is emerging between generations â and it could reshape how people save, borrow, and buy homes.
Trump JPMorgan debanking lawsuit â US President Donald Trump is suing JPMorgan Chase for $5 billion, claiming the bank closed accounts linked to him and his businesses after January 6, 2021, without warning.Â
JPMorgan and CEO Jamie Dimon deny the claims, saying accounts are never closed for political reasons. The case adds fuel to the wider debanking debate tied to crypto and tech.
Calls grow to teach blockchain in Nigerian law schools
'If courts lack a basic understanding of distributed ledger technology, they cannot properly deliver justice,' says blockchain lawyer Olayimika Oyebanji
How can courts rule on blockchain disputes if future lawyers are never taught how the technology works? With blockchain becoming a vital tool for real-world applications, Nigerian legal professionals are advocating for its inclusion in law education across universities nationwide to address emerging legal frontiers such as smart contracts, DeFi disputes, and digital asset regulation. âSmart contracts should be included in law curricula, especially given their impact on legal interpretation,â Nigerain lawyer Senator Ihenyen told The Crypto Radio. âItâs interesting to see how jurisdictions define smart contracts within contract law, helping users understand their risks, implications, and bugs,â he explained. Ihenyen founded Infusion Lawyers in Nigeria in 2017. He said, âNFTs are expected to reshape how intellectual property ownership, transfer, and usage are defined.â He also believes that The Investment and Securities Act 2025 âis significant because it formally recognizes virtual assets as securities, marking a major regulatory milestone.â âWith this law in place, Nigeria now has a formal licensing regime allowing both local and foreign players to operate legally under SEC oversight,â Ihenyen noted. Inside Nigeriaâs legal education gap on blockchain Despite learning institutions such as Baze University, Covenant University, and the University of Lagos offering fintech- and blockchain-focused programs, âno Nigerian university has yet integrated blockchain into law education,â Olayimika Oyebanji, a blockchain lawyer and DeFi researcher, told The Crypto Radio. He wrote a paper in August 2025 calling for mandatory blockchain modules in Nigerian law schools under the 2025 ISA framework, saying his âefforts focus on raising awareness.â He said his appeals to Nigerian legal bodies to integrate distributed ledger studies into law education went unanswered. The paper called for integrating blockchain education into Nigerian legal training, citing the rapid growth of crypto and web3 and the new legal and regulatory challenges they create. The research also stressed the need for clear, adaptive crypto laws in Nigeria and recommended adding smart contracts, cryptocurrencies, and digital assets to core legal education. Despite the absence of provisions to integrate blockchain into the Nigerian legal curriculum, âThe closest step made was the 2023 National Blockchain Policy, which outlined a roadmap for blockchain adoption across sectors,â said Oyebanji. He also pointed to comments from President Bola Tinubu urging Nigeriaâs judiciar to embrace crypto literacy in the fight against financial crime, signaling continued momentum despite institutional challenges. Barriers slowing blockchain adoption in legal education
Ihenyen said confusion between blockchain, and crypto scams has âhindered its integration into legal education.â âThere is also a lack of skilled educators across institutions, making it critical to have teachers who understand the technology,â he added. âThere must be targeted capacity-building initiatives for lecturers and educators to teach this increasingly vital area of knowledge.â Oyebanji agreed, stating: âIf courts lack a basic understanding of distributed ledger technology, they cannot properly deliver justice." âI donât understand why Nigeria hasnât prioritized blockchain as an emerging technology or developed a curriculum for it,â he added. Ihenyen said adoption efforts should be led by industry bodies to influence policy, drive advocacy, and bridge the gap between the private and public sectors. âThe government must step up by investing in training and education for legal practitioners interested in digital assets,â Oyebanji said. âFunding can play a major role.â AI concerns and the case for blockchain in legal training As discussions around legal education expand, comparisons with artificial intelligence have entered the debate â particularly around professional standards and the risks posed by AI hallucinations. âNo one really knows who will control AI agents ethically,â said Ihenyen. "Blockchain-based smart contracts could help set built-in ethical boundaries, which may be more effective than relying only on codes of conduct as AI becomes more autonomous." He stressed the importance of âpushing blockchain and AI developers to build safety and privacy by design, so innovation doesnât move forward without accountability.â Oyebanji pointed to the upcoming law on data privacy and AI governance that may address issues like AI hallucinations, and the glaring lack of an equivalent for blockchain, which "offers a more level, cost-effective field with lower barriers to entry.â How other countries teach blockchain law Calls to integrate blockchain into legal education are not limited to Nigeria. Across Africa, legal practitioners and researchers are increasingly advocating for reform. In parts of Africa, blockchain is increasingly being incorporated into legal education alongside AI and technology. In 2025, the University of Cape Town partnered with the University of Zurich on a blockchain summer program linking law, economics, and technology. The University of Johannesburg also offers a short course covering blockchain and legal applications. Similarly, the University of Ghana School of Law offers an L.L.M. in IT Law that covers blockchain, cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin, CBDCs, and related regulatory, mining and environmental issues. Globally, many law schools already offer dedicated blockchain and law courses, initiatives, and student societies. In the United States, Standard Law Schoolâs Blockchain Education Initiative provides glossaries, bootcamps, and seminars for legal professionals. In the United Kingdom, integration is also expanding, with law and technology modules increasingly embedded in curricula. These often appear as undergraduate electives or dedicated master's programs at institutions including Kingâs College London, Oxford University, and Queenâs University Belfast.