All JD stablecoins today are scams
All services claiming to offer access to JD.com’s stablecoin are fraudulent, the Chinese e-commerce giant said in a statement posted on Weibo, a microblogging platform.
JD.com said entities are misleading the public by claiming to have partnered with its Hong Kong subsidiary, JD CoinLink. The company emphasized that it has not issued a stablecoin at this point or formed any such partnerships.
Fraudulent campaigns are emerging in parallel, according to multiple WeChat accounts warning against stablecoin scams. Fraudulent campaigns are promising users 5,000 JD.com stablecoins for signing up and additional rewards for referring friends.


JD.com has recently shown strong interest in stablecoins. It plans to apply for a stablecoin license in Hong Kong, where a new regulatory framework comes into effect on Aug. 1. The company has also been among several Chinese tech firms lobbying the People’s Bank of China to allow yuan-pegged stablecoins in the region.
China has banned crypto trading and mining, instead promoting its central bank digital currency, the digital yuan. But recently, some academics and policy advisers have begun advocating for a more open approach to crypto.
In May, the state-backed International Monetary Institute republished an article discussing Bitcoin’s potential as a reserve asset. The following month, a commentary in a paper affiliated with one of China’s top research bodies warned that US dollar-backed stablecoins pose a threat to China’s monetary sovereignty and that Beijing should take part in global discussions.
On the same day the US Senate passed the stablecoin-focused GENIUS Act, People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng announced the creation of an international operations center to promote the digital yuan.
At a recent panel discussion among legal experts on stablecoins hosted by Magazine, Winston Ma, former managing director of China’s sovereign wealth fund, noted that Pan’s speech referenced “CBDC stablecoins,” suggesting that Beijing may view central bank digital currencies and stablecoins as a single concept.
Solana dev impersonators target South Korean chat groups
The debut of a SOL staking ETF in America has coincided with a wave of phishing scams in South Korea targeting users through fake Solana-related groups.
Victims were lured with phishing links that redirected them to counterfeit websites mimicking Solflare, a popular Solana wallet. The sites promised free SOL rewards for creating a wallet. Once set up, users were encouraged to stake their tokens with the promise of daily interest payouts, leading many to deposit their SOL.


Scammers impersonated Superteam Korea, the local chapter of Solana’s developer community, by creating fake group chats on the messaging app KakaoTalk. These chats were styled to appear legitimate, using official Solana branding, partnership announcements and event updates. Fraudulent accounts in the groups even used the real names and photos of individuals affiliated with Superteam Korea.
Some victims went further, transferring fiat currency to bank accounts provided by the scammers. The fake wallet interfaces displayed fabricated balances, giving the illusion that SOL had been deposited.
When victims attempted to withdraw profits or move their tokens to real wallets, the scammers either removed them from the chat groups, stopped responding, or shut down the fake websites to eliminate traces of the fraud.
Indian crypto exchange CoinDCX under fire for sudden delistings
Indian cryptocurrency exchange CoinDCX is facing a backlash after it announced its decision to delist around 50 trading pairs without prior notice.
Users took to social media to complain that they were forced to sell their holdings, but CoinDCX CEO Sumit Gupta clarified that the delistings affected only margin trading pairs, not spot trading. The tokens in question remain available for spot trading, he said.


According to Gupta, the move was driven by India’s harsh tax regime on crypto. Margin trading, he explained, results in a higher tax deducted at source (TDS) than customers typically expect. India currently imposes a 1% TDS on crypto transactions above 10,000 rupees (about $115), meaning those above the threshold incur additional tax payments. In addition, crypto investors face a 30% flat tax on capital gains, making India one of the most punitive crypto tax environments in the world.
Recently, CoinDCX was forced to reverse a decision on the delisting of several spot trading pairs after community backlash. Gupta acknowledged that the exchange’s communication “could have been…
cointelegraph.com
