Ripple CEO Inks His Faith For The Token On His Arm After Ripple Clentched Its Pivotal Victory In Court
In a bold and symbolic gesture, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has etched a pivotal moment in crypto legal history onto his skin.

In a bold and symbolic gesture, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has etched a pivotal moment in crypto legal history onto his skin.
Ripple has applied for a US national bank charter and a Federal Reserve account to support its stablecoin RLUSD. The move comes as new laws push stablecoin issuers to meet tougher rules, with Ripple aiming to boost trust and compete with USDC and USDT.
Ripple’s Brad Garlinghouse is announcing that Ripple is finally putting their SEC case to an end once and for all, as the company prepares to withdraw its cross-appeal.
A 26-year-old TikTok influencer and crypto trader was reportedly kidnapped in France and held for a €50,000 crypto ransom. But when the kidnappers found he had been all-in on XRP since 2018 and had little to show for it, they released him—allegedly sending $1,000 in USDT before letting him go.
Ripple and the SEC have jointly asked a US court to lift a ban on XRP sales to institutions and cut Ripple’s fine from $125 million to $50 million. They hope this will end the long-running legal case before a key 16 June deadline.
Ripple has partnered with Web3 Salon to support Japanese startups building on the XRP Ledger. The programme offers up to $200,000 in funding, mentoring, and events to boost XRPL use in Japan.
Ripple’s stablecoin RLUSD received approval from the Dubai Financial Services Authority for use in the Dubai International Financial Centre, joining its existing authorisation in New York. This allows RLUSD to be integrated into Ripple’s payment network, offering fast, low-cost, and regulated cross-border transactions for businesses in the region.
Meta shareholders have decisively shut down a proposal to add Bitcoin to the company’s treasury, but industry whispers suggest the tech giant may have its sights set on Ripple’s XRP.
Dubai has launched its first government-backed platform, Prypco Mint, allowing people to buy small shares in property using blockchain. The system links directly to official land records and aims to make real estate investment easier and more secure.
StraitsX has partnered with Ripple to launch its Singapore dollar-backed stablecoin XSGD on the XRP Ledger, improving speed and lowering costs for digital payments. This partnership supports cross-border transactions and expands access to regulated stablecoins in Asia.
Ripple contests SEC's hefty $2 billion fine with a proposed $10 million settlement, emphasizing compliance changes and lack of investor harm.
The request comes against the backdrop of Nigeria’s crackdown on cryptocurrency exchanges and the devaluation of the national currency.
Binance halts $4.2 million XRP theft, supporting Ripple post-hack. CEO Teng pledges secure ecosystems, echoing past aid in crypto crises.
Amidst all the noise, no one seems to be seriously exploring how much money Binance was fined by the US government.
Metropolitan Commercial Bank fined $30 million by authorities for its involvement in the misuse of the digital prepaid visa card program.
While the founders and CEO have settled their fines, VARA reported that OPNX is yet to make the required payment, potentially leading the regulator to take further measures against the platform.
The Justice Department has been looking into Binance over money laundering allegations, reports note.
The Central Bank of the Netherlands (DNB) is hitting prominent crypto exchange platform Coinbase with a multimillion-dollar fine for failing to comply with its guidelines.
New research shows the most number of SEC crypto-related litigation occurred in New York, but the agency has been increasing such actions in other federal courts.
On October 5, 2020, the SEC alleged that McAfee and Watson promoted ICO investments on Twitter without disclosing that they were paid for them.