
Today news
2025-03-17 06:15:00
OKX has temporarily suspended its decentralized exchange aggregator after regulators in the European Union (EU) began looking at how it was used by North Korea to launder proceeds from a recent hack of crypto exchange Bybit.
Bloomberg reported on March 11 that the EU regulators were investigating OKX’s Web3 services for allegedly laundering funds from the Bybit hack, prompting OKX President Hong Fang and other executives to call Bloomberg’s report misleading and assert the company’s commitment to combating financial crime.
I’m deeply disappointed that when we try to help our industry get safer, those who we have helped sent mis-leading information instead and tried to create FUD.
Regardless of what others do or say, we take our commitment to compliance seriously. We take our commitment to our… https://t.co/nN9aYlPNO1
— hong (@hfangca) March 11, 2025
We typically don’t respond to false claims and misinformation.
Despite our best efforts to help Bybit actively by directing resources towards them, they appear to be citing misinformation on X and with journalists.
We spoke to Bloomberg today and provided our statement… https://t.co/VJyK9WhKSP
— Haider (@Haider) March 11, 2025
“We are addressing a tagging issue with explorers that highlights OKX DEX aggregator as the destination of trades when in fact, OKX DEX aggregator just looks for the best price to execute the order, and then the final order/trade is placed on one of the DEXs our aggregator connects to,” a spokesperson for OKX told CoinDesk in a Telegram message.
The spokesperson said that after consulting regulators, they proactively paused our DEX aggregator to implement new tagging and security upgrades.
“This decision ensures the transparency of how our software and systems work, along with the safety of our platform and users,” they continued.