News linked to both this project and an event.
India's 2026 tax filing season imposes stricter compliance requirements on crypto investors. Although the tax framework has not undergone drastic changes, enforcement intensity and reporting details have significantly tightened, making the potential consequences of filing errors more severe.India has implemented the new Income Tax Act (2025) effective April 1, 2026, replacing the original 1961 Act. For the FY2025-26 tax year, crypto assets (VDAs) still need to be reported under the existing framework, but the execution requirements have been further refined. Specifically, Schedule VDA requires investors to report on a "per-transaction" basis rather than merely aggregating net gains, covering records of each transaction, exchange, and asset disposal. For users involved in cross-platform trading, DeFi operations, and multi-wallet transfers, data integrity and consistency have become core challenges.Analysis indicates that failing to fully report any crypto asset exchange or transaction could trigger compliance risk reviews, as regulators are increasingly demanding data matching and on-chain/exchange record verification. (Times of India)
Circle Chief Strategy Officer Dante Disparte responded to the major security breach affecting Drift Protocol on April 1, which resulted in over $270 million in stolen funds. He stated that open financial systems must be built upon foundations of legal accountability, shared security, and rules that evolve in real time with emerging threats. Circle freezes USDC funds only when legally required—a measure reflecting its compliance obligations and safeguarding users’ assets and privacy rights. He emphasized that openness and accountability must be balanced, and all participants across the ecosystem—including protocols, wallets, infrastructure providers, exchanges, and stablecoin issuers—must jointly shoulder responsibility for security and accountability. Circle is collaborating with U.S. and international policymakers to advance stablecoin legislation, including the GENIUS Act, to establish a more modern legal framework enabling lawful, rapid intervention against illicit activities while protecting property rights and privacy—ensuring the continued resilience and robust growth of open financial systems.