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Resupply Rage Gets Legal: Singapore Court Orders Crypto Twitter to Cool Down
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Resupply Rage Gets Legal: Singapore Court Orders Crypto Twitter to Cool Down

A Singapore court has essentially told two crypto personalities to put down the keyboard swords and stop slinging accusations at a Curve-linked contributor after the 2025 Resupply exploit. The March 24 order from the Protection from Harassment Court has put OneKey founder Wang Lei and the X user "web3feng" on a content diet, prohibiting them from posting allegedly defamatory statements about the claimant, Wang Haoming, who goes by "Haowi Wong" on X. Nothing says "touch grass" quite like a court order.

The legal drama kicked off after the June 2025 exploit of stablecoin protocol Resupply, which drained approximately $9.6 million from the protocol through a price manipulation vulnerability in the wstUSR market. Some in the DeFi space immediately pointed fingers at Curve infrastructure because of cvcrvUSD and vault integrations—because when $10M walks, DeFi detectives start looking for familiar faces. Curve founder Michael Egorov, for his part, has denied any Curve personnel were involved. Classic "not our code, not our problem" energy.

The court order bars threatening, abusive, or insulting communications and requires the respondents to pay 2,500 Singapore dollars (about $1,900) in compensation and costs by April 7. That's roughly the price of a decent used car in Singapore, or one very expensive Twitter poll. Curve Finance noted that disputes in crypto can sometimes cross "the line between legitimate and well-founded criticism and outright falsehoods and defamation," adding that distorted claims undermine trust in the ecosystem. Translation: roast people all you want, but maybe don't get lawyers involved.

Wang Haoming said the situation escalated after the exploit

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Publishergascope.com
Published
UpdatedApr 3, 2026, 02:06 UTC

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