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South Korea Sees Crypto Investors Selling Coins to Buy Real Estate, With Highest Proportion in the 30s Age Group

2 hours ago

May 10 — South Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport reports 324 homebuyers used cryptocurrency sale proceeds to fund home purchases between February 10 and March 31. Of these buyers, 229 (roughly 70.7%) were aged 30–39—this group accounted for the largest share of declared crypto funds, totaling about 10.31 billion South Korean won (around $7.4 million). Notably, South Korea began separately listing virtual asset sale income in housing finance plans this year, a sign crypto gains are flowing into the real estate market. However, such funds make up only ~0.1% of total home purchase capital, so their overall impact remains limited.
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Report: Coinbase and Kraken Account for 22% of US Crypto Industry AI Mentions, IBIT Leads Bitcoin ETF-related Responses

A May 10 market analysis report shows Coinbase and Kraken together account for 22% of all AI references in the cryptocurrency category—13% for Coinbase and 9% for Kraken—leading other U.S. exchanges by a three-to-one margin. Gemini ranks third at 5.5%, Robinhood Crypto fourth at 5%, and BlackRock’s bitcoin spot ETF IBIT fifth at 4.5%, while dominating searches related to "bitcoin ETF." The analysis notes hardware wallets are losing influence in AI-generated responses. Though Ledger and Trezor still lead in searches for "best cryptocurrency wallets," AI now more often recommends custodial solutions from regulated exchanges when users ask about the "best crypto asset storage methods." The report argues the "self-custody narrative" that gained traction after the FTX collapse is no longer the dominant framework AI references. Moreover, AI is rapidly reshaping the playing field for U.S. retail crypto finance brands: "When users ask ChatGPT where to buy Bitcoin, the platforms AI priori

8 minutes ago

A US military F-35 fighter jet sent a distress signal over the Arabian Sea

May 10 — A U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II fighter jet transmitted the 7700 emergency code minutes ago while operating over the Arabian Sea, according to Iran’s Tasnim News Agency. The 7700 code is a universal emergency signal for both civilian and military aircraft, signifying a critical situation (e.g., mechanical failure, medical emergency, or loss of control) that requires priority handling and may call for an immediate landing.

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An American cargo ship was attacked near Qatar

On May 10, Iran’s Tasnim News Agency reported—citing informed sources—that a U.S.-flagged cargo ship was attacked and caught fire near Qatar.

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Iranian Navy Commander: Indigenous Light Submarine on Alert in Strait of Hormuz

May 10 (local time) — Iranian Navy Commander Shahram Irani said an indigenously built Iranian light submarine is on standby in the Strait of Hormuz, ready to deploy and conduct relevant missions based on threat levels, combat capabilities, and operational requirements. (CCTV News)

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Malaysian Police Slow Progress on Case of Chinese Citizen Robbed of 50,000 USDT, Lawyer Angrily Points Out Investigation Delay May Involve "Cover-up"

**May 10** In February this year, Malaysian police raided a rented villa in Country Heights, Kajang, targeting several Chinese citizens suspected of fraud. The officers allegedly forced the victims to transfer approximately $50,000 (around 200,000 Malaysian Ringgit) in USDT. Twelve implicated officers were later arrested and relieved of frontline duties, but the investigation remains pending technical reports and digital evidence analysis—no breakthrough has been made to date. Charles, the lawyer representing the eight Chinese victims, slammed the probe’s excessive slowness. “There’s been no follow-up since the 12 officers’ arrest, suggesting suspected internal interference to suppress the case,” he stated. He warned that if internal protection is uncovered, a complaint will be filed with the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC).

8 minutes ago

More than half of U.S. voters disapprove of Trump's economic policies

**A new Financial Times poll released May 10 finds more than half of American voters disapprove of how Donald Trump has handled the economy, with top concerns including inflation, rising living costs and the energy price impact of a potential war with Iran.** **Despite reports of job gains, a manufacturing resurgence and a climbing stock market, public sentiment about real-life cost-of-living pressures has pushed Trump’s economic approval rating down to roughly 37%, while disapproval tops 55%.** **The poll underscores a gap between Wall Street and everyday Americans in economic perception—one that could hurt the Republican Party’s performance in the 2026 midterm elections.**

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