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LBank Launches $100M Futures Protection Fund for Traders1

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Paid for by CoinWMar 12, 2025
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  • The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.
  • The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.
  1. The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.
  2. The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.
  3. The emergence of cryptocurrency and blockchains 12 years ago changed everything.

Singapore, Singapore, March 12th, 2025, Chainwire

LBank(lbank.com), a leading global cryptocurrency exchange, has announced the launch of its $100 million Futures Risk Protection Fund, setting a new benchmark for trader security and market fairness. This initiative is designed to mitigate the impact of abnormal market volatility, ensuring users can trade with confidence while reinforcing LBank’s position as an industry leader in risk management and innovation.

Fund Details

The Futures Risk Protection Fund is activated during wick events—instances where the K-line price deviates by more than 2% from the market reasonable price within 1 minute and quickly rebounds. This mechanism applies to the top 100 futures trading pairs including $BTC, $ETH and $SOL by market capitalization (as listed on CoinMarketCap), ensuring broad coverage across high-liquidity assets.

Affected traders who experience forced liquidation or stop-loss losses due to price spikes will receive 120% compensation, reinforcing LBank’s commitment to user protection and market integrity.

  • Market Reasonable Price: Determined based on a composite value from the top 5 derivatives rankings on CoinMarketCap.
  • Compensation Mechanism: Eligible users receive 120% of their losses, credited in USDT to their spot accounts within 48 hours, minimizing disruption and enabling them to stay active in the market.
  • Additional Airdrop: In addition to individual compensation, each time a price spike occurs, LBank will allocate an extra 10,000 USDT, distributed proportionally to all position holders of the affected pair based on their holdings. These rewards are credited directly to futures accounts within the same 48-hour timeframe.

Redefining Trader Protection in the Crypto Futures Market

LBank’s $100 million risk protection fund is one of the most comprehensive safeguards, turning market volatility into an opportunity, not a setback. By leveraging USDT for seamless settlements, the program eliminates unnecessary complexities, ensuring fair, fast, and transparent risk management.

With over 15 million users worldwide, LBank continues to pioneer trader-first innovations, blending deep liquidity, market-leading security, and user-centric initiatives. This latest move reaffirms LBank’s commitment to providing a secure and rewarding trading experience, reinforcing trust and stability in the rapidly evolving crypto futures market.

About LBank

Founded in 2015, LBank is a leading global cryptocurrency exchange, serving over 15 million registered users in more than 210 countries and regions. With daily derivatives trading volume of more than $67 billion and support for over 800 cryptocurrencies, LBank is committed to delivering a comprehensive and user-friendly trading experience. Through innovative trading solutions, LBank has helped users achieve average returns of over 130% on newly listed assets.

As a pioneer in the Meme coin market, LBank Crypto Exchange has listed over 240 mainstream Meme coins and 40 Meme gems, with several achieving gains of over 500%. As the industry leader in first-time Meme coin listings, LBank has become the go-to platform for Meme coin investors.

Users Can Follow LBank for Updates

Website: https://www.lbank.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/LBank_Exchange

Telegram: https://t.me/LBank_en

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lbank_exchange

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/lbank

For media requests, users can contact via email: press@lbank.com

Contact

PR & Communications Team

LBank

press@lbank.com\

Dogecoin (DOGE), the world's largest meme cryptocurrency by market value, seems headed toward a repeat of the bullish "golden cross" technical pattern that presaged the early 2021 surge.

DOGE, which has a market cap of about $22 billion, has demonstrated remarkable performance this year, with a price surge of over 70% and significantly outpacing the near 50% increase in bitcoin (BTC), the largest cryptocurrency, according to CoinDesk data.

  • One more line here.
  • And another for testing purposes.

The recent security breach for around $1.5 billion at Bybit, the world's second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, sent ripples through the digital asset community. With $20 billion in customer assets under custody, Bybit faced a significant challenge when an attacker exploited security controls during a routine transfer from an offline "cold" wallet to a "warm" wallet used for daily trading.

Initial reports suggest the vulnerability involved a home-grown Web3 implementation using Gnosis Safe — a multi-signature wallet that uses off-chain scaling techniques, contains a centralized upgradable architecture, and a user interface for signing. Malicious code deployed using the upgradable architecture made what looked like a routine transfer actually an altered contract. The incident triggered around 350,000 withdrawal requests as users rushed to secure their funds.

While considerable in absolute terms, this breach — estimated at less than 0.01% of the total cryptocurrency market capitalization — demonstrates how what once would have been an existential crisis has become a manageable operational incident. Bybit's prompt assurance that all unrecovered funds will be covered through its reserves or partner loans further exemplifies its maturation.

Since the inception of cryptocurrencies, human error — not technical flaws in blockchain protocols — has consistently been the primary vulnerability. Our research examining over a decade of major cryptocurrency breaches shows that human factors have always dominated. In 2024 alone, approximately $2.2 billion was stolen.

What's striking is that these breaches continue to occur for similar reasons: organizations fail to secure systems because they won't explicitly acknowledge responsibility for them, or rely on custom-built solutions that preserve the illusion that their requirements are uniquely different from established security frameworks. This pattern of reinventing security approaches rather than adapting proven methodologies perpetuates vulnerabilities.

While blockchain and cryptographic technologies have proven cryptographically robust, the weakest link in security is not the technology but the human element interfacing with it. This pattern has remained remarkably consistent from cryptocurrency's earliest days to today's sophisticated institutional environments, and echoes cybersecurity concerns in other more traditional domains.

These human errors include mismanagement of private keys, where losing, mishandling, or exposing private keys compromises security. Social engineering attacks remain a major threat as hackers manipulate victims into divulging sensitive data through phishing, impersonation, and deception.

Human-Centric Security Solutions

Purely technical solutions cannot solve what is fundamentally a human problem. While the industry has invested billions in technological security measures, comparatively little has been invested in addressing the human factors that consistently enable breaches.

A barrier to effective security is the reluctance to acknowledge ownership and responsibility for vulnerable systems. Organizations that fail to clearly delineate what they control — or insist their environment is too unique for established security principles to apply — create blind spots that attackers readily exploit.

This reflects what security expert Bruce Schneier has termed a law of security: systems designed in isolation by teams convinced of their uniqueness almost invariably contain critical vulnerabilities that established security practices would have addressed. The cryptocurrency sector has repeatedly fallen into this trap, often rebuilding security frameworks from scratch rather than adapting proven approaches from traditional finance and information security.

A paradigm shift toward human-centric security design is essential. Ironically, while traditional finance evolved from single-factor (password) to multi-factor authentication (MFA), early cryptocurrency simplified security back to single-factor authentication through private keys or seed phrases under the veil of security through encryption alone. This oversimplification was dangerous, leading to the industry's speedrunning of various vulnerabilities and exploits. Billions of dollars of losses later, we arrive at the more sophisticated security approaches that traditional finance has settled on.

Modern solutions and regulatory technology should acknowledge that human error is inevitable and design systems that remain secure despite these errors rather than assuming perfect human compliance with security protocols. Importantly, the technology does not change fundamental incentives. Implementing it comes with direct costs, and avoiding it risks reputational damage.

Security mechanisms must evolve beyond merely protecting technical systems to anticipating human mistakes and being resilient against common pitfalls. Static credentials, such as passwords and authentication tokens, are insufficient against attackers who exploit predictable human behavior. Security systems should integrate behavioral anomaly detection to flag suspicious activities.

Private keys stored in a single, easily accessible location pose a major security risk. Splitting key storage between offline and online environments mitigates full-key compromise. For instance, storing part of a key on a hardware security module while keeping another part offline enhances security by requiring multiple verifications for full access — reintroducing multi-factor authentication principles to cryptocurrency security.

Actionable Steps for a Human-Centric Security Approach

A comprehensive human-centric security framework must address cryptocurrency vulnerabilities at multiple levels, with coordinated approaches across the ecosystem rather than isolated solutions.

For individual users, hardware wallet solutions remain the best standard. However, many users prefer convenience over security responsibility, so the second-best is for exchanges to implement practices from traditional finance: default (but adjustable) waiting periods for large transfers, tiered account systems with different authorization levels, and context-sensitive security education that activates at critical decision points.

Exchanges and institutions must shift from assuming perfect user compliance to designing systems that anticipate human error. This begins with explicitly acknowledging which components and processes they control and are therefore responsible for securing.

Denial or ambiguity about responsibility boundaries directly undermines security efforts. Once this accountability is established, organizations should implement behavioral analytics to detect anomalous patterns, require multi-party authorization for high-value transfers, and deploy automatic "circuit breakers" that limit potential damage if compromised.

In addition, the complexity of Web3 tools creates large attack surfaces. Simplifying and adopting established security patterns would reduce vulnerabilities without sacrificing functionality.

At the industry level, regulators and leaders can establish standardized human factors requirements in security certifications, but there are tradeoffs between innovation and safety. The Bybit incident exemplifies how the cryptocurrency ecosystem has evolved from its fragile early days to a more resilient financial infrastructure. While security breaches continue — and likely always will — their nature has changed from existential threats that could destroy confidence in cryptocurrency as a concept to operational challenges that require ongoing engineering solutions.

The future of cryptosecurity lies not in pursuing the impossible goal of eliminating all human error but in designing systems that remain secure despite inevitable human mistakes. This requires first acknowledging what aspects of the system fall under an organization's responsibility rather than maintaining ambiguity that leads to security gaps.

By acknowledging human limitations and building systems that accommodate them, the cryptocurrency ecosystem can continue evolving from speculative curiosity to robust financial infrastructure rather than assuming perfect compliance with security protocols.

The key to effective cryptosecurity in this maturing market lies not in more complex technical solutions but in more thoughtful human-centric design. By prioritizing security architectures that account for behavioral realities and human limitations, we can build a more resilient digital financial ecosystem that continues to function securely when — not if — human errors occur.

LBank Launches $100M Futures Protection Fund for Traders