ZachXBT has called for stricter penalties for SIM swap and social engineering attacks, criticizing the legal frameworks in Canada and the European Union as too lenient. He argues that current laws allow many offenders, including minors, to avoid meaningful consequences and maintain anonymity. He cited the case of 17-year-old Canadian Cameron Redman, who was involved in the theft of $37 million and remained anonymous until later phishing and X account hacks, as an example of how legal loopholes enable offenders to evade accountability. These calls for reform highlight concerns about legal gaps that allow perpetrators of crypto-related fraud to escape significant punishment.
It's wild that there still hasn't been any media coverage of this. Near the start of the year, we started sounding the alarm that many members of Congress were buying Palantir stock for the first time. It was unlike anything we'd ever seen. Members of committees on Homeland https://t.co/C4HQcaOSZg
Another one: Representative Julie Johnson bought Palantir stock for the first time on January 15th. $PLTR has now risen 93% since then. Johnson sits on the House Committee on Homeland Security. https://t.co/Z4A5fcdVPQ
Opinion: Landsman: It's time to ban stock trading in Congress and rebuild public trust | Opinion https://t.co/ROTpglsoCy