Cryptocurrency firms based in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been hit with a flood of requests by Russian clients to liquidate billions of dollars worth of digital assets, Reuters reported on Friday.
One crypto executive claims to have received a number of requests from Swiss brokers over the past few days to liquidate billions in bitcoin BTC$67.846,96, with not one of those requests being for less than $2 billion.
“We have one guy – I don't know who he is, but he came through a broker – and they're like, 'We want to sell 125,000 bitcoin.' And I'm like, 'What? That's $6 billion, guys.' And they're like, 'Yeah, we're going to send it to a company in Australia.'"
Other Russians are looking to use their crypto to invest in property in the UAE, the report continued. Dubai has for years been a popular destination for Russians, and they've been among the top visitors and buyers of real estate there long before the Ukraine invasion began.
Many Bitcoin veterans, having seen these sorts of reports more than once, are taking the Reuters story with a big grain of salt. “Calling a hard fake news on this one,” tweeted Blockstream’s Adam Back. Coinshares’ Meltom Demirors said: “This kinda feels like the 2018-2019 deluge of emails to [over-the-counter] desks about whales wanting to sell 10-100k slugs of BTC … Will believe it when the ticket gets printed. Until then, FUD.”
The UAE has previously claimed it is not siding with either Western allies or Moscow. UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash late last month said the Gulf state “believes that taking sides would only lead to more violence,” and that the UAE’s focus was to “encourage all parties to resort to diplomatic action.”
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New research claims specialized AI dramatically outperforms general-purpose models at detecting exploited DeFi vulnerabilities.
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A purpose-built AI security agent detected vulnerabilities in 92% of 90 exploited DeFi contracts ($96.8 million in exploit value), compared with 34% and $7.5 million for a baseline GPT-5.1-based coding agent running on the same underlying model.
The gap came from domain-specific security methodology layered on top of the model, not differences in core AI capability, according to the report.
The findings come as prior research from Anthropic and OpenAI shows AI agents can execute end-to-end smart contract exploits at low cost, accelerating concerns that offensive AI capabilities are scaling faster than defensive adoption.