Coverage is mostly measured — 8 of 8 reports stay neutral.
Injective has filed a transfer agent registration with the U.S. SEC to enable on‑chain recordkeeping for tokenized securities, positioning the network to support regulated real‑world asset issuance in the United States. The filing, announced in July 2026, aims to move ownership records onto blockchain while preserving compliance, though approval is not guaranteed. Separately, the project disclosed a supply‑chain incident involving its npm packages, which was detected and mitigated before any downloads occurred, resulting in no user funds or on‑chain assets being compromised.
Injective seeks SEC registration to act as a transfer agent for tokenized securities on its blockchain.
The SEC filing does not constitute approval and may require additional information before a decision is made.
Injective’s blockchain can settle transactions in under one second, enabling near‑instant ownership updates.
A malicious npm package targeting Injective’s SDK was identified and removed before any downloads, with zero user funds at risk.
Injective has added further security measures to its npm supply chain following the incident.
Injective filed a transfer agent registration with the SEC to maintain on‑chain ownership records for tokenized securities.
No, the filing is pending and the SEC may request additional information before making a final determination.
No, the malicious package had zero downloads and was removed before any developers could use it, so no funds were at risk.
Injective deprecated the affected package versions, released clean replacements, and implemented additional protections for its npm supply chain.
The network can settle transactions in less than one second, allowing ownership updates to occur almost instantly.
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