Zora Revises Coin Policies After ZachXBT Call-Out

TheCryptoTimesОпубліковано о 2025-08-03Востаннє оновлено о 2025-08-26

Zora, the Coinbase-backed crypto platform, has introduced new rules to hide coins that break its community guidelines after facing backlash for promoting a fake Tyson Fury account and being linked to alleged serial scammer Sahil Arora. 

The company announced on X that coins flagged for issues like impersonation or offensive content will no longer appear openly. However, users can still buy, sell, or transfer them if they want.

Users holding these flagged tokens will now see them marked in their wallets with a warning that the coin has been hidden due to guideline violations.

ZachXBT Exposes Controversial Talks with Sahil Arora

The new change came after crypto sleuth ZachXBT, shared some screenshots online that suggested that executives from Zora and Coinbase were in talks with Arora about possible collaboration, as confirmed by Protos.

Arora is well known in the crypto space for orchestrating celebrity rug pulls, with names like Jason Derulo, Caitlyn Jenner, and Iggy Azalea attached to projects that quickly collapsed. 

He has claimed to have made thirty million dollars last year from such ventures and bragged that he was safe under Donald Trump’s lighter approach to crypto regulation.

Among the leaked exchanges were messages involving Jesse Pollak, the head of Coinbase’s Base App, who appeared to advise Arora to drop what he called the “bad guy positioning” and said he was looking forward to seeing Arora’s “positive impact.”

Zora Executives Promote Fake Tyson Fury Account

Other screenshots showed Zora co-founder Jacob Horne and head of partnerships Zak Krevitt in emails where Arora claimed he had onboarded heavyweight boxing champion Tyson Fury to the platform.

Horne later promoted what he thought was Fury’s account on the platform. He even shared a tokenized post that he said he had “just saw.” But the account turned out to be fake. After Zora deleted the page, users quickly complained that they could no longer trade the token connected to the fake account.

Pollak later tried to defend his contact with Arora. He said “I told [Arora] he had a bad rap, bad actors aren’t tolerated on base, and he’d need to demonstrate positive impact.” He added that he was willing to hear Arora out but insisted that “no live meeting ever happened” and that the two parties were not “working together.” 

His explanation drew mockery across X, with ZachXBT reposting the defense but swapping Arora’s name with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and the Lazarus hacker group to show how silly it sounded.

Zora raised fifty million dollars in 2022 through Coinbase Ventures. The platform is designed like a social media site where every post becomes a tradable coin. Coinbase leaders, including Pollak and CEO Brian Armstrong, have promoted Zora before, showing how closely it is tied to the exchange.

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