A South Korean cryptocurrency exchange accidentally distributed billions of dollars worth of Bitcoin to its customers, while Uber was ordered to pay $8.5 million in a sexual assault case, and YouTube revealed a $60 billion revenue for 2025, according to reports. Bitcoin also hit its lowest level since September 2024.
Bithumb, the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange, mistakenly gave away over 40 billion (32 billion) worth of Bitcoin to its customers on Friday. The company had intended to give customers a small cash reward of 2,000 won (1.37), but instead, 2,000 Bitcoins were distributed. The platform quickly realized its error and recovered almost all the missing tokens, restricting trading and withdrawals for the 695 affected customers within 35 minutes of the glitch, according to BBC World. The company reported recovering 99.7% of the 620,000 Bitcoins mistakenly sent.
In a separate legal matter, a US court ordered Uber to pay $8.5 million (6.2 million) to a woman who claimed she was raped by an Uber driver. The federal lawsuit, heard in Arizona, found Uber responsible for the driver's behavior after a two-day deliberation. Uber stated its intention to appeal the verdict. The jury rejected additional claims, including negligence and defective safety systems, according to BBC Technology and Business.
The price of Bitcoin fell to its lowest level in 16 months, reaching 60,000 (44,000), despite former US President Donald Trump's support for cryptocurrency, as reported by BBC Technology. The drop followed months of surging Bitcoin prices, which saw the cryptocurrency hit an all-time high of 122,200 in October 2025. "Those who bet too big, borrowed too much or assumed prices only go up are now finding out the hard way what real market volatility and risk management look like," Joshua Chu, co-chair of the Hong Kong Web3 Association, told Reuters.
In other financial news, Google revealed that YouTube generated over $60 billion (44 billion) in revenue in 2025, including advertising and paid subscriptions. This figure surpasses streaming rival Netflix's $45 billion revenue, according to BBC Business. This appears to be the first time Google has individually highlighted its video platform's yearly revenue since acquiring it in 2006. Midia Research senior analyst Hanna Kahlert said the announcement was "perhaps not a surprising one," as the platform has become "almost infrastructural for digital natives."
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