Philippines regulatory shift: ISPs begin to enforce blocking of unlicensed trading platforms

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【Crypto World】The regulatory attitude towards the cryptocurrency market in the Philippines has shown a clear shift. Recently, the National Telecommunications Commission issued a key directive requiring local internet service providers to restrict user access to 50 trading platforms. All of these platforms are listed by the Central Bank of the Philippines as unauthorized operations.

Some users have reported that they are unable to access certain globally renowned exchanges through multiple local ISPs. The blocking actions are directly mandated by regulatory authorities and are unprecedented in their scale. Of course, the Central Bank has not yet publicly released the full blacklist of platforms, but this move hints at a change—local regulators are thoroughly changing their strategy.

Previously, the Philippines adopted a relatively lenient attitude, implicitly allowing these platforms to operate. Now, the situation has reversed, and enforcement has begun. For exchanges wishing to operate in the Philippines or serve local users, obtaining a local license is no longer optional but a matter of life and death. This marks the official transition of the Philippine crypto market from the “gray area” to the era of “licensed operation.”

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NFTragedyvip
· 12-26 21:01
Damn, the Philippines is really going all out, blacklisting 50 platforms directly. There's really no room for negotiation now.
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GweiTooHighvip
· 12-26 16:58
This move by the Philippines is really incredible, going straight from laid-back to iron-fisted, with 50 platforms just shutting down. Domestic small retail investors probably have to use VPNs now, haha.
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AirdropHarvestervip
· 12-24 11:10
The Philippines' move is really aggressive; ISPs are directly cutting off the internet... It seems there's no way out without obtaining a license.
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OnchainDetectivevip
· 12-24 11:10
50 platforms were blocked overnight, this tactic is interesting... The blacklist was not even made public before taking action, what does that imply? According to on-chain data, there should be a story of fund flows behind this operation. Usually, such urgent regulation is not just for compliance; it depends on who has how much risk exposure within these platforms. The Philippines suddenly shifted, I had guessed it early. Loose policies can't last long, directly banning at the ISP level... This method is quite harsh. Not making the blacklist public and instead blocking everything is a typical approach for investigating fund connections. Through multiple tracking methods, clues should be discoverable.
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digital_archaeologistvip
· 12-24 10:51
Oh no, the Philippines' recent moves are really quite aggressive. They completely changed their approach, from neglect to strict regulation... who can handle that? They don't even dare to make the blacklist public, playing this blind box game here. Regular users are caught in the crossfire, can't even log in, feeling like an invisible hand is choking them. Licenses have now become a talisman; without them, it's almost impossible to move forward.
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RebaseVictimvip
· 12-24 10:50
The Philippines' move is really aggressive; 50 platforms were directly shut down... But on the other hand, wanting to enjoy the Philippines' cake without a license? That’s a no-go.
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