
World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the Trump-backed crypto platform that describes itself as “community governed,” is again facing criticism over how it manages user funds. Recent wallet freezes and an upcoming asset redistribution have intensified long-standing concerns about centralized control. Users remain divided over whether WLFI’s intervention reflects responsible oversight or signals deeper governance problems.
WLFI announced that it will reassign assets from wallets compromised in a pre-launch phishing attack. The incident exposed seed phrases belonging to what the platform called a “relatively small subset” of users.
According to WLFI, attackers gained access through external security failures rather than flaws in its own infrastructure or smart contracts. The affected wallets have been frozen since September while the platform conducts its investigation.
Only users who completed Know Your Customer (KYC) verification will regain access to their funds. Accounts without KYC verification will remain locked. WLFI previously blacklisted 272 wallets tied to the incident, stating that its intervention prevented additional losses while it worked with those affected.
Reaction within the crypto community remains split over the platform’s recent action. Some participants see WLFI’s actions as necessary protection following the phishing attack. Others argue the steps contradict the project’s claims about shared governance.
Concerns increased after several X users argued that WLFI’s ability to freeze and reassign assets conflicts with a model built on community oversight. Critics also questioned why these decisions bypassed any form of community voting process.
Traders and developers discussing the situation pointed to several key questions :
Others defended WLFI, saying the platform is taking responsibility instead of distancing itself from the breach. Supporters argue the decision to restore funds stands out in an industry where many projects avoid addressing security failures directly.
Good to see a project actually taking responsibility instead of hiding behind ‘not our fault’. User safety > everything.
Further scrutiny arises from a separate dispute in September, when WLFI unlocked 24.6 billion tokens, valued at nearly $5 billion at the time, shortly after presenting them as locked. The move caused a sharp but temporary price jump followed by a pullback. And as expected, it also raised questions about the project’s internal decision-making.

