Not Safe for Work? Meet the Top Gainer of Recent Days

Not Safe for Work? Meet the Top Gainer of Recent Days

One of the top gainers in the past few days has been a coin called Titcoin, which nearly doubled in price just yesterday.

If you google the name, you’ll find that Titcoin was actually a real project existed between 2014 and 2018. It was originally designed as an anonymous, decentralized payment method for adult content - pitched as a way to solve the privacy and stigma issues around paying for such services. Despite the bold idea, the coin failed to secure meaningful partnerships within the industry and eventually faded away.

Recently, though, the name has been revived by a new meme token—just like Fartcoin, which I talked about earlier, reused the name of a long-forgotten 2013 coin. As with Fartcoin, a loud and provocative name seems to be working: it grabs attention - and for a meme token, what else do you really need?

But stories like these highlight a bigger issue in crypto: token names aren’t trademarks. There’s no legal protection over who can use a particular name, which means it’s entirely possible (and not uncommon) to find two active cryptocurrencies with the exact same name.

So if you're using rabbit.io to swap tokens and you’re not 100% sure you're holding the exact version of a token that we support - don’t hesitate to reach out to our support team. We'll help you navigate the chaos of crypto naming, where dozens of tokens can look nearly identical but behave very differently.