Quick Take
  • Crypto news stories are vanishing without a trace.
  • Articles questioning the influence of paid press releases have quietly disappeared from major crypto websites, leaving little evidence they were ever published.
  • Chainstory analyzed 2,893 press releases distributed between June 16 and November 1, 2025.
  • 62% originated from high-risk (35.6%) or confirmed scam projects (26.9%).

What Happened

At the same time, thousands of promotional announcements continue to flood the industry, shaping narratives, moving markets, and blurring the line between journalism and advertising.

Exchange listing announcements (spam): 24%

In crypto, the effect is amplified, with algorithmic trading bots that scrape keywords such as “partnership” or “listing,” automatically triggering buy orders.

Retail investors often interpret the placement of content on recognized domains as evidence of legitimacy.

Market Context

Headlines are deliberately loaded with marketing buzzwords like “AI-Powered Revolution,” “RWA Game-Changer,” terms editorial desks would likely reject if scrutinized.

The result is a short-term price pump, often followed by unexpected declines once the underlying project fails to meet expectations.

Why It Matters

Chainstory analyzed 2,893 press releases distributed between June 16 and November 1, 2025. Using AI-driven sentiment tagging and risk classification, cross-referenced with blacklists like CryptoLegal.uk, Trustpilot, and scam alert feeds, the report found that:

62% originated from high-risk (35.6%) or confirmed scam projects (26.9%).

Low-risk issuers accounted for only 27% of releases.

In certain niches, such as cloud mining, scam, or high-risk content, dominated ~90% of releases.

Details

Crypto news stories are vanishing without a trace. Articles questioning the influence of paid press releases have quietly disappeared from major crypto websites, leaving little evidence they were ever published.

The Shadow Pipeline That Fuels FOMO

The tone of the content was heavily promotional:

Neutral: 10%

Overstated: 54%

Overtly promotional: 19%

Content type breakdown further highlighted the triviality of much coverage:

Product tweaks or minor feature updates: 49%

Substantive corporate events (funding, M&A): 2% (58 releases)

Based on this, the researchers concluded that these dynamics create a “manufactured legitimacy loop.” Dubious projects buy guaranteed placements across dozens of outlets, including mainstream financial portals, sidebars, and niche crypto aggregators.

Placement allows these projects to populate “As Seen On” sections, leveraging recognition to drive retail FOMO.

PR Dollars Speak Louder Than Facts

The ecosystem echoes TradFi abuses. SEC data shows press releases fueled 73% of OTC penny-stock pump-and-dump schemes from 2002–2015.

Complicating matters, FTC rules for native advertising require clear disclosure. In practice, many crypto “Press Release” sections appear neutral, erasing the sponsored stigma and conferring the illusion of independent validation.