TL;DR: DORA—Regulation (EU) 2022/2554—has applied in the EU since 17 January 2025. It requires financial entities (including CASPs authorised under MiCA) to implement robust ICT risk management, test operational resilience, report major incidents, and oversee critical technology vendors. For CoinW users, this means stronger protection against outages and cyber events, clearer communications during incidents, and improved continuity of services.
The Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) is the EU’s horizontal framework for ICT risk and resilience in the financial sector: prevent incidents, withstand disruption, and recover quickly. It applies directly across Member States and harmonises how firms manage technology risks, test critical capabilities, and oversee third-party ICT providers.
Legal reference: Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 (DORA). See also the EIOPA overview.
| Date | What happened |
|---|---|
| 14 Dec 2022 | DORA adopted by EU co-legislators. |
| 27 Dec 2022 | Published in the Official Journal (OJEU L 333). |
| 17 Jan 2025 | DORA applies across the EU. |
“ICT” covers information and communication technology—including cloud, data centres, software, networks, and security services—used to deliver financial services.
Expect improved uptime targets, redundancy, and faster recovery from potential outages. You should see clearer status pages and restoration timelines when incidents occur.
For significant ICT incidents, CoinW must coordinate regulatory reporting and user-facing updates, improving transparency around impact and remediation.
Reinforced controls like MFA, session protections, and fraud/risk monitoring help prevent account compromise and service disruption.
Cloud and other ICT providers are audited more tightly, with contractual safeguards to ensure resilience and portability of services/data.
DORA applies to EU-authorised entities and activities in the EU. If CoinW serves EU users or operates within the EU, DORA obligations apply.
Some resilience testing may require maintenance windows. Expect advance notice and clear timelines to minimise disruption.
Contracts must include audit rights, resilience SLAs, data portability, and exit strategies. Critical ICT providers are under EU-level oversight.
DORA focuses on ICT resilience. Personal data remains under GDPR’s scope.

In June 2026, JuCoin was flagged for abnormal withdrawal processing, with reports that a significant portion of its reserves consisted of stablecoins issued on its own proprietary chain rather than official versions, raising doubts about reserve transparency. The platform has undergone multiple rebrands, previously suffered losses due to contract vulnerabilities, and has heightened user vigilance regarding exchange security. CoinW, in contrast, has maintained an eight-year track record with zero security incidents. It employs multi-signature technology, MPC-based private key sharding and distributed storage, full-stack risk controls with real-time monitoring, and a publicly verifiable Proof of Reserves (PoR) mechanism to ensure transparent and auditable asset backing. Users are advised to self-check withdrawal conditions on their current platforms, verify PoR, assess operational history, and consider migrating to CoinW, where completing KYC enables secure trading.

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