A Singapore court has ordered OneKey founder Wang Lei (Yishi) and pseudonymous user @web3feng to stop harassing Curve Finance contributor Haowi Wong. The Protection from Harassment Court ruled on March 24, barring them from making abusive statements and ordering them to pay about $1,900 in damages. The case stems from online accusations following the June 2025 exploit of the Resupply protocol, which cost users $9.3 million.
A Singapore judge has ordered two individuals to stop harassing Curve Finance contributor Haowi Wong. The Protection from Harassment Court issued the ruling against OneKey founder Wang Lei, known as Yishi, and the pseudonymous user behind the X account @web3feng.
The respondents did not appear in court and did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The March 24 ruling specifically bars them from posting claims that Wong defrauded others or spread false information.
The two were also ordered to pay 2,500 Singaporean dollars, about $1,900, in damages and costs by April 7. The case originated from the June 2025 exploit of stablecoin lending protocol Resupply that cost users $9.3 million.
As the protocol allowed users to lend crvUSD stablecoins into Curve vaults, it was perceived by some to be formally affiliated with Curve. The dispute involved statements accusing Curve of responsibility in the exploit and levelling personal accusations against Wong.
“Steer clear of all projects associated with Curve/Yearn,” Wang said at the time. Curve founder Michael Egorov responded, “no single person from Curve working on that project.”
Egorov stated that Curve Finance was not formally involved in the court case. He said Haowi took them to court “just because he loves Curve!” and “cannot tolerate FUD!”
OneKey said in June that Wang’s advocacy represented his “personal behavior.” The company stated it “had never instigated, organized or manipulated any KOL or user in any form to launch a public opinion attack on Curve or any project.”
“This situation is no longer about technical discussions or differences in opinion. It involved sustained personal attacks, serious allegations such as fraud, and even threatening behavior,” Wong said. He argued that at that point, it crosses out of ‘DeFi discourse’ and becomes real-world harm.
