A legal dispute has erupted between Maple Finance and Core Foundation, potentially jeopardizing a multi-million dollar Bitcoin investment program. The Cayman Islands Court has issued an injunction against Maple Finance, preventing it from launching its competing BTC product, syrupBTC, and handling CORE tokens without prior consent. This action stems from a commercial agreement signed in early 2025 between the two parties to jointly develop lstBTC, a liquid staked Bitcoin product that delivers yield while securely storing assets. Core Foundation alleges Maple misused confidential information during the development process and launched its own competing syrupBTC project, violating the exclusivity clause. Maple Finance strongly denies these accusations, stating their product is independent and protects lender rights. While the dispute awaits resolution, Maple claims its BTC Yield program will continue to operate independently with 85% of invested Bitcoin returned to lenders, while maintaining 15% for legal purposes. Core Foundation, on the other hand, focuses on community protection, seeking to enforce contractual terms and ensure the integrity of lstBTC and secure lender safeguards. They plan to launch new projects in the coming months as part of their expanded ecosystem.