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Boba Guys, Shopify users showcase adoption of Web3 tools – Solana Breakpoint

Mainstream commerce and big brands are reporting improved business results and promising loyalty programmes through integrations with the wider Solana ecosystem.

Web3 tools powered by layer-1 blockchain Solana are driving tangible returns and delivering deep customer data insights, according to prominent mainstream brands and companies that attended Solana Breakpoint.

The four day conference hosted in Amsterdam in 2023 attracted a wide variety of businesses and projects from Web2, Web3 and traditional backgrounds. A prominent takeaway was adoption of Solana-based tools and services innovating payments and loyalty programmes.

Boba Guys, a growing United States-based bubble tea brand in the mold of Starbucks, unpacked how its pilot programme for a new customer loyalty app delivered insightful data while seemingly incentivizing customers to return to its stores in San Francisco.

Related: Visa taps into Solana to widen USDC payment capability

The five week programme relied solely on in-store promotion to customers in the area. 600 users were onboarded, with 31% of orders being attributed to the loyalty programme after the fact. Co-founder Bin Chen and Andrew Chau also reported that the app resulted ina 67% increase in monthly visits of loyalty programme users and a 65% increase in spend.

Solana Foundations head of commerce business development Josh Fried tells Cointelegraph that the development of the loyalty programme provides a tangible use case for commercial clients looking for Web3, blockchain based tools to build their businesses and customer base.

“The Boba Guys pilot initial data shows that we’re actually improving their business results. A real retailer with 25 locations got on stage and said this Solana-based programme was bringing a return of investment of 800%,” Fried explained.

For every $1 that Boba Guys puts into the programme, the company is seeing $9 revenue in return. It’s a “legitimate business uplift”, Fried said, with the company planning to roll out the app across its stores in San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles.

The recent integration of Solana Pay into e-commerce platform Shopify is another indicator that Web3 based payment tools are becoming a viable alternative for conventional businesses. Fried unpacked how merchants are beginning to provide meaningful feedback on the adoption of its payments rail.

The MadLab NFT project noted a material uplift in sales from crypto native users that were holding crypto. “These users were holding USDC on Solana, waiting for the utility to use it to pay for something rather than just trading. The community used the integration to start buying merch," Fried said.

Another anecdote came from an entrepreneur based in Denver, Colorado, who has turned to Shopify’s Solana Pay integration to drive sales of bespoke fragrances. The attraction to the payment solution is the ability of Web3 to help drive e-commerce sales:

“When you're buying e-commerce, you can't smell something. Right. He's like, ‘for a storyteller, I need metaverses, I need Web3 technology that's going to bring new layers to the sale’.”

While optimistic, Fried concedes that there is a significant amount of work to drive adoption of Solana Pay and Web3 tools built on Solana. Having worked at Google for a decade on the development of Google Pay, he highlights that event the tech behemoth took years to see adoption of its increasingly ubiquitous payment service.

“What helps is when somebody like Visa comes along and says, hey, we're going to start doing interbank settlement on the Solana blockchain,” Fried explains. Major payment processors and payment rails will be crucial in driving Web3-based payments adoption.

Magazine: Slumdog billionaire 2: ‘Top 10… brings no satisfaction’ says Polygon’s Sandeep Nailwal

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

Google Cloud teams up with Web3 startup to make DeFi mainstream

Google Cloud told Cointelegraph that the partnership was done in light of increasing interest from clients exploring blockchain workloads on Google Cloud.

Google Cloud has joined forces with a Web3 startup to develop user-centric developer tools for decentralized finance (DeFi) to lower the barrier of entry into the decentralized world.

The DeFi infrastructure provider Orderly Network has teamed up with Google Cloud to develop off-chain components of DeFi infrastructure focused on tackling self-custody and transparency challenges. Orderly will be a DeFi infrastructure provider, available on Google Cloud Marketplace.

Google Cloud told Cointelegraph that the partnership was struck in light of increasing interest from clients exploring blockchain workloads on Google Cloud.

Rishi Ramchandani, Head of APAC Web3 GTM, Google Cloud Asia Pacific told Cointelegraph that the surge in demand highlights the necessity for a tailored Web3 product suite. He added:

“Working with Orderly Network to build robust infrastructure will help address the gaps in DeFi adoption and growth, and ensure scalability in the continuously evolving space through the development of secure and user-centric enterprise developer tools.”

With blockchain technology being at the centre of the fintech revolution, many in the financial industry are exploring decentralized technologies, including JP Morgan which has been actively testing various blockchain-based solutions including DeFi ones. The traditional banking systems started showing interest in blockchain tech quite early with one report from 2021 suggesting that 55% of the top-100 banks have some exposure to the decentralized tech.

Orderly hopes to distribute the DeFi load into on-chain and off-chain components to ensure a balance between speed with sufficient decentralization. The firm claimed this distribution would streamline operations without compromising the inherent advantages of a decentralized system. These off-chain components will ensure that crucial interactions are carried out on-chain while interactions that can be efficiently handled off-chain are processed away from the main blockchain.

Cointelegraph got in touch with Arjun Arora, COO at Orderly Network, to understand how their collaboration with Google will help in making DeFi mainstream. Arora told Cointelgraph that to achieve mainstream adoption, blockchain technology must outperform current solutions and Orderly is building a trading Lego for seamless dApp integration across blockchains with a focus on merging the best of decentralzied exchanges (DEXs) and centralized exchanges (CEXs.)

“Our collaboration with Google ensures our matching engine competes with centralized systems seen in traditional finance, but the rest of our infrastructure and liquidity network retains all the benefits of self-custody and transparency seen in decentralized finance.”

DeFi's biggest challenge comes from the entry barrier and the security issues that have plagued the ecosystem for a long. With the likes of Google Cloud entering the DeFi infrastructure market with Orderly as its key partner, the collaboration aims to build a secure environment and tools to resolve these issues.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

FedNow Service has no relation with CBDCs, Federal Reserve clarifies

The Federal Reserve certified the FedNow Service as “ready,” after it onboarded 41 financial institutions, 15 service providers and the U.S. Department of the Treasury to test out the system, before its launch by the end of July 2023.

The Federal Reserve of the United States clarified that its new service for instant payments between organizations — FedNow Service — has no relation with central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).

The Federal Reserve certified the FedNow Service as “ready,” after it onboarded 41 financial institutions, 15 service providers and the U.S. Department of the Treasury to test out the system, before its launch by the end of July 2023. However, the central bank had to clarify that the promise of instant fiat payments and real-time gross settlement (RTGS) is not powered by a CBDC.

In a tweet, Federal Reserve stated that FedNow Service is similar to other payment services such as Fedwire and FedACH, which work within the boundaries of the fiat ecosystem. It said:

“The FedNow Service is not related to a digital currency. The FedNow Service is a payment service the Federal Reserve is making available for banks and credit unions to transfer funds for their customers.”

The Federal Reserve further confirmed that it has not yet decided on issuing the highly anticipated CBDC and “would only proceed with the issuance of a CBDC with an authorizing law.”

The table above highlights the initial list of participants. However, the Federal Reserve plans to onboard all 10,000 U.S. financial institutions in time to come.

Related: Major US banks get passing grade in ‘severe recession’ stress test

On May 11, the Federal Reserve announced the integration of Metal Blockchain into the FedNow Service.

Metal Blockchain’s listing in the FedNow Service Provider Showcase. Source: FedNow

Metal Blockchain is a crypto network developed by Metallicus, based on a fork of Avalanche's code. According to its documents, the network features a subnet called “X-Chain” that allows developers to enact rules for transferring assets. For example, a token can be issued with the rule that it “can only be sent to US citizens” or “can’t be traded until tomorrow.”

Magazine: Tokenizing music royalties as NFTs could help the next Taylor Swift

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

DeFi exec breaks down what it takes to attract institutions to staking

In an exclusive interview with Cointelegraph, Alluvial chief product officer Matt Leisinger discusses the impact of liquid staking on the crypto ecosystem.

In episode 18 of Cointelegraph’s Hashing It Out podcast, Elisha Owusu Akyaw sits down with Matt Leisinger, chief product officer at Alluvial — a software development company supporting the implementation of the Liquid Collective protocol — to explore the world of crypto staking and its potential to attract institutional investors. Leisinger explains the Liquid Collective and shares his thoughts on the future of Ether (ETH) staking after the Shanghai upgrade. 

Matt Leisinger started his carrier in the traditional finance sector and shifted to trading cryptocurrencies in 2016. Leisinger invested in the Ethereum ecosystem and contributed to projects providing liquid staking services. Leisinger explains liquid staking as allowing users to stake assets on the blockchain and mint a receipt token that represents the staked assets, which maintains liquidity while users earn rewards and secure the network.

As institutional investment in cryptocurrency skyrockets, some are looking at ways to add staking to their portfolio. According to Leisinger, most of these firms would naturally choose liquid staking, but hurdles around Know Your Customer and Anti-Money Laundering requirements, transparency, tokenholder privileges, and counter-party risks must first be dealt with. Leisinger explains that Alluvial provides a solution for enterprises by dealing with these hurdles that slow down adoption.

On regulations, Leisinger says that firms like Alluvial “really want” regulatory clarity. According to him, there are two types of staking: direct staking and actively managed staking. Both have different implications from a regulatory perspective around token ownership, security and transparency. Leisinger believes liquid staking is better positioned to withstand regulatory pressure due to its transparency.

Related: Why anonymity is key to self-autonomy — And how crypto helps freedom movements win

What’s more, Leisinger admits that a lack of regulatory clarity has had a chilling effect on institutional staking. Nevertheless, the Alluvial exec is optimistic that new milestones like the Ethereum Shapella upgrade will derisk participation in staking and attract interest.

Listen to the latest episode of Hashing It Out with Leisinger on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts or TuneIn. You can also explore Cointelegraph’s full roster of informative podcasts on the Cointelegraph Podcasts page.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

Bitcoin’s big month: Did US institutions prevail over Asian retail traders?

There may be no single reason for BTC’s 39% January price gain, but some suspect institutional investors. Can their impact be quantified, though?

Bitcoin experienced the second-strongest January in its history — and the best since 2013 — rising nearly 40% amid wide reports that institutional investors were back on board.

Zhong Yang Chan, head of research at CoinGecko, told Cointelegraph that there were “net institutional inflows into digital asset funds in January 2023, particularly in the last two weeks, with Bitcoin the largest beneficiary.”

Meanwhile, a Jan. 30 CoinShares blog noted that the total assets under management in digital asset investment products — a good gauge of institutional participation — had risen to $28 billion, led by Bitcoin (BTC), which was up 43% from November 2022’s low point in the current cycle.

The reasons for this bullishness varied depending on whom one asked, ranging from macro factors like a pause in inflation growth to more technical reasons like a squeeze on BTC short sellers. Elsewhere, a research report from Matrixport noted that institutional investors are “not giving up on crypto,” further suggesting that as much as 85% of Bitcoin buying in January was the result of U.S. institutional players. The cryptocurrency services provider added that many investors had used the U.S. Jan. 12 Consumer Price Index print “as a confirmation signal to buy Bitcoin and other crypto assets.”

Almost all gains were during U.S. market hours

But how did Matrixport come to attribute up to 85% of monthly BTC growth to U.S. institutional investors? As the Singapore-based firm explained in its recent market overview: “The most astonishing statistic is that almost all of the +40% year-to-date rally in Bitcoin has happened during US market hours. [...] That’s 85% of the Bitcoin move.” Matrixport continued:

“We have always worked with the assumption that Asia is driven by retail investors, and the US is driven by institutional investors.”

So, if Bitcoin’s market price rises during U.S. market trading hours but falls during Asian trading hours, as seemed to be happening in January, can one assume that U.S. institutional investors were buying Bitcoin while Asian retail traders were selling it — a sort of yin-and-yang action? Apparently so. During U.S. trading hours, “institutions, aka ‘stable hands,’” were taking advantage of the dips, added Matrixport.

Recent: State of play: Decentralized domain services reflect on industry progress

Is this really what drove BTC’s price upward in January? “In my personal opinion, the assumption that Asian retail and U.S. institutional investors are two main drivers of net Bitcoin flows is valid,” Keone Hon, co-founder and CEO at Monad Labs — which developed the Monad blockchain — told Cointelegraph. There are other market participants, of course; but when looking at flows, “irregular ones” have the largest impact, continued Hon:

“In the current market, institutional players represent a potentially new — or renewed — source of demand similar to early 2021. Meanwhile, on the retail side, Asia-centric exchanges like Binance, Bybit, Okex and Huobi represent a majority of spot volume and nearly all of the derivatives volume.”

Others, though, aren’t so sure. “There is no way to confirm that U.S. markets are driven by institutional investors and Asian markets are driven by retail players since we don’t have data related to the identity of traders,” Jacob Joseph, research analyst at CryptoCompare, told Cointelegraph.

Granted, there is a “sentiment” or belief that large retail interest exists in Asia, “especially in Korea, as KRW represents the fourth-largest trading pair after USDT, BUSD and USD,” continued Joseph, but it can’t really be quantified.

Still, he acknowledged that the Matrixport report was interesting, adding, “Our data shows that more than two-thirds of the BTC returns in January can be attributed to the U.S. market hours, and our historical hourly data also shows that an above-average volume is traded during these hours.”

Justin d’Anethan, institutional sales director at the Amber Group — a Singapore-based digital asset firm — told Cointelegraph, “I don’t really have metrics to say whether 85% is on point or not.” He was inclined to see the January rally as broad and macro-driven, especially with inflation heading lower and expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve won’t keep raising rates. He added:

“You can see equities, gold, real estate, and, yes, crypto gaining. That’s probably driven by large institutions and smaller investors alike, especially when FOMO kicks in.”

D’Anethan also looked at Coinbase’s recent premium index, “which is in the green but not massively. That’s typically a good metric to see if bigger American entities are on a shopping spree. Right now, it looks muted, positive, but probably just reallocating cash that was sitting on the sidelines.”

Jacob said that a better way to gauge U.S. institutional activity is to look at exchanges “that cater their services solely to them.” Along these lines, “CME Group, the largest institutional exchange in crypto, saw its monthly volume rise 59% in January,” while LMAX Digital, another institutional-focused exchange, “also saw its trading volumes rise 84.1%, higher than the average increase in trading volume on other exchanges.”

Then, too, who’s to say Asian retail traders aren’t operating during U.S. market hours? Chan, for instance, acknowledged that while the markets “do tend to move more during U.S. hours,” CoinGecko believes that this is “more a reflection of the outsized influence that U.S. monetary policy currently has on the crypto market and broader financial markets. Traders are most active when they believe markets are volatile, and in the current environment, Asian traders may have also gravitated toward ‘Fed watching’ to catch potential market movements.”

Chris Kuiper, director of research at Fidelity Digital Assets, told Cointelegraph that there isn’t a single event or catalyst that one can point to, to explain Bitcoin’s recent price movement. But to him, “It’s not surprising given the conditions that have been forming — namely, the increasing amount of illiquid coins, coins that haven’t moved in over a year — and the continued outflow of coins from exchanges.” Both factors make for a lower supply of BTC “and create conditions ripe for higher moves.”

Kuiper also cited the futures and derivatives market as a factor in BTC’s climb, “with a large amount of shorts getting liquidated over the past few weeks.” D’Anethan, too, mentioned “short-sellers getting squeezed” as a possible driver. “In itself, it’s not a cause for [prices] going up, but when things do rise, it accelerates it.”

Looking ahead

Be that as it may, if one agrees that January held some promise for Bitcoin on the institutional front, can one necessarily assume that it will persist through 2023?

“As the market gains clarity on which players avoided contagion, we’ll see an uptick in new entrants that were sidelined during the back half of last year, particularly as innovative custody agreements emerge to address the major pain points of the recent collapses,” David Wells, CEO of digital asset trading platform Enclave Markets, told Cointelegraph.

Recent: What crypto hodlers should keep in mind as tax season approaches

More needs to be done to maintain institutional momentum, the executive stated. “To really attract institutional flow, crypto markets will need to build more sophisticated products that allow for proper hedging and risk management,” added Wells. He’s optimistic providers will rise to the challenge, however.

It appears that inflation may have peaked, and many expect the U.S. Fed and perhaps other central banks to slow the pace at which they tighten interest rates, said Kuiper. While that does not necessarily portend rising risk-asset prices, “institutions and other asset allocators in the longer-term may once again turn to Bitcoin if central banks ease aggressively as they have done in the past,” he concluded.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

What is institutional DeFi and how can banks benefit?

Institutional DeFi could be a new paradigm that banks can leverage for product innovation, new pricing models and operational efficiencies.

Financial services institutions and banks have increasingly engaged with Web3 since 2020. This is also true within institutional decentralized finance (DeFi), as several potential use cases have emerged that could trigger a new wave of innovation within these organizations. 

Institutional DeFi does not refer to growing institutional investments in DeFi protocols and decentralized applications (DApps) but rather to large institutions using DeFi protocols to tokenize real-world assets with regulatory compliance and institutional-level controls for consumer protection. A common question that comes up is: What benefits does DeFi offer on top of digital banking?

Not long ago, banking was a physical effort where transactions were paper-based and interactions took place through a network of banks. Digitization added efficiencies by automating services and reducing the burden on bank branches. Fintech-led innovation enabled seamless customer interactions with very few physical touchpoints.

The digitization of banks still meant that information was distributed, creating reconciliation overheads. While transactions were executed over digital networks, bookkeeping still had to be performed separately. DeFi would bring the execution of transactions and bookkeeping onto the same network. That’s the advantage that DeFi provides over plain vanilla digitization.

While banks understand the opportunities that lay ahead with institutional DeFi, there are several hurdles to overcome before benefits can be realized at scale. 

In 2019 alone, banks spent over $270 Billion per year to comply with regulatory obligations toward offering mainstream financial services. Banks and financial services firms must collaborate with regulators and will need to get several controls in place to tap into institutional DeFi.

Regulatory compliance for institutional DeFi

Banks go through high levels of rigor before offering their products and services to consumers. They are checked for viability through stress scenarios, but more importantly, are also checked for conduct issues. For instance, lending products are scrutinized for mis-selling to customers if the interest rates are very high.

In the DeFi world today, there are products that wouldn’t survive banks’ usual degree of due diligence. Several DeFi platforms offer three and four-digit annual percentage yields to their liquidity providers, which is unheard of in mainstream financial services.

The DeFi world also suffers from a lack of corporate governance. The tokenized world hands over governance to its tokenholders. While most DeFi ecosystems have high degrees of centralization through uneven token ownership, they still often lack sufficient corporate governance.

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The other key focus area for regulatory compliance is when products are launched on-chain. In today’s environment, a bond’s issuance goes through regulatory approvals depending on the bond’s structure. But if the bond issuance is done on DeFi, there is no regulatory framework to rely on or control the process.

Banks must work with each other and with regulators to drive product innovation and regulatory frameworks around native institutional DeFi products.

Legal framework for smart contracts

Smart contracts are a critical aspect of DeFi. They offer the ability to programmatically trigger and settle transactions. However, they are still a nascent technology, and the legal enforceability of a transaction triggered by a smart contract is unclear in many jurisdictions and situations.

There are pockets of guidelines from various regulatory and legal bodies across the world. For instance, the state of Nevada in the United States has made smart contracts legally enforceable, but there needs to be a broader legal framework that nation states sign up to so that financial services that rely on programmable money can have robust legal foundations.

Data privacy

DeFi applications have not only taken pride in but also have relied upon the transparency of on-chain transactions. The broader ecosystem has used this feature effectively in understanding market behaviors. For instance, whale activity is regularly tracked by applications to assess market sentiment.

Models like automated market making (AMM) have emerged within DeFi thanks to on-chain transparency. DeFi protocols are able to calculate asset prices based on real-time supply and demand data. Institutional DeFi looks to draw inspiration from these models.

Yet, conventional capital market participants rely on the privacy of transactions. Brokers have acted as proxies for institutions that look to place large market orders. While the market sees large transactions happening, it is not possible for them to spot the institution that is behind the transaction.

Institutional DeFi would need to find a good middle ground between the transparent DeFi world and traditional capital markets that are intermediated to create privacy. In the past, banks have tested DeFi using permissioned blockchains that allowed only certain participants to use the chain.

In recent times, however, institutional participants have been more open to try out permissionless blockchains like JPMorgan’s collaboration with Polygon. However, it remains to be seen how they will achieve the required level of privacy of transactions while providing the algorithms with on-chain information for AMM to happen effectively.

AML/KYC controls

Last but not least, banks and financial services firms rely on robust Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) controls. Some 10%-15% of the workforce in banks ensure that compliance and risk standards can meet regulatory rigor.

On the other side of the spectrum, a recent Chainalysis report highlighted that as of early 2022, nearly $10 billion worth of cryptocurrencies were held by illicit addresses. According to the report, nearly $8.6 billion worth of cryptocurrencies were laundered by cybercriminals in 2021.

Again, there is a middle ground that needs to be identified where institutional DeFi participants identify themselves through robust KYC processes. In order to use DeFi services offered by institutions, users must also adhere to any AML controls and on-chain analytics that are mandated by the institutions.

Other considerations

This is not an exhaustive list of capabilities that institutions must have in place to explore DeFi effectively. There are other aspects such as aligning standards across banks, jurisdictions and asset classes. Institutional DeFi can only work if many institutions come to the table in a planned fashion.

Self-custody wallets with very little friction should be in place. For institutional DeFi to go mainstream, user experiences must be seamless. Wallets like ZenGo already onboard users without the need to use private keys. This should be the norm for institutional DeFi to go mainstream.

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On-chain and off-chain interoperability must be in place as the onboarding of institutions to the global banking infrastructure could potentially take decades. Banks must also be open to dialogues when they use different chains and cryptographic technologies that need to talk to each other in order to achieve an integrated market infrastructure.

The next couple of decades is going to be fascinating as controlled, regulated and intermediated capital markets look to tap into the DeFi “wild west.” How banks and financial institutions work together and with regulators globally will decide whether institutional DeFi can be the utopian middle ground that brings together the best of both worlds.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

Elon Musk alleges SBF donated over $1B to Democrats: “Where did it go?”

SBF made the “highest ROI trade of all time” by donating $40 million to the right people for getting away with stealing over $10 billion, said Will Manidis, the CEO of ScienceIO.

The attempts of mainstream media to water down the frauds committed by FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) did not fare well in convincing the crypto community and entrepreneurs. Instead, the misinformation campaign collided with Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s drive to position Twitter as "the most accurate source of information."

The world is yet to overcome the shock after witnessing the legal leniency awarded to SBF for misappropriating users’ funds and shady investment practices via trading firms Alameda Research and FTX. Will Manidis, the CEO of ScienceIO, a healthcare data platform, pointed out that SBF made the “highest ROI trade of all time” by donating $40 million to the right people for getting away with stealing over $10 billion.

On the other hand, Musk alleged that SBF donated over $1 billion to Democratic candidates, which is way more than the publicly disclosed amount of $40 million. SBF previously admitted to making backdoor donations to the Democratic Party. Musk asked:

“His actual support of Dem elections is probably over $1B. The money went somewhere, so where did it go?”

The United States House Financial Services Committee chair Maxine Waters, a Democrat, and ranking member Patrick McHenry, a Republican, have requested SBF to appear in an investigative hearing scheduled for Dec. 13.

To this request, prominent entrepreneurs, including Polygon CEO Ryan Wyatt, informed Waters that “he’s (SBF) a criminal” after being shocked at the leniency shown by the people in power to the fugitive.

Related: FTX collapse drives curiosity around Sam Bankman-Fried, Google data shows

The crypto community openly criticizes paid narratives that try to show SBF in good light. The latest backlash is related to SBF’s interviews in New York Times DealBook Summit and Good Morning America interviews.

Speaking to the news outlets during the ‘apology tour,’ SBF portrayed himself as a victim and got applauded at the end. “Watching SBF’s interview is kind of like watching Casey Anthony’s documentary. They’re so mechanical, they’re so inauthentic in their delivery. If you feel any emotion, at all, it slows people down. The way it is expressed is a separate subjective matter,” said Twitter user and developer Naom.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

Crypto Twitter unhappy with SBF ‘puff piece’ pushed by mainstream media

While SBF refuses to interact with Crypto Twitter, the same community he once called home, he was featured in New York Times trying to explain the sequence of events that led to the fall of FTX.

When the world realized the fraud Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) committed to building his FTX empire, fellow entrepreneurs, investors and long-time believers unanimously acknowledged the damage caused to the credibility of the crypto ecosystem. On the other hand, mainstream media — that predominantly attacked crypto via negative speculations — has seemingly taken sides with SBF while paying no heed to the losses exceeding billions of dollars incurred by the general public.

While SBF refuses to interact with Crypto Twitter, the same community he once called home, he featured in a New York Times (NYT) article on Nov. 14, trying to explain the sequence of events that led to the fall of the crypto exchange FTX. Surprisingly, the article’s tone did not resonate with the community, as many suspected a bias given SBF’s strong ties with United States politics.

As rightfully pointed out by Bloomberg journalist Trung Phan, the “puff piece on SBF” fails to mention the various frauds and crimes committed by the entrepreneur. Instead, the NYT chose to report an angle no one expected.

Crypto entrepreneurs, including Polygon Studios CEO Ryan Wyatt, angel investor Balaji Srinivasan and billionaire Elon Musk, openly criticized NYT for trying to change the narrative. Pointing out the obvious, Wyatt explained to the NYT author how SBF committed significant financial crimes, adding:

“It’s just a disservice to all of those impacted, and it’s disheartening to see all of this just skimmed over like he made a simple mistake.”

Srinivasan accused the New York Times of covering up the crimes committed by Sam Bankman-Fried. “Nothing SBF says can be trusted. Nothing NYT says can be trusted either,” said Srinivasan while asking Crypto Twitter to mass block the media outlet for spreading disinformation.

The talk of the town, Elon Musk, cemented the above accusations by asking a simple question on his recently-purchased social media platform:

“Why the puff piece @nytimes?”

At a time when entrepreneurs are trying to remediate the destruction caused to the crypto ecosystem, the community keeps a close on mainstream media’s attempt to change the narrative. It is important to note that other mainstream media outlets, such as CNBC, The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, have accurately reported on the wrongdoings of SBF.

Related: FTX collapse could see crypto sector layoffs accelerate

In a recent Ask Me Anything (AMA) session conducted on Nov. 14, Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao asked investors to take responsibility for their investment decisions instead of purely blaming bad actors like FTX.

“As a user, you also have responsibility — you can’t just blame all of the responsibility to other people. When bad things happen, if you blame all of the responsibility, if it’s always to other people, you will never be successful,” CZ explained.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

Vitalik Buterin ‘kinda happy’ with ETF delays, backs maturity over attention

Sharing his opinion around crypto regulations, Buterin spoke against the regulations that have an impact on the inner workings of a crypto ecosystem.

The co-founder of Ethereum (ETH), Vitalik Buterin, believes that the crypto ecosystem needs to mature and be in tune with the regulatory policies that allow crypto projects to operate internally freely.

Sharing his opinion around crypto regulations, Buterin spoke against the regulations that have an impact on the inner workings of a crypto ecosystem.

Considering the current circumstances, he believed it was better to have regulations that allow inner independence to crypto projects, even if it hampers mainstream adoption. Buterin opined:

“I'm actually kinda happy a lot of the exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are getting delayed. The ecosystem needs time to mature before we get even more attention.”

The use of know-your-customer (KYC) on decentralized finance (DeFi) frontends was another concern pointed out by Buterin. However, he highlighted the need for KYC on crypto exchanges, which has seen wide-scale implementations. According to the entrepreneur:

“It (KYC on DeFi frontends) would annoy users but do nothing against hackers. Hackers write custom code to interact with contracts already.”

In this regard, Buterin made three recommendations, as shown below.

On an end note, Buterin recommended using zero-knowledge proofs to meet regulatory requirements while preserving users' privacy, stating that “I would love to see rules written in such a way that requirements can be satisfied by zero knowledge proofs as much as possible.”

Related: The Merge brings down Ethereum’s network power consumption by over 99.9%

Google recently added a search feature that allows users to view ETH wallet balances by searching their addresses.

Acknowledging the recent Ethereum Merge upgrade, Google embedded a countdown ticker dedicated to Ethereum’s transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus mechanism.

USDT aims to offer a lifeline to inflation-stricken nations: Tether CEO

MetaMask adopts custodial features for NFT-hungry institutional investors

The MetaMask Institutional wallet added Cobo NFT management to its growing list of custodial services for institutional investors.

Institutional investment is pouring into the crypto world, notably the nonfungible token (NFT) scene. In a reaction to the influx, MetaMask Institutional announced another addition to its custodial services offerings for institutional-level clients.

MetaMask’s partnership with NFT management and storage service Cobo aims to create a “one-stop platform” for large corporations dealing with digital assets.

Although MetaMask is a non-custodial wallet at its average user level, the institutional branch of the wallet has been adopting custodial partnerships in various countries around the world.

Tavia Wong, the director of marketing and business development for Cobo, told Cointelegraph that not only does custodianship provide asset protection, but for institutions specifically, custodianship becomes useful on an administrative level.

“Because of the high levels of users and different clearance levels, institutions require additional features to avoid internal failures and the consequences of negligence."

While wallets like MetaMask have been deemed not as “user friendly” in the past, this addition to custodial offerings prioritizes usability for big investors.

Related: Institutional crypto custody: How banks are housing digital assets

The new integration allows institutional clients to designate roles amongst the company alongside internal collaboration tools. According to Wong, this enables user limits on buying, trading and selling as permitted by the administrator.

“With multisig access, it ensures that no single entity will be able to control all assets, removing any single point of failure."

The debate between noncustodial and custodial wallets still rages on nonetheless.

With many in the space touting the slogan “not your keys; not your coins,” noncustodial wallets are often looked to for more security and financial autonomy.

However, as mainstream users continue to enter the space without a technical background, custodial wallets often offer a more user-friendly environment. Some users even refute the aforementioned slogan in favor of greater accessibility for easy adoption:

Traditional financial giants like Société Générale, one of the largest investment banks in Europe, recently opened up crypto asset management services to provide its clients with an easy on-ramp.

Nasdaq also announced on Sept. 20 that it will offer crypto custodial services.

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