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FTX’s $1.4B bid on Voyager Digital assets: A gambit or a way out for users?

FTX has bid $1.4 billion for Voyager Digital’s assets, looking to provide users a way out if they move to its platform, but there are risks.

In September, cryptocurrency exchange FTX US secured the winning bid for the assets of embattled crypto brokerage firm Voyager Digital with a bid of approximately $1.4 billion. The bid was made up of the fair market value of Voyager’s crypto holdings “at a to-be-determined date in the future.”

According to Voyager, at current market prices, the fair value of its holdings was estimated around $1.3 billion, and the deal included an “additional consideration,” estimated to be worth approximately $111 million.

Since then, new details on the case have emerged, with court filings showing that the cash paid for Voyager Digital itself was only $51 million. The $1.31 billion FTX offered for Voyager crypto holdings are set to be distributed to eligible credits on a pro-rata basis, according to the filings.

The $111 million included in the deal are, as a result, split between the $51 million being paid for Voyager’s assets, intellectual property and user base, and the $60 million that consists of an accumulated $50 account credit for each user who onboards with FEX and a $20 million earnout.

Voyager’s users search for answers

While news of FTX’s winning bid trickles in through court documents and other scarce sources, users of the bankrupt firm keep on searching for answers, organizing through social media to accumulate as much information as possible.

Initial math done by users taking Voyager’s balance sheet into account has suggested that users who move on to FTX can expect to get a haircut of over 30% on the assets they held. To some, seeing any type of return is better than seeing nothing after the platform went under.

Voyager Digital's balance sheet. Source: Reddit, Sedar.

FTX’s CEO Sam Bankman-Fried has said that its bids were “generally determined by fair market price,” with the company buying up assets to give them back to customers.

Voyager’s problems emerged after the firm extended a loan of $670 million to crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital, which defaulted in late June. FTX’s bid excluded the Three Arrows Capital loan.

As it stands, it seems users who will receive their assets back will have to flock to FTX’s trading platforms if the court approves the deal. The Voyager app would, as a result, reach its end while FTX’s user base would swell significantly.

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To users who may soon be moving to FTX, there are a few concerns that they need to be aware of if they choose to stay on the new platform.

FTX offers its users an earn program that allows them to earn interest on their cryptocurrency holdings, albeit with annual percentage yields (APYs) that are usually lower than those users were getting on other crypto lending platforms, including Voyager.

FDIC insurance snafu

Before Voyager Digital went under, regulators directed it to remove “false and misleading statements” that its users’ deposits were insured by the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as if they were regular savings accounts.

In a joint letter, Seth Rosebrock and Jason Gonzalez, assistant general counsel at the FDIC, suggested that Voyager’s representations “likely misled and were relied upon” by customers placing funds on the platform.

While FTX has been seen as a beacon of hope attempting to backstop contagion in the cryptocurrency industry after a run for liquidity led to the collapse of several firms, the FDIC also warned it to stop making “misleading” statements regarding the insurance status of users’ deposits.

FTX received a cease-and-desist letter from the FDIC to stop suggesting user funds on the platform were insured. The letter specified that Brett Harrison, the president of FTX US, said in a tweet that direct deposits from employers were stored in FDIC-insured accounts in users’ names.

While Harrison responded on social media by saying that he deleted the post and didn’t mean to indicate that cryptocurrencies stored in FTX are insured by the FDIC, his statements could have misled users flocking for safety.

Contagion risks

As users move to FTX either because they enjoy the platform, want to diversify from Binance or Coinbase or want the ability to earn interest on their tokens, the company grows.

It’s unclear whether FTX’s attempts to backstop contagion in the cryptocurrency space could be leaving the exchange itself vulnerable, although experts believe what it’s doing is risky.

Speaking to Cointelegraph, Richard Gardner, CEO at fintech firm Modulus, said it’s important to recognize the “FTX gambits” for what they are, as attempts to “buy up risky assets at rock bottom prices to expand a la Andrew Carnegie.”

Gardner added that Bankman-Fried is “attempting to consolidate the industry” by betting on high-risk endeavors. He concluded:

“This recession is in its earliest stages, and the smarter play is to let the Fed's monetary policy shifts play out and save capital. In the relatively near future, there will be companies, complete with better fundamentals and greater viability, in need of a bailout. Those companies will be the better investment. FTX is simply playing roulette at this point.”

Investors who may potentially be moved to FTX may also want to consider that the company is involved in American politics as its digital markets co-CEO Ryan Salame has campaigned with his girlfriend Michelle Bond, a New York Republican running for Congress.

Salame has reportedly spent millions on political donations in the 2022 election cycle by donating to cryptocurrency-focused super political action committees (PACs). Super PACs can raise unlimited amounts of money to support candidates but cannot donate to them directly.

Some of the funds Salame deployed, according to finance reports, appear to have been funneled into Bond’s race after a series of money transfers. Bond herself holds cryptocurrencies.

Alameda Research and FTX

Alameda Research is a crypto quantitative trading firm and market maker founded by FTX’s CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. The firm often seems to fly under the radar, but its trading volume and incredible profit of $1 billion in 2021 have made the task harder as time goes by.

Alameda Research’s influence has been seen by some as a potential conflict of interest, taking into account its relationship with FTX. Cory Klippsten, CEO of crypto startup Swan Bitcoin, has been quoted saying that FTX and Alameda have been “able to benefit from a regulatory gap that has allowed them to trade and profit from cryptocurrencies” without following the same rules traditional financial institutions do.

For its part, Sam Bankman-Fried has said Alameda is a “wholly separate entity” that gets no preferential treatment. As Bloomberg reported in September 2022, questions persist because Bankman-Fried and Alameda’s CEO Caroline Ellison have until recently shared an apartment with eight other colleagues.

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Ellison has addressed these concerns, saying they’re “arm’s length and don’t get any different treatment from other market makers.” Alameda was initially FTX’s largest trader, as in its early days, the exchange had limited access to liquidity. According to Bankman-Fried, it’s no longer the platform’s biggest market maker.

While the potential conflict of interest could mean regulators will soon target FTX once again, the company is reportedly actively in talks with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which reduces regulatory risk.

As users flock to FTX — or any other centralized entity — it’s important to always consider the pros and cons of keeping funds on that platform. As Bitcoin (BTC) advocate Andreas Antonopoulos famously said: not your keys, not your coins.

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Mainstream NFT adoption will be driven mostly by their utility

Hype may have been a factor in the rise of NFTs, but the actual utility will be the catalyst for the mainstream adoption of the technology.

Nonfungible tokens (NFTs) have seen a stratospheric surge in popularity accompanied by sky-high values, giving rise to legitimate and ongoing worries about a market bubble, as many projects lacked real-world application or utility.

NFT utility is an essential component because it adds value and functionality to the technology. One of the most well-known use cases for NFTs is the ownership of digital art pieces like CryptoPunks. Play-to-earn (P2E) gaming is another use case that had massive popularity in 2021.

NFTs can assist firms in various sectors with their operations since, at their core, they contain evidence of ownership and proof of provenance. In addition, collections have access to a strong branding strategy that works in conjunction with their public image due to granting commercial rights to NFT owners for their assets.

However, the market needs additional use cases for NFT technology to reach mainstream adoption as it adds value and usefulness to NFTs, helping them to stand out among the crowded digital asset projects.

For example, picture-for-proof (PFP) projects may have driven huge NFT growth in 2021, but a lot of it was based on speculation by investors trying to make a profit. In addition, market leaders like the Bored Ape Yacht Club have actual utility, with each ape granting the owner access to events and copyright licenses to monetize their NFTs. Many copycat projects lacked any utility, apart from mimicking popular projects and promising vague “future developments” for holders.

Furthermore, brands that want to use NFTs need a solid strategy that spans their business model and industry for particular use cases. Unfortunately, many have entered the NFT market without a proper plan or vision, rushing on the hype train or cash grabs. As a result, NFT hype has led to confusion among investors and consumers alike.

Users want utility

However, as the market has matured, it seems like it is shifting toward a focus on utility, with investors becoming savvier and expecting additional use cases for their NFTs.

Kameshwaran Elangovan, co-founder and chief operations officer at NFT launchpad GuardianLink, told Cointelegraph:

“People have also grown beyond just thinking about speculative profit. They have started to think about long-term investments. The growing knowledge and awareness about NFTs have, in a lot of beneficial ways, helped the market and the offerings shift towards NFTs that have utilities rather than the ones that just represent a gimmick.”

Ted Mui, CEO at Chibi Clash — a P2E blockchain game — told Cointelegraph, “The market is going to shift towards a focus on utility because people are becoming more careful with how and where to spend their money. That’s why they say a bear market is for building. People will need more than the promise of good art to convince them and increase their confidence in investing their hard-earned money.” He continued:

“That’s where the utility will come into play and also be the reason NFTs are adopted into wider society. As it stands, owning digital art is still relatively foreign to most people, and at most, it’s a cool concept. The utility will allow the mainstream to attach a more tangible value to owning an NFT — this will ultimately be the catalyst for a more wide stream adoption.”

What are the use cases?

When it comes to real-world utility, digital ticketing is a promising use case for NFTs. NFT tickets are essentially digital assets that save a user’s credentials to provide them entrance to an event. 

To make the experience of being a fan even more immersive, they can also provide ticket holders extra benefits, such as access to the backstage area, merchandise and other items. In addition, NFT tickets can potentially reward artists, event organizers and other stakeholders with recurring royalties, assisting in establishing a stronger link with fans.

When using NFT tickets, everyone can follow the transactions on a blockchain ledger, making it simpler to know when and where the ticket was purchased and sold. In addition, smart contracts can enable NFT tickets to hold a fixed price, preventing ticket scalpers from inflating prices on the secondary market. As a result, the NFT ticketing market is expected to be worth $68 billion by 2025 and presents a practical use case for NFT technology.

Organizers can put up a rule that will cause a royalty payment to be made if a ticket is transferred to a new owner. This will allow them to decide how royalties are distributed after secondary ticket sales.

Metaverse real estate has also gained traction as an NFT utility. On a metaverse platform, an area of digital land that users may own is called NFT virtual land. Because each NFT is one of a kind and it is simple to demonstrate digital ownership, they are well suited for use in representing land ownership. In addition, people can use NFT land for various purposes including working, socializing, gaming and promoting their businesses. The value of a plot is determined by factors such as its usefulness, rarity, the project it will host and market speculation. 

Users can acquire NFT land directly from a project via a land sale or on the secondary market through an NFT exchange like OpenSea. However, before making a purchase, users should completely understand the potential risks and benefits of the virtual property and the project that will be built on it. Benefits include being able to build on the virtual land and rest spaces to other users. One of the risks of investing in virtual land is an investor losing money if the land’s value decreases over time.

Putting more of a focus on utility will bring about several positive changes, one of which is the potential resolution to the problem of investors seeking quick liquidity and immediate returns. While cryptocurrencies and NFTs will always appeal to those seeking to get wealthy quickly, utility encourages ownership over short-term flips.

Sony Announces Web3 Content Strategy Utilizing Soneium

What remains in the NFT market now that the dust has settled?

From profile pictures to celebrity endorsements, NFT space has changed a lot since the market boom in 2021.

Over the last two years, nonfungible tokens (NFTs) have emerged as one of the most active and noticeable aspects of Web3.

The data stored on blockchains by NFTs may be connected with files that include various forms of media, such as photographs, videos and audio. In certain instances, it can even be related to physical items. The owner of an NFT will often have ownership rights over the data, material or item connected with the token, and these tokens are typically purchased and traded on specialized markets. The rise of NFTs was meteoric in 2021, but it hasn’t been very steady since then, and it seems to have fallen sharply in 2022

Why NFTs exploded in popularity in 2021

In 2021, two of the most active markets for NFTs were collectible art projects and the video game industry. NFTs have ushered in a new era of video gaming, which has resulted in the proliferation of new types of games, such as blockchain-based play-to-earn games that provide players with in-game benefits. Users now have the opportunity to own in-game assets for the first time and make a possible profit from such assets by trading them on NFT platforms like OpenSea.

Axie Infinity, a game that included both NFTs and its own native cryptocurrency, became the most popular crypto game overall. Axie’s NFT market reached a milestone of $1 billion in total trading volume. In addition, the game accounted for two-thirds of blockchain-game NFT transactions in 2021, according to a report covered by Cointelegraph in March this year.

The gaming industry can help to bring NFTs into the mainstream due to their massive popularity. Pavel Bains, executive producer of Mixmob — a card strategy racing game — told Cointelegraph:

“NFTs within crypto gaming are a massive tool, probably one of the top three driving forces in crypto mainstream adoption. Right now, the biggest roadblock we’re facing is that the games aren’t very fun to play. Some will say, ‘Oh, the onboarding experience is bad... Using a crypto wallet isn’t ideal. You need to abstract it away.’ I don’t believe that. Kids will go through pain to get what they want if it’s fun.”

Fear of missing out also seemed to play a major role, with the massive success of picture-for-proof collections like the Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) soaring from a mint price of $300 to up to $3.4 million for a rare golden ape.

No matter what it is, there are usually two types of adopters: those who see the potential in a trend and are willing to stick with it and those who join in because everyone else is doing it. NFTs are no different.

How NFTs have fared in 2022

NFT sales stayed fairly strong in the first half of 2022, with crypto users spending $2.7 billion on minting NFTs during that period. However, despite a strong start to the year, there have been some negatives within the NFT space.

Earlier this year, the floor prices for BAYC dropped below $100,000, only to recover, with the cheapest Bored Ape recently selling for 73 Ether (ETH) ($125,000) on OpenSea.

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This year also saw users losing their Bored Apes due to user error. “Fat finger” errors have led to Bored Apes worth hundreds of thousands being sold for far less. For example, Ape #835 sold for 115 Dai on March 28 this year, with Ape #6462 selling for 200 USD Coin (USDC) on May 15.

In September, daily NFT trading volume on OpenSea was down nearly 99% from its May 1 peak of $405.75 million, with a daily volume of $10.29 million at publishing time. When it comes to individual collections, BAYC currently has a daily trading volume of only $400,000, according to DappRadar. According to the decentralized application explorer, CryptoPunks has no trading volume as of 7:20 a.m. UTC Oct. 3.

Due to current market conditions, one can expect to see fluctuations in the value of NFT projects, according to experts. Yaroslav Shakula, CEO of Yard Hub — a framework for NFT, Web3 and blockchain entrepreneurial ideas — told Cointelegraph:

“NFTs have surely been affected by the bear market but, in many cases, less severely than classic crypto and altcoins. What will happen next depends on the global political and macroeconomic situation. All tech stocks and risky assets are now tanking against the U.S. dollar, so in a short- and mid-term period, one might expect fluctuations in NFT prices as well.”

Despite these low volumes, NFTs continue to enjoy significant visibility.

Many people may have noticed a dramatic increase in the amount of people’s profile pictures on Instagram and Twitter that include a monkey, bear or other NFT image.

In January this year, Twitter announced that users would be able to officially use NFTs as their profile pictures via Twitter Blue. The premium, subscription-based version of Twitter allows users to connect their wallets and post a hexagon-shaped profile picture once an NFT is connected. Meta quickly followed Twitter’s lead and implemented a similar feature for Instagram and Facebook.

Celebrities continue to be involved in the NFT space, with Snoop Dogg recently collaborating with Mobland, a mafia-themed metaverse, to create digital weed farm NFTs. The weed farms were developed as a part of NFT 3.0, the third generation of NFTs.

The future of NFTs 

Not only do some industry professionals feel that the NFT market will continue to exist, but they also anticipate that it will continue to expand and play an increasingly crucial role in the digital economy. According to a report covered by Cointelegraph, the NFT market could be worth $231 billion by 2030. This is due to continued adoption within the video game, music, art and digital collectible industries.

Shakula is bullish on NFTs for the long-term, telling Cointelegraph, “In the long-term, NFTs definitely look good — I’m sure they have a big future. This technology opens many new opportunities, even for classic businesses and common users. They can be used for tokenizing assets and providing them to employees as perks and benefits.”

Experts also believe that our lives will become more virtual in the coming years. It’s possible that in the near future, people will be able to carry out their daily activities within a virtual space, using virtual assets. Essentially, this will represent the creation of a metaverse in which everything is transformed into an NFT token. Although it is unknown how this will coexist with our physical life in the “real world,” the revolution is already well on its way to being realized.

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Some experts believe that NFTs will soon reach mainstream status. Jack Vinijtrongjit, CEO of AAG — a Web3 development firm — told Cointelegraph, “NFTs are evolving from just being a collectible and speculative tool to real world use cases, such as identity and customer relationship management. We can already see companies like Starbucks using it as a replacement for their membership card and universities issuing NFTs for a diploma. I believe we are about to see NFTs moving from niche to mainstream as the result.”

The reaction of the video game industry to the introduction of NFTs has been the subject of much conjecture. Although some businesses are currently delivering digital assets as a part of blockchain games like Ember Sword, the widespread adoption of this technology has not yet occurred in the gaming community, leading many specialists to wonder how or even whether they will take off in the mainstream gaming industry.

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Bitcoin Lightning Network capacity strikes 5,000 BTC

The growth in Bitcoin added to the layer-2 Lightning Network has electrified over the past year, hitting 4,000 Bitcoin less than four months ago.

Bear markets are for building out capacity on the layer-2 Lightning Network. Despite macroeconomic headwinds and sluggish price action, the Lightning Network, the layer-2 payments solution fo Bitcoin (BTC), continues to flourish.

The Bitcoin Lightning Network reached a milestone capacity of 5,000 BTC ($96 million). In effect, more and more Bitcoin is being introduced to Lightning Network payment channels worldwide, as Bitcoiners continue to support the growth of the network.

Bitcoin Lightning Network capacity. Source: Look into Bitcoin

The Lightning Network allows users to send Bitcoin (or satoshis, the smallest amount of a Bitcoin) to send or receive money faster and with lower fees. The more capacity on the network, the more liquidity is on hand. As a result, users can experience faster payment speeds and potentially larger transaction volumes. 

First created in 2018, the Lighting Network has come under fire recently. Bitcoin influencers such as Udi Wertheimer have discussed the network’s “failure,” claiming that no one uses the network. Nonetheless, the network hit 4,000 BTC capacity in June and over the past four years, it has become a reliable payment network and is popular in El Salvador, the Isle of Man and Gibraltar:

Nourou, of Bitcoin Senegal, explains why the LN is so important. He told Cointelegraph, "In Senegal, we have an economy of 50 FCFA. That is to say that the Senegalese of the working and proletarian class, who represent the majority of the population, buy, for their breakfast, 50 FCFA (0.07€) of milk, sugar, coffee, water, and many other basic products."

"Microtransactions are our economic reality. For Bitcoin to become the standard in the years to come, and in our economies, the lightning network would have to have enough capacity to support these microtransactions."

Nicolas Burtey, CEO at Galoy, was one of the first to celebrate the 5,000 Bitcoin achievement. Burtey told Cointelegraph that the adoption of Bitcoin in El Salvador was the tipping point for the Lightning Network. This is where all metrics really started to take off." He joked, "The bill should have actually been called the Lightning Law!"

Burtey continued, explaining that while the 5,000 BTC metric is important, “Payment velocity per channel is growing at an even faster rate. It's a more meaningful metric, but only node operators can see it, so it's not so prominent in the media.”

The Lightning Network, once a space for hobbyist Bitcoin enthusiasts, now appeals to large corporations. MicroStrategy is now hiring for a Bitcoin Lightning Software engineer. MicroStrategy is the largest holder of Bitcoin among publicly traded companies, with 130,000 BTC on its balance sheet

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Elsewhere, Strike, a Bitcoin Lightning company headed by Jack Mallers, raised $80 million to “revolutionize payments” for merchants. Mallers and Strike spearheaded El Salvador’s Bitcoin adoption plans in 2021.

For Nourou, who's hosting Dakar Bitcoin Days in December, the first major Bitcoin conference in Senegal, the 5,000 BTC milestone is monumental:  "An increase in BTCs blocked in the network and the number of channels opened in parallel is a further step towards the democratization of Bitcoin transactions in the world."

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Music NFTs a powerful tool to transform an audience into a community

Music artists have the opportunity to develop tighter relations with their fans through the use of NFTs.

As one of the oldest entertainment industries in existence, the music business has experienced many technological advances that enhanced widespread adoption. The digitalization of music meant that artists could reach any audience across the world, and digital distribution gifted people with unlimited access to music. 

With these advances in distribution came some drawbacks in music monetization. The way musicians make money in a digital format has reduced margins from media or video revenue. Artists have been pushed back to generating revenue from offline endeavors like concerts and selling merchandise as the online landscape has been filled with intermediaries that take a piece of the pie.

“Web3 and existing platforms help us build a new chapter of the music industry.” Takayuki Suzuki, CEO at MetaTokyo — Web3 entertainment Studio — told Cointelegraph, “It was hard to find good music for me, checking many record stores in Tokyo and sometimes overseas. Now it’s very accessible via streaming.”

A new paradigm of Web3 tools is giving creators the means to develop an existing audience and transform it into a community. Fan relations have become crucial and they have never been tighter with artists in Web3.

Marcus Feistl, chief operations officer of Limewire, a Music NFT marketplace that was originally a free software peer-to-peer file sharing music-based platform, told Cointelegraph:

“The music and creator industry is certainly on the verge of a step change, moving from a Web2 model focused on content consumption to a Web3 model focused on content ownership. Artists are just beginning to find their way to best utilize Web3 to interact with their audience.”

Among the many use cases for nonfungible tokens (NFTs), the most prevailing has been the ability to form communities around token holders. The rise of decentralized autonomous organizations experimented with coordinating these communities in a digitally native way. All these unlock potential opportunities for independent artists willing to innovate in the next iteration of the music space.

Disrupting the music industry once again

The music industry has always been willing to try new things. As Mattias Tengblad, CEO and co-founder of Corite — a blockchain-based crowdfunding music platform — told Cointelegraph, “When music videos came out in the 80s, it was entirely new and people weren’t sure what to make of it. Adoption of these things often starts slowly but eventually becomes mainstream.”

Web3 platforms are in their early stages. The majority of users are crypto savvy and have a basic technical understanding of how to interact on-chain. As the space develops, Web3 music platforms can become a key piece in the way labels and artists do business and market themselves.

The opportunities presented by this technology facilitate connections between like-minded individuals breaking any previous barriers to forming a community. “It was hard to maintain great relationships in the industry,” reflected Suzuki, “I’ve been constantly meeting and re-connecting with forward-thinking people.”

These innovations aren’t exclusive to incumbents of the music industry and young talent native to Web3 can open the gates for new expression and monetization. It is encouraging the relationship between artists, middlemen and fans to transition into a community.

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Music innovation empowers those artists testing new technologies with the opportunity to become the next established artists of the upcoming generation. This can potentially diminish the importance of record labels to an artist’s success. Many record companies are getting involved by moving some of their activity on-chain and releasing NFT collections.

“There will always be a need for record labels, but I think the ones that fail to adapt to the changing landscape are at risk of being left behind,” Tengblad said, adding:

“Once you have a loyal group of supporters, I think the technology opens the door for you to monetize your work directly, while also sharing in the benefits of your success with your supporters.”

Successful Music NFT drops show how Web3 can disrupt the fundraising model by allowing artists to go directly to fans for funding. Those artists that make an effort to engage with their community and build a direct relationship with their fanbase will benefit the most from Web3.

From audience to community

An audience is generally understood as a one-way relationship, while a community suggests a two-way communication between the artist and its fans. For a community to be productive, those involved should enrich the creative process by actively listening to each other’s needs and proposing solutions for the betterment of the community as a whole. 

As artists shift to a more community-driven approach, blockchain and NFTs allow artists to raise funds from their fans with no middlemen and offer unique benefits and opportunities back to the people who contribute to them. Prevailing platforms are still a crucial tool for community building and music distribution to complement a Web3 strategy.

“Affordable digital recording has led to an explosion of musicians on YouTube who reach out to their community for collaborations, instant feedback, live streams, etc,” commented Tengblad, “Social media and chat programs like Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Telegram, and Discord give people who are interested in what you are doing a chance to engage with more of your content, connect with you and with each other.”

If an artist posts a new video on Youtube, their community can contribute to the artist’s work by providing instant feedback and proposing new ideas that can help the artist grow and develop further.

Activities performed by the community tend to enjoy a bigger impact and immediately affect the growth of an artist. With the backing of a strong community, artists possess a solid foundation to build a career.

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The engagement process between the artist and their community has to become as simple as possible. Suzuki explained:

“Web3 will give more power to artists and creators so there would be a need for education. Intermediaries could be supporters or contributors in a community not intercepting information or money.”

This starts with clear communication and by making NFTs more accessible to everyone. Bringing NFTs and the model of content ownership closer to fans is what will ultimately drive artist communities, as it creates a much stronger and more exclusive connection between fans and creators.

“For creators, this means an easy-to-use self-onboarding process where they can create their first NFT project in just a few clicks,” concluded Fesitl, “For fans this means that you can either use a fully custodial service without the need of owning a wallet or directly connecting an external wallet, providing the full Web3 experience.”

Artists who are most prepared to succeed in today’s industry are the ones who are willing to use every tool available to build an interactive and engaged community around their work.

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How NFTs and the Metaverse can keep fashion luxurious

Luxury in the metaverse isn’t just exclusive to owning the biggest land plot or the best NFT avatar — it’s more than that.

It’s no secret that the fashion industry has started to explore the cryptoverse, with brands like Dolce & Gabbana, Gucci, Philipp Plein and Tiffany & Co. taking their own path down the metaverse runway. 

Decentraland’s Metaverse Fashion Week hinted at a new wave of fashion, while Philipp Plein brought the metaverse and nonfungible tokens (NFTs) right into his London shop. The innovative technology mixed with the ever-changing fashion world was an inevitable pair, but there is always room for more.

Even during its inception, the promise of the metaverse has convinced people to pay millions for land in the virtual worlds — so, why not fashion? The fashion industry is always looking for new ways to innovate and create new traditions.

While the metaverse removes the tangible aspect that captivates many in the fashion industry, it is a new way to experience wearing and using beautiful pieces digitally on a personal avatar. Lokesh Rao, CEO of Trace Network Labs, previously told Cointelegraph that “a digital avatar can wear any garment without any constraints of type, design, fabric and use.”

As many know, however, the fashion industry remains one of the most exclusive industries in the world. With Chanel’s bag quota or purchase criteria and the long waiting list to get a Hermès Birkin or Kelly, a lot of the influence in the fashion industry comes from exclusivity, price, outfits and, in many cases, who one knows.

And as many fashion enthusiasts understand, there is nothing like opening the box of a long-coveted piece and holding, wearing and loving it for the first time. The idea of luxury is a melange of both exclusivity and passion. Why should fashion in the metaverse be any different?

Keep and grow traditions 

While prominent brands value their traditions, they should also evolve as time goes on. However, appealing to a new user base while keeping the existing ones entertained is not easy. 

In a fight to keep customers and enthusiasts loyal to the brand, Indrė Viltrakytė, a fashion entrepreneur and the founder of Web3 fashion venture The Rebels, suggested they “co-create digital wearables with members of their community and sharing commercial rights/profits or royalties with them.”

In this case, Viltrakytė told Cointelegraph that digital collectibles could help showcase fashion enthusiasts’ interest in a brand. These would not only be available to influencers, or the lucky ones who are given PR packages for their large following and interest in a brand, but could be for everyone.

For example, Maison Margiela could offer a set amount of digital wearables when buying a pair of the Bianchetto Tabi Boot. The boots can be worn in the Metaverse and in real life for those diehard fans who do not necessarily have a following behind them.

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Tiffany & Co. has already done something similar with their CryptoPunk NFT collection NFTiff, a collection of CryptoPunk-inspired NFTs that are “exclusive to CryptoPunk holders.”

For 30 Ether (ETH), CryptoPunk holders can secure a physical version of their favorite and probably most expensive NFT to be worn as a status symbol. This is something that would not be exclusive to those with influence and can carry online into the new era of Tiffany’s little blue box, an iconic emblem of the brand.

Digital fashion items are nonfungible

NFTs, according to the Ethereum Foundation, are “tokens that we can use to represent ownership of unique items.” They are not able to be modified or deleted once minted, and “digital assets never deteriorate,” said Viltrakytė. 

Unfortunately, many assets in the fashion industry, such as the aforementioned Birkin, which has “outperformed the S&P 500 over 35 years,” according to Finty, can be stolen, destroyed or worn down over time without proper care. This is where digital assets rise above because, “like some ultra-exclusive, non-tangible experiences currently available, not everything expensive needs to be ‘touched’ to have value,” Viltrakytė noted.

Plus, outside of collectors and caretakers, it is almost impossible for an enthusiast to get their hands on an archive piece, especially if preservation could be a problem. Sometimes, brands will showcase their archive in cities like Paris or Milan for a limited time, but in many cases, it is a private affair owned by private people. However, one way that brands can utilize this exclusivity of a non-deteriorating asset is through NFTs and blockchain-based NFT museums.

Viltrakytė said, “If an NFT gives you direct access to Chanel archives or the creative director of Hermès, it signifies the special status you can have or even upgrade with time.” The NFT will never expire, and there will always be a way to create a luxurious and exclusive experience.

Another way, she suggested, is to create something like a fashion bond, where after some point, the NFT can be exchanged for a luxury item. “For example, if you are a Hermès client and would like to purchase a deed for your daughter to redeem it for a one-of-a-kind bag on her 18th birthday, you can do it seamlessly as an NFT,” she said, adding:

“Paper certificates burn; servers crash and lose data; but blockchain does not lie, and a nonfungible token like that would be 100x more liquid, verifiable and longer-lasting than any traditional document.”

Embrace e-commerce and the technology

As exciting as it is to go to the shop and try on, feel, walk around and experience the shop and its clothes, e-commerce is already on its way to becoming the main way to shop. The metaverse can help make it as luxurious and modern as traveling to Paris to buy a beloved Kelly. A new and creative approach is necessary because, as Viltrakytė said, “now, post-covid, 99.99% of brands are selling online, including Hermès.” Brands need to embrace what technology can do for their image and customers.

Viltrakytė believes that the industry is in the experimental phase of Web3 and virtual reality to see how they really affect the fashion industry, as “we don’t have solutions capable of making a digital garment ‘fit.’ When we have a ‘good enough’ depth sensors in our smartphones’ front camera and AR technology that can ‘fit’ any item perfectly on anyone, it will be the true start of the digital wearables era.”

According to Vogue Business, a Los Angeles modeling agency, Photogenics, has already experimented with this type of technology by creating “avatars via 3D scans of models’ faces, while their bodies were rendered from scratch.” The models and their avatars, personalized to the model’s preference of reality or creativity, are available for use in the metaverse as virtual models.

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Digital wearables can also shape who we are online. If one decides to move into the metaverse for various reasons, an identity there is as important as it is in real life. In fashion, people use details to express themselves, adding their own embroidery to pieces and customizing it to represent their personality. This concept will be just as important online as it is offline, as Viltrakytė suggested:

“The virtual presence can be an extension of one’s physical self and personality, or it can be something completely different from who a person is in real life. I think we’ll be seeing a mixture of those two concepts.” 

The simple fact is that the technology is not there yet. But as the fashion industry has proven time and time again, “our creativity shows how we can leverage all of this potential in the fashion industry.” 

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Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission CVM Subpoenas Mercado Bitcoin on Fixed Income Token Investments

Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission CVM Subpoenas Mercado Bitcoin on Fixed Income Token InvestmentsThe Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM) has sent a subpoena to Mercado Bitcoin, one of the biggest exchanges in the country, to inquire about the services the company lends regarding cryptocurrency-related fixed return investments. The company will have to disclose the details of these investments and if they plan to maintain them as available […]

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What Cardano’s Vasil hard fork means for the blockchain

Cardano’s Vasil hard fork seeks to enhance the platform’s transaction throughput speeds, DApp development capacity, security and general usability.

After several delays and some setbacks, Cardano’s long-awaited Vasil upgrade finally went live on Sept. 22. From the outside looking in, the hard fork is designed to help improve the ecosystem’s scalability and general transaction throughput capacity as well as advance Cardano’s decentralized applications (DApps) development capacity. 

To commemorate the event, an announcement was made by blockchain firm Input Output Hong Kong (IOHK) — which currently oversees the design, building and maintenance of the Cardano platform — just minutes after the development.

To obtain a more holistic overview of what the upgrade represents and its potential impact on Cardano (as well as the crypto ecosystem at large), Cointelegraph reached out to Shahaf Bar-Geffen, CEO of COTI, a protocol for creating decentralized payment networks and stablecoins. In his view:

“The Vasil Upgrade heralds the dawn of a new era for the Cardano ecosystem and the decentralized finance space at large. The upgrade aims to improve the network’s scalability and enhance Cardano’s smart contract capabilities.”

Bar-Geffen further noted that the hard fork will significantly improve the efficiency of Djed, an algorithmic stablecoin developed jointly by IOHK and the COTI Group, increasing the number of transactions carried out on the Djed platform and thus helping position Cardano as a prime contender for stablecoin transactions.

A closer look at what Vasil has to offer

Before looking at the functional and operational benefits afforded by the Vasil hard fork, it would be best to understand what exactly a hard fork is. In its most basic sense, a hard fork is a network upgrade set in motion when those governing a blockchain platform decide to add or fix certain features to the ecosystem. 

In other words, when a hard fork takes place, the network splits into two versions that run separately, where one version follows existing features and rules while the other continues as an upgraded version of the network. 

Expounding her view on the technical aspects of the upgrade, Charmyn Ho, head of crypto insights for cryptocurrency exchange Bybit, told Cointelegraph that at the application layer, Cardano’s Vasil hard fork aims to bolster the network’s current smart contracts to curate a better experience for both users and developers alike, adding:

“This will simultaneously lead to a more efficient building process with regard to applications on the chain. At the infrastructure level, the many upgrades that come with the Vasil hard fork will allow Cardano to increase its block size and TPS whilst maintaining its POS mechanism.”

Ho further highlighted that the Vasil hard fork is aimed not just at improving the scalability of the chain and optimizing its existing features but also at bolstering the network’s stability and connectivity. “This is a huge and prominent step forward for Cardano as the upgrade is expected to reduce the network's transaction costs while increasing transaction speeds,” she added. 

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Lastly, it is worth noting that Vasil is not Cardano’s first major network upgrade because a year or so ago, the project witnessed the launch of another hard fork called Alonzo, which was designed to allow users to devise DApps using smart contracts. The Alonzo upgrade, alongside many other developments, was Cardano’s way of providing users with an attractive alternative to Ethereum, another platform that allows for the seamless development of novel applications using smart contracts.

Why is Vasil so important?

Named after a prominent member of the Cardano community who passed away in 2021, Vasil St. Dabov, the upgrade will enhance the ecosystem’s transaction throughput, efficiency and block latency speeds. Furthermore, the hard fork will see the implementation of a technique called diffusion pipelining, which seeks to improve block propagation times while increasing the network’s transaction processing capabilities.

The Vasil hard fork will introduce three key Cardano Improvement Proposals (CIPs), namely CIP-31, CIP-32 and CIP-33. In this regard, CIP-31 will spur the introduction of a new reference input mechanism that will allow DApps to access transactional output data without having to recreate it as before, making the entire process extremely streamlined and time-saving. At the same time, CIP-32 is designed to enhance Cardano’s native decentralization levels by introducing an on-chain data storage feature for network participants.

CIP-33 will make transactions lighter by making changes to the system’s native programming script, allowing for faster processing as well as reduced fees. Lastly, another improvement called CIP-40 will be introduced as part of Vasil. It will introduce a new output transaction mechanism to help improve block transmission without full validation.

Other updates include an enhancement of Cardano’s native smart contract programming language Plutus, which will now be more functionally advanced than its previous iteration. Not only that, Vasil will also improve the platform’s security by making it easier to interface with Cardano’s UTXO model (which has been built to resemble that of Bitcoin) while keeping its transaction load off-chain.

Potential effects on ADA

While the first round of the hard fork started on Sept. 22, the remaining upgrades are set to take effect on Sept 27. To this point, the second phase of the hard fork will look to redefine Plutus’ cost model, which has a direct effect on the processing power and memory fees required to govern Cardano’s native smart contracts.

In addition to the Vasil upgrade, the Cardano team revealed that it has been working tirelessly on the development of its layer-2 scaling solution — the Hydra head protocol — which is capable of processing transactions from the Cardano blockchain while still making use of it as its core security and settlement layer.

To this point, a recent update by the Cardano team revealed it had successfully addressed a known issue with Hydra’s node framework. As things stand, the protocol does not have a fixed release date. However, the IOHK team has hinted that the offering could make its way into the market sometime in late 2022 or the first quarter of 2023.

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Vasil was originally slated to go live earlier this year but faced numerous setbacks. Even though the upgrade is live now, the ecosystem continues to reel in from the impact of these delays. For example, since the start of 2020, Cardano’s native cryptocurrency, ADA, has continued to witness a dip in its transaction volume. Not only that, but from a purely price-performance standpoint, the upgrade has not been able to do much in terms of spurring ADA’s value, with the currency trading down less than 1% on the week.

Despite ADA’s price action continuing to remain quite lackluster, the fact that the Cardano ecosystem has made such tremendous strides over the past year shows that the project seems to be primed for big things in the near to mid-term.

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Institutional crypto custody: How banks are housing digital assets

Large financial institutions are getting involved in digital assets by investing capital, time and effort into custody technology solutions.

Until 2020, most of the crypto market action was largely driven by retail enthusiasm. It was only around August 2020 that institutions started to participate meaningfully in this asset class. As the United States Federal Reserve unleashed trillions of dollars of liquidity into the market during the COVID-19 pandemic, retail and institutional investors jumped onto the cryptocurrency bandwagon.

While crypto loyalists claim large-scale institutional adoption over the last couple of years, the entire asset class is only around $1 trillion in size. That is quite small when compared to the gold market of $11 trillion and the bond market of over $100 trillion. There is still a long way to go for the institutional adoption of crypto and blockchain-based digital assets.

A quick look at Coinbase’s trading volumes below shows the rise of institutional capital in crypto. But, it is also clear that the institutional numbers are quite modest when compared to other asset classes.

Some institutions, particularly top-tier banks and fintech, have started building capabilities to offer digital asset products and services to their clients. This is because banks and fintech are starting to see crypto, nonfungible tokens (NFTs) and other digital assets as a systemically important asset class. Not offering these products and services to their clients would be leaving a pot of money on the table.

These clients that banks serve vary from hedge funds, asset managers, family offices, corporations, small and medium enterprises, to even retail customers. However, it is easier for banks to serve their institutional clients first, as they would have to go through lower regulatory hurdles than when serving a retail audience.

Financial institutions have focused on a few capabilities that have lower regulatory hurdles such as custody and data analytics within the crypto space. While this is largely true with banks, fintech have taken a more retail-friendly approach. For instance, Revolut offers crypto services to its customers.

As the first article in a series focusing on institutional involvement in digital assets, we will look into institutional custody solutions for digital assets.

What is digital asset custody?

Digital asset custody is the process of storing crypto, NFTs and other forms of digital assets safely and securely.

For the many things that Web3 and cryptocurrencies have got right, the user experience behind onboarding and self-custody is still lacking. A new user typically creates an account on an exchange like Coinbase or Binance and buys crypto there. These cryptocurrencies sitting in their exchange account are under the custody of the exchange.

However, if a user wants to take custody of their digital assets holdings, they would typically move them to a wallet like MetaMask or Phantom. This is called self-custody. This can be intimidating for users as it requires remembering a private key. To date, about four million Bitcoin (BTC) have been lost due to owners losing their private keys.

Self-custody may not be a solution for everyone. At the same time, institutions that provide custodial services to clients have had their dark days, too. For instance, Celsius, a centralized crypto lending platform, held custody of their client assets and have had trouble servicing its customers.

As markets hit peak crisis through the Terra episode, Celsius wasn’t able to return the crypto assets of their customers due to poor liquidity management practices. Therefore, institutions offering custodial services must have high-risk management standards to ensure their clients’ digital assets holdings are safe and liquid.

How do financial institutions approach digital asset custody?

Banks have been custodians of retail and institutional money for decades and have done a pretty good job. Particularly after the Great Depression, the self-custody of assets was considered too risky, and that led to the rise of banking institutions.

According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), reporting banks across the world held over $101 trillion in assets in 2022. The U.S. accounted for about 20% of that, at just over $20 trillion. This demonstrates that banks have historically been trusted with holding custody of both institutional and retail assets.

As a result, it is only natural that institutional and retail investors rely on banks to offer digital asset custody solutions. However, unlike custody of conventional money, digital assets require a new set of considerations from a bank.

What are banks’ custody considerations?

Banks looking to set up digital asset custody typically look at two broad approaches: building and buying capability.

Banks can choose to organically build custody capability. For instance, Nomura’s Komainu and Standard Chartered’s Zodia custody platforms are examples where major banks used their in-house technology to build digital asset custody solutions.

These banks can use these solutions for their own clients and offer custody platforms for other banks to use, too.

However, banks are not in the technology business. When a bank chooses to buy custody capability, it may just acquire a custody provider or the technology from an external vendor. Once they acquire the technology capability from a vendor, they can offer custody services to their clients.

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Other alternatives are investing in a digital asset custody provider for long-term strategic synergies and/or partnering with a custody provider. In summary, they will look to inorganically create custody capability through strategic investments and acquisitions.

Where a bank chooses to buy or inorganically bring in the digital asset custody capability from an external vendor, there are certain product considerations:

Regulatory approvals

Banks must seek regulatory clarity and ensure compliance before choosing a custody provider. The custody platform under consideration must demonstrate compliance with regional regulatory policies around crypto custody. 

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency in the U.S. and the Markets in Crypto-Assets in Europe drive custody regulations for their respective regions. As custody providers, banks will hold private keys on behalf of their clients. This adds additional operational risks and banks must demonstrate that suitable controls are in place to ensure safekeeping.

Blockchains and assets supported

When banks look at a potential custody platform, one of the key considerations would be the blockchains that the platform supports. Often these custody solutions support blue chip assets like BTC and Ether (ETH). 

However, with more chains growing in stature, user base and transaction volume locked, clients may demand custody support for chains like Solana, Avalanche and others. Also, it may not be enough for custody platforms to just support crypto anymore.

NFTs have started to make a mark, particularly within the art space. The most expensive NFT yet, The Merge, was sold for $91.8 million. As a result, private banking and wealth clients of banks may soon demand support for NFT custody too. This would be a key consideration for a bank looking to choose a custody platform.

Tech only vs. custody vendors

Another key criterion for a bank is to choose between custody platforms and custody service providers. With the former, banks would treat them just as a technology vendor. In this scenario, the banks would still be responsible for owning the operating model behind the custody service.

On the other hand, banks could also choose to partner with custody service providers, where they get the technology and the entire custody capability out of the box. Banks would just be white labelling the entire service.

Fireblocks and Copper are custody platforms that provide the technology capabilities, whereas, Coinbase and Gemini offer out-of-the-box “custody as a service” solutions.

Cybersecurity standards and audits

Cybersecurity is perhaps the biggest risk for a digital asset custody provider. As a result, custody vendors must show that they have been examined by auditors across key dimensions such as security, availability, processing integrity, confidentiality and privacy. 

There are two commonly used examinations that custody vendors go through. They are SOC1 and SOC2, where SOC stands for System and Organisational Controls. Gemini announced clearing both SOC1 and SOC2 examinations in January 2021.

While these are point-in-time examinations, periodic audits are essential to ensure cyber standards are kept up to date.

Wallet types

Custodians offer clients different wallet capability types. The choice of wallet types decides the level of security, recoverability, seamlessness and compatibility with various blockchains.

Hot wallets are connected to the internet and are a lot easier to use as they integrate with applications for decentralized finance (DeFi) and NFTs more seamlessly.

Cold wallets are mostly offline and are only connected to the internet through a controlled mechanism. Therefore cold wallets offer secure custody of digital assets. Due to the controls in place to make them secure, cold wallets are not the most seamless experience for buying and selling digital assets.

Multisignature (multisig) wallets are used to increase the security of transactions as they require multiple parties with individual private keys to sign a transaction. Although they make custody and transactions more secure, multisig wallets are not compatible with all chains. They can only support the custody of a limited number of digital assets.

Multi-party computation (MPC) wallets are an alternative to multisig wallets and offer the same level of security but better compatibility. With MPC, no single party holds the complete private key. Different parties involved in signing transactions hold two independent mathematically generated secret shares.

As a result, the security levels rely on multiple parties signing transactions while still being able to support different blockchains more seamlessly.

Custody platforms and service providers. Source: Blockdata

Segregation of client funds

Custody providers should be able to service clients who want their funds held separately from other clients. This functionality is critical for banks to consider when they are choosing their custody partners to serve their institutional clients.

Pricing 

Custody providers have different pricing models that they charge to their banking partners. The custody providers/platforms charge the banks a licensing fee, often based on the features that the banks want to roll out to their clients. Banks typically charge a percentage of assets under custody to their clients.

Pricing often depends on the nature of the service or product that the custody providers offer. For instance, if the custody provider is just providing the technology platform, pricing would be a licensing fee model. However, if a bank chooses to go for a complete “custody as a service” provider, they may incur an “assets under custody” commission. They would pass on this fee to their clients.

Integration with apps for staking

Most crypto users expect to use the crypto positions in their wallets to make passive income through DeFi solutions. As DeFi solutions scale, this is another application for custody platforms to support. Therefore, compatibility with multiple chains, assets and their decentralized applications (DApps) is a critical functionality.

Integration and Interfaces

Custody platforms must provide various interfaces like mobile, PC, Mac and browser compatibility. This is another key consideration for banks when they roll out these solutions to their institutional clients.

Integration with tax and Anti-Money Laundering solutions are critical features that custody platforms must offer. Banks would want to provide seamless tax calculation integration to their clients based on the digital assets transactions they have made and the tax regime that their institutional clients fall under.

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Custody platforms like Fireblocks offer integration with on-chain analytics solutions, Elliptic or Chainalysis, for example. This integration offers the intelligence to spot any money laundering activities that banks must be aware of.

Banks and digital assets: The future

In summary, digital assets will grow into a significant focus area for banks and financial institutions in the future. The convergence of conventional financial market participants and futuristic ones has just begun. 

The first set of capabilities that banks have been focused on are infrastructure, compliance and regulatory capabilities. This is evident from their investments and partnership focus areas within the digital assets space.

However, as regulatory frameworks become clearer, we should see more innovative digital asset sub-verticals being embraced by financial services.

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Ethereum post-Merge hard forks are here: Now what?

The Merge marks a turning point for the Ethereum network, but what are the consequences of switching to a new consensus mechanism?

On the first day after the Merge, the decentralized finance (DeFi) community is settling into the seemingly uneventful transition of the Ethereum network from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS). However, it has yet to be seen the benefits that hard forks will bring to PoW supporters.

So far, the most important contending networks in favor of the mining community, EthereumPoW and Ethereum Classic, have shown different outcomes post-Merge.

A stumbling start

The fledgling EthereumPoW started its debut with Twitter users reporting issues with accessing the network. The issues were confirmed to be the result of a hack to the network but was reportedly resolved.

Major cryptocurrency exchange OKX has already started providing on-chain data for the new network. Though the current transaction activity of the crypto asset seems stable, the PoW spin-off’s price value has been in constant decay since its launch, going from a price of $137 at its peak to $5.87 at publishing time, according to CoinMarketCap.

Moving forward, there is no clear infrastructure or roadmap plan for the ETHPoW network. The project’s “meme” white paper, displayed on its website, is 10 pages long, with five of them solely dedicated to the title of the project and the remaining five “intentionally left blank.” The prank document is also accompanied by a GitHub repository with merely 16 contributions since August this year, and no further information is provided on the section of EthereumPoW official documents.

ETC’s revival

The cryptocurrency Ethereum Classic (ETC) could see a turnaround in its struggle to lift off, as the community could shift to the six-year-old project.

Originally created in 2016, the existence of Ethereum Classic is the result of one of the biggest philosophical divisions in the Ethereum community. The fork originated as a solution to the hack of The DAO, a project executing on the Ethereum network.

The DAO was an early iteration of a decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) on the Ethereum network. To address the hack and compensate investors, the community agreed to essentially roll back the network’s history to before the hack happened with a hard fork. While the new fork inherited the name “Ethereum,” those who disagreed with the move continued to support the old fork, which became known as Ethereum Classic.

Today, Ethereum Classic works as an open-source blockchain that runs smart contracts with its own cryptocurrency.

The preference for ETC over other fork options goes beyond its market price, already submitted to various ups and downs, but rather a matter of practicality. Sebastian Nill, ETC miner and chief operations officer of mining consulting company AETERNAM, told Cointelegraph that, since it runs using a PoW consensus protocol, it is more attractive for the mining community, adding:

“The possibility of a hardfork has always been there. People are always going to prefer to be able to mine Ether rather than having to buy it.”

As the network is a fork of Ethereum, meaning everything the main network had can be replicated on its hard fork, that doesn’t imply that the possibility of building products and services on top of the ETC’s chain would be the main interest for the community. 

The cryptoasset could also absorb most of the energy consumption left by Ethereum to apply on their own proof-of-work, allowing the network to confirm transactions and maintain its security with an important amount of energy resources.

“Ethereum Classic is going to be just as effective as Ethereum was for miners. In the end, the community is going to pick ETC, not because of its rentability but for effectiveness for data processing,” Nill says.

The user perspective

The users that decide to hold Ethereum PoW or any subsequent token post-Merge could find it difficult to trade their new assets. The support for operations with the fork-resulting asset from major exchanges like Binance is a current relief for holders who still face the asset’s decay in value.

Moreover, another concern that could be in sight is the one coming from the regulation front. In a recent commentary given to Wall Street Journal reporters on Thursday, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Gary Gensler reportedly said that cryptocurrencies and intermediaries that allowed staking could be defined as a security.

The regulatory attention toward Ethereum resulting from a PoW to PoS transition could be a game changer that effectively fits the U.S. law. This is due to the possibility of staked assets to generate dividends and be seen as securities according to the Howey test.

On the other hand, while Ethereum’s upcoming PoS model is more energy efficient and environmentally friendly, the upgrade hasn’t cured the current headaches for DeFi protocols and its users, like network congestion and high transaction fees, known as gas fees. For instance, the first nonfungible token (NFT) to be minted post-Merge cost over $60,000 in gas fees.

The building of strong foundations over providing lower gas fees and major transaction speed is a temporary tradeoff that won’t affect the market, as Matt Weller, global head of research of City Index, told Cointelegraph:

“From a user perspective, you want something that is cheap, fast and reliable. Through the Merge and more scaling in future plans for the Ethereum Foundation, this could be a foreseeable opportunity. They have worked from a very safe place, assuring security at all cost over other tradeoffs.” 

No shortcuts

Ethereum’s choice to bet on a change for its consensus protocol has been defended as a necessary, non-negotiable step. 

Skylar Weaver, devcon and devconnect lead of the Ethereum Foundation, told Cointelegraph that the Merge is a testament to the network’s “no shortcuts” approach to its development:

“No, I don’t think it is a trade-off. I see PoS as a necessary step to achieve those user-focused perks, like transaction speed and lower gas fees. Other chains achieve lower gas fees and faster transaction speeds indeed by making tradeoffs: They sacrifice decentralization to have more scalability. They take shortcuts.” 

Moreover, the usage of rollups through layer-2 networks will still allow access to Ethereum’s benefits for mainstream users.

“Ethereum is scaling right now via L2s. Specifically rollups. Folks can use Rollups today to have transactions with a fraction of the gas cost, faster, while still inheriting the security and decentralization benefits of Ethereum. That's how we are scaling without taking shortcuts.” Weaver said.

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