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Navigating the Wormhole Airdrop: Defi’s Next Big Token Drop Explained

Navigating the Wormhole Airdrop: Defi’s Next Big Token Drop ExplainedWormhole, a platform fostering blockchain interoperability within decentralized finance (defi), has unveiled plans for an airdrop of its proprietary token, W. The initiative is part of the protocol’s broader aim toward progressive decentralization, rewarding dedicated users and developers within the Wormhole ecosystem. Wormhole to Airdrop W Token to Advance Defi Interoperability Wormhole, a facilitator of […]

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Wormhole and AMD Forge Alliance to Revolutionize Blockchain Interoperability 

Wormhole and AMD Forge Alliance to Revolutionize Blockchain Interoperability On Wednesday, the blockchain interoperability platform Wormhole revealed it is collaborating with the American multinational semiconductor company AMD (Advanced Micro Devices). Wormhole plans to utilize AMD’s Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology in order to bolster cross-chain communication and multi-chain scalability. AMD’s FPGA Tech to Power Wormhole’s Interoperability Ambitions Wormhole, an interoperability platform for blockchains, […]

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Wormhole raises $225M at $2.5B valuation

The protocol reached a total value locked of $3.8 billion at its peak.

Cross-chain protocol Wormhole has secured a $225 million investment at a valuation of $2.5 billion.

According to the Nov. 29 announcement, the investment round was led by Brevan Howard, Coinbase Ventures, Multicoin Capital, Jump Trading, ParaFi, Dialectic, Borderless Capital, and Arrington Capital. 

The Wormhole Foundation also announced the launch of Wormhole Labs, which the company says "is an independent technology company that specializes in building products, tools, and reference implementations that help grow cross-chain activity and development." Currently, its blockchain-to-blockchain communications technology is used to bridge assets, power oracle data feeds, and transfer non-fungible tokens.

Wormhole was launched in 2021 and has since facilitated over $35 billion in transactions. Developers claim that the protocol processes over 2 million cross-chain messages across more than 30 chains every day. 

In February 2022, Wormhole was hacked for more than $321 million from an unauthorized minting glitch on its Ethereum-Solana bridge. Shortly after the incident, venture capital firm Jump Crypto pledged to replenish more than $320 million in funds lost during the hack. 

In May investors of the former Terra Luna ecosystem filed a lawsuit against Jump Trading, the high-frequency trading firm which owns Jump Crypto, alleging the firm and its CEO, Kanav Kariya, manipulated the price of TerraUSD to gain roughly $1.3 billion in profits. The allegations have not yet been proven in court. 

Related: Jump Crypto replenishes funds from $320M Wormhole hack in largest-ever DeFi 'bailout'

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Evmos, Swing, Tashi, Wormhole team up to solve Cosmos liquidity problems

Tashi and Swing will integrate Wormhole bridged tokens for USDC, USDT, wETH, and others, potentially making Cosmos DeFi easier to use.

A group of decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols have teamed up to solve liquidity problems in the Cosmos ecosystem. The teams involved include cross-chain bridging protocol Wormhole, liquidity aggregator Swing, lending protocol Tashi, and Cosmos network Evmos. 

According to statements from two of the teams involved, Wormhole will register five new bridged tokens for use on Evmos: Tether (USDT), USD Coin (USDC), wrapped Ether (wETH), wrapped Bitcoin (wBTC) and Solana (SOL). A Wormhole governance vote on this part of the proposal began on September 19 and currently has near unanimous support.

Once the tokens are launched on Evmos, they will be implemented into Swing protocol, which will allow users to send them to Evmos from any network that Swing supports, including BNB Chain, Polygon, Fantom, and others.

Tashi will also implement Swing into its user interface, allowing users to bridge the coins and deposit them as collateral with a minimum of button clicks. Users will then be able to take out loans of either Cosmos-based or Ethereum-based coins using this collateral, swap the loaned coins for others, deposit them into liquidity pools, or perform other common DeFi actions.

Caption: Tashi user interface. Source: Tashi.

According to representatives from both Swing and Tashi, the integrations are ready to go live and are simply waiting for the Wormhole proposal to pass and be implemented. The proposal’s vote will come to an end on September 24, which implies that the new liquidity system should go live soon afterwards.

Related: DYdX to launch decentralized order book exchange on Cosmos: KBW 2023

In a conversation with Cointelegraph, Tashi co-founders Lindsay Ironside and Kristine Boulton claimed that the new system is needed to fix a “crisis” in liquidity within the Cosmos ecosystem. “We’ve got this chain that continues to deliver these amazing opportunities, but nobody’s using it because they can’t get liquidity there,” Boulton stated. But “[Wormhole], they’re on, I think it’s 29 different chains right now [...] so it is an opportunity to fix that crisis.”

Ironside stated that she felt a new system was needed after she first began using the Cosmos ecosystem. She had a bad user experience the first time she attempted to swap USDC for Cosmos (ATOM) and send it to Evmos. In order to obtain the ATOM, she needed to first bridge her USDC to Cosmos Hub. But once the USDC was on the network, she didn’t have the ATOM to pay the gas fee to make the swap.

According to Ironside, this experience caused her to realize that the team needed to focus on this problem. “Coming in as new users [...] and trying to figure out where the solutions to these problems were, [that] was a big deal,” she remarked.

In a separate conversation, Swing CEO Viveik Vivekananthan agreed that the new system will potentially fix these problems. If a user wants to swap USDC for a different coin on Evmos, Swing will convert a small portion of the coins sent into the Evmos native coin, which will then be spent on gas to make the swap. This will allow users to onboard into Evmos using any supported coin, Vivekananthan explained.

In the beginning, Swing will only be able to bridge tokens from mostly non-Cosmos networks into Evmos, he stated, but the team plans to expand its compatibility to allow bridges between different Cosmos networks in the future.

The Cosmos community has been making a concerted effort to attract users with new features in 2023. Cosmos-based chain Noble launched a native version of the USDC stablecoin on March 28, and Cosmos Hub implemented liquid staking on September 13. However, the ecosystem also faces a competitor in the form of the Optimism Superchain, which is attempting to build an interconnected web of blockchains with similar features to Cosmos.

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Wormhole integrates native USDC transfers for four blockchain networks

Wormhole integrated with Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol, allowing USDC to be sent between Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum and Optimism.

Wormhole has integrated Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol (CCTP), allowing USD Coin (USDC) to be transferred between Ethereum, Avalanche, Arbitrum and Optimism via Wormhole-based bridges, according to a Sept. 20 announcement.

The new feature is available to end-users via the Portal bridge, and developers can integrate it into their own apps using Wormhole Connect.

Portal USDC bridge. Source: Portal

The Wormhole team claimed that the new integration will reduce liquidity issues and user confusion. “On these new and emerging chains, multiple versions of these bridged USDC tokens can exist,” it stated, “which can lead to fragmented liquidity, poor pricing, and a confusing experience for users and developers alike.” CCTP will help fix this problem by “creating a natively cross-chain USDC that can be burned and minted across connected chains,” it stated.

When Circle first issued USDC, it was only available on Ethereum. If a user wanted to transfer USDC to another chain, they needed to use a bridge to lock up their native USDC on Ethereum and mint a derivative version on the other chain. However, multiple bridging protocols with various derivative versions of USDC could sometimes cause confusion among end-users.

In 2021, Circle launched its stablecoin on a second chain, Stellar. It continued to launch on additional chains afterward, bringing the number of compatible networks to 14 as of Sept. 20.

But for a user to transfer native USDC from one network to another, they still needed to deposit their coins to a Circle partner’s account and then withdraw them to another network using that account. Partially because of this complexity, many users continued to use bridged versions of the coin instead of its native version.

Related: Stablecoin depegging plagued USDC and DAI more than others: Analysts

On April 26, Circle launched CCTP, which is a set of smart contracts and an application programming interface (API) that can be used to burn USDC on one chain and have it be re-minted on another chain without the user needing to deposit to a Circle partner account.

At the time of its launch, CCTP only allowed transfers between Ethereum and Avalanche or vice-versa. Since then, it’s been expanded to support Optimism and Arbitrum networks as well. Circle plans to add additional networks in 2023, according to the protocol’s documents.

The Sept. 20 announcement states that CCTP has now been integrated into the Wormhole bridge interface, allowing Wormhole users to transfer native USDC between CCTP-supported chains for the first time. These networks currently include Ethereum, Optimism, Avalanche and Arbitrum.

Wormhole is not the only bridge that has implemented or intends to integrate with CCTP. Wanchan provides a similar feature, and according to Circle’s April 26 announcement, Celer, Hyperlane, LayerZero and LI.FI have also stated that they intend to implement it soon.

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

LiFi launches multi-bridge governance solution after Uniswap debate

The new bridge aggregator allows cross-chain DAOs to only accept votes confirmed by more than one bridge.

Multichain bridging protocol LiFi has launched a multi-message aggregator for decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) governance, according to an Aug. 17 announcement from LiFi research lead Arjun Chand. If implemented by decentralized exchanges, lending apps, and other Web3 protocols, the new aggregator should help prevent governance attacks that originate from cross-chain bridges, according to the aggregator’s documentation.

The announcement comes after a vigorous debate over bridge security on the Uniswap forums in late January and early February, concluding that no single bridge has all the security features necessary for secure governance.

Crypto exchange Uniswap is governed by a decentralized autonomous organization called UniswapDAO. In January, this DAO began discussing deploying a second copy of Uniswap to BNB Chain. This opened the question of how Uniswap would be governed on more than one chain since, previously, all votes were taken on the Ethereum network. On Jan. 24, the DAO voted to deploy a second copy of Uniswap to BNB Chain and to use bridging protocol Celer to send messages from BNB to Ethereum.

Although this proposal passed, controversy erupted almost immediately over the choice of Celer bridge as the means of sending messages. Some DAO participants feared that Celer was not secure enough to prevent cross-chain governance attacks. Instead, they recommended Wormhole, LayerZero, or DeBridge be used. Other participants defended Celer as the correct choice.

On Jan. 31, the DAO held a second vote on which bridge should be used for governance. Wormhole won the vote and was chosen as the official bridge for governance.

UniswapDAO proposal for cross-chain governance. Source: Uniswap.

Despite this win for Wormhole, the referendum was contentious. Only 62% of UNI tokens were used to cast “yes” votes. By contrast, many UniswapDAO proposals received nearly unanimous votes for or against.

In the debate leading up to the vote, many participants concluded that Uniswap should use multiple bridges instead of just one. This way, if one bridge became hacked, the other bridges would reject the malicious messages sent by it, and the attack would be prevented. However, no multi-bridge solution was available at the time. Hence, the proposal's supporters argued that Wormhole should be used until a multi-bridge solution could be created.

Related: Token hoarders defeat the purpose of most DAOs: Study

In the Aug. 18 announcement from LiFi, Chand said the team’s new bridge aggregator would provide “a future-proof solution for different cross-chain messaging needs,” preventing protocols in the future from needing to rely on a single bridge for governance messages.

According to the aggregator’s documents, protocols can use LiFi to require that votes be confirmed on two out of three bridges to be valid. For example, if one bridge says that a DAO token holder voted “yes,” but the two other bridges say that they voted “no,” the “yes” vote will be confirmed. The aggregator can also be configured to use three out of five bridges or any other ratio the DAO wants.

LiFi bridge aggregator design diagram. Source: LiFi.

LiFI isn’t the only team to create a multi-bridge aggregator for DAO governance. Gnosis released a similar protocol called “Hashi” in March.

In June, a UniswapDAO committee claimed that Hashi was “not yet production-ready,” had pending audits and did not have a bug bounty. Therefore, the committee concluded that it was unsuitable to handle DAO governance.

The LiFi aggregator has also not been audited. Chand claimed in his announcement that “soon, we'll expand its testing and submit it for an audit by Trail of Bits.”

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Blockchain developers launch $50M fund to increase Wormhole adoption

Wormhole is a cross-chain messaging protocol often used to transfer assets from one blockchain to another.

A $50 million fund has been launched to help startups that use the Wormhole cross-chain messaging protocol, according to a May 18 announcement. The new fund is being managed by venture capital fund Borderless Capital and is backed by over 20 other blockchain development teams and venture capital firms, including Circle, Polygon Ventures, Solana Foundation, JumpCrypto, and others.

The fund will help startups that are “innovating cutting-edge apps, infrastructure, or tools that span multiple ecosystems,” according to its application page on the Wormhole website, which also describes the fund as “anti-maxi” or promoting the idea that more than one blockchain is needed to solve users’ problems.

David Garcia, CEO & Managing Partner of Borderless Capital, stated that he thought the new fund would help to grow the Web3 economy and allow applications to attract new users:

“Our goal is to empower builders to transcend the limitations of individual ecosystems, paving the way for blockchain applications and protocols to realize their full potential."

Wormhole is a cross-chain messaging protocol. It allows different blockchain networks to communicate with each other and is often used to bridge assets from one network to another. For example, if a user wanted to transfer Ether (ETH) from the Ethereum network to the Solana network, they could do so using Wormhole. It is connected to over 20 different networks, the announcement said.

Other cross-chain messaging protocols include LayerZero, Celer, DeBridge, and many others.

Related: Uniswap debate between bridging protocols lays bare security concerns

Wormhole has expanded its network of partners in the past few months. In January, crypto exchange Uniswap chose it as the official bridging protocol for its cross-chain governance between Ethereum and BNB Network. And on April 26, Wormhole integrated with Circle’s Cross-Chain Transfer Protocol to allow for simpler transfers of US Dollar Coin from Ethereum to Avalanche.

However, Wormhole has also met with controversy over its security in the past. Its Solana bridge was hacked in February, 2022, leading to $321 million in losses. Developers later patched the faulty code that had led to the exploit and reimbursed all users.

Magazine: Should crypto projects ever negotiate with hackers? Probably

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Wormhole hacker moves another $46M of stolen funds

The Wormhole exploiter appears to be seeking arbitrage opportunities with Ethereum-pegged assets.

The ill-gotten crypto from one of the industry’s largest exploits is on the move again, with on-chain data showing another $46 million of stolen funds has just shifted from the hacker’s wallet.

The Wormhole attack was the third largest crypto hack in 2022 resulting from an exploit of Wormhole’s token bridge in February 2022. Around $321 million of Wrapped ETH (wETH) was stolen.

According to blockchain security firm PeckShield, the hacker’s associated wallet has become active once again, moving d $46 million worth of crypto assets.

This was made up of around 24,400 of Lido Finance-wrapped Ethereum staking token (wstETH), worth approximately $41.4 million and 3,000 Rocket Pool Ethereum staking token (rETH), worth about $5 million, which was moved to MakerDAO.

The hacker appears to be seeking yield or arbitrage opportunities on their stolen loot as the assets were exchanged for 16.6 million DAI, PeckShield reported.

The MakerDAO stablecoin was then used to buy 9,750 ETH priced at around $1,537 and 1,000 stETH. These were then wrapped back into 9,700 wstETH.

On Feb. 10, an on-chain sleuth observed that the hacker was “buying the dip.”

However, the price of Ethereum has since fallen below those levels over the past few hours. At the time of writing, ETH was trading down 2.6% on the day at $1,505 according to CoinGecko.

At the time of the transfers, stETH prices depegged from Ethereum and climbed as high as $1,570. They’re currently trading 2.4% higher than ETH at $1,541. Furthermore, wstETH also has depegged and rose to $1,676, 11.3% higher than the underlying asset.

Related: Crypto exploit losses in January see nearly 93% year-on-year decline

The latest funds movement comes only a few weeks after the hacker moved another $155 million worth of Ethereum to a decentralized exchange on Jan. 24.

95,630 ETH was sent to the OpenOcean DEX and then subsequently converted into ETH-pegged assets including Lido’s stETH and wstETH.

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets

Injective partners with Wormhole to bring 10 new blockchains to the platform

“Users will soon find Wormhole integrated into the backend of the Injective Bridge whereby transferring assets from distinct EVM chains or Solana can be done with the click of a button,” Injective Labs stated.

Decentralized finance (DeFi) protocol Injective (INJ) has partnered with Wormhole to integrate “10 new blockchains” to its network.

Injective is a Cosmos layer-2 decentralized exchange (DEX) that offers derivatives, token swaps and sports betting prediction markets. It is also focused on interoperability via cross-chain bridging, and currently supports digital assets from Ethereum, Polkadot and IBC-enabled chains such as Cosmos.

Injective Labs, the protocol’s developers, noted in a May 25 announcement that the partnership will enable users to transfer and trade assets across any chain that is integrated with Wormhole.

“The Wormhole integration will vastly enhance Injective’s capabilities with respect to interoperability. Users will soon find Wormhole integrated into the backend of the Injective Bridge whereby transferring assets from distinct EVM chains or Solana can be done with the click of a button,” Injective Labs stated.

Wormhole is a generic messaging protocol that interacts with different blockchains, providing services such as cross-chain application support and token bridges.

Not all of the “10 new blockchains” are  named specifically. Wormhole’s website also only lists nine chain integrations which include Solana, Terra, Ethereum, Avalanche, Oasis Binance Smart Chain, Polygon, Fantom and Aurora.

With Terra falling into a heap, and Ethereum already being supported, it is unclear what the other remaining chains out of the total of 10 are.

However the project has highlighted the ability of Injective to “serve as the primary gateway for cross-chain native assets from Solana and other prominent Layer 1 chains” to enter the ecosystem.

“The options for users can extend far beyond asset transfers as well. For instance, DApps on Injective could enable seamless cross-chain trading across the Cosmos and Solana ecosystems while also being able to offer yields on Solana (or any other Wormhole supported asset).”

“Builders utilizing chains such as Avalanche, Algorand or Polygon can access assets within the broader Cosmos ecosystem via Injective,” it added.

Related: Assuming Bitcoin plays nice, higher timeframe analysis points to $90 Solana (SOL) price

The announcement has done little to sway the value of Injective’s native token INJ so far, with the price dropping 2.6% in the past 24 hours to sit at $2.21 at the time of writing. The token is also down 91.1% since its all-time high of $24.89 in late April 2021, according to data from CoinGecko.

Crypto Analyst Issues Ethereum Alert, Says ETH Primed To Plunge Lower Against Bitcoin – Here Are His Targets