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Zoop teams up with Ready Player Me, raises $15 million 

Zoop, a digital celebrity collectibles trading platform, raised $15 million in grants and investments, and will partner with cross-game avatar company Ready Player Me, the company announced. 

The company did not say where the $15 million in new grants and investments came from. Stokely, a former CEO of OnlyFans, launched Zoop in May with fellow co-CEO RJ Phillips. Zoop promises to pay celebrities 70% of the revenue from sales generated on its platform.

The new Ready Player Me partnership will allow players to use Zoop’s celebrity avatars in supported apps and games across multiple metaverses. Game developers will also be rewarded for the time users spend on their games.

“This presents a significant opportunity for Zoop to reimagine how the world’s biggest celebrities are connecting with their fans and transcending the one-sided social media engagements of the past,” Zoop co-CEO Tim Stokely said in a statement. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Stephanie Murray

Former Uber employees back new startup raising $9 million to decentralize ridesharing

Decentralized Engineering Corporation (DEC), a software development company, has raised $9 million to decentralize ridesharing. 

Foundation Capital and Road Capital co-led DEC’s seed round. Other investors include 6th Man Ventures and Common Metal as well as prominent angel investors such as Uber’s former general manager for New York Josh Mohrer, founder of Flexport Ryan Petersen and former early Uber employee Ryan McKillen. 

DEC has developed Trip, a new protocol built on the Solana blockchain that can be used for multiple mobility-based applications. The first application to use the network will be Teleport, a decentralized ride-sharing application built by DEC. 

The Trip network is open source. Key components of ridesharing services such as dispatch, payments, background checks and dispute resolution will be accessible to all network participants. 

“You can have multiple rideshare operating companies and multiple clients connecting to that same network and working together in creating this marketplace,” said Paul Bohm, CEO and founder of DEC. “… As opposed to Uber, which is a singular monopoly that no one can compete [with], no one can build on, no one can innovate and change.” 

Bohm isn’t looking to onboard the Ubers of the world onto Trip. He’s looking to instead bring on the smaller players who want to take on Goliath. 

“Why would the drivers keep investing into Uber’s ecosystem?” Bohm said. “When they could actually all collaborate and build their own ecosystem where they have ownership over what they’re doing.” 

It’s table stakes to be at least as good as Uber

Bohm has years of experience working on peer-to-peer networks. He founded a food delivery company in Austria, which was later acquired by Delivery Hero, one of the largest food delivery companies in Europe.  

He then joined Dropbox as the eleventh employee helping to build out the company’s peer-to-peer protocol. He even helped make simulations for how many cars Uber would need to cover a city at former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick’s Jam Pad. 

On Teleport, individuals can access a marketplace for ride requests.

“It’s table stakes to be at least as good as Uber is right now,” Bohm said. “But what we are achieving and I think that’s relatively new to web3 is the user experience is extremely simple for users, they can use credit cards, or they can use crypto.” 

Bohm will pilot Teleport at the Solana Breakpoint conference in Lisbon and Art Basel in Miami this year. He decided to demo the app at conferences because of the high demand and how difficult it can be to catch a ride. 

“I worked on queueing algorithms in the past and auction algorithms and so it was very clear to me that you could actually do a lot better, especially when there’s really high demand and low supply,” Bohm said. “So, I wanted to show people this is real, it works right now.” 

The funding from this round will enable DEC to expand the service to other events, make additional partnerships and encourage open-source development through hackathon events. 

Bohm’s goal for next year is to launch in its first city with multiple partners. He also wants to achieve the decentralization milestone of having the protocol governed no longer by DEC but by multiple dispersed entities. 

DEC raised half of the funds before the market crash and the other half afterward, Bohm said.  The round was all equity, he added. 

“By turning ridesharing into a protocol, Teleport is building what we couldn’t build at Uber in 2010, and what Uber should be building today,” said McKillen, former product manager and software engineer at Uber, in the release. “Riders and drivers will migrate from centralized middlemen to an open economy with aligned economic incentives.” 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kari McMahon

SushiSwap’s new Head Chef describes himself as a ‘wartime CEO’

Decentralized exchange SushiSwap Head Chef Jared Grey is certainly aware that he’s got a tough grind ahead.

Grey, who took on the role three weeks ago — after a lengthy search and public hiring process — has joined a team marred by controversy and personal disputes. The role has been occupied by three individuals in the past, one who stole $16 million from the project’s treasury, one who was ousted by the team, and one who erupted on Twitter blaming everyone but himself. 

Amid these issues, SushiSwap has largely faded out of sight. While the exchange once nearly matched main competitor Uniswap’s volumes, last month it saw just 2.2% of the activity on Uniswap.

Yet Grey is optimistic that he can turn things around in the same way as a new CEO might revive a dying business.

“I would say that’s exactly what I’m focused on doing — a kind of wartime CEO methodology right now. Like where can we cut? Where can we lean out?” he told The Block.

This mindset is going to come in handy as Grey faces three key battles. His first challenge is to heal the rifts and divisions among the SushiSwap team and its community. Then, he will need to turn the exchange’s fortunes around in time before it runs out of financial runway. Grey will need to do all of this under growing scrutiny from regulators who are eyeing the decentralized finance space. 

Wrangling with internal challenges

To start with, Grey will need to begin by creating unity within the team and its community, where there has historically been a lot of infighting; when former CTO Joseph Delong left, he said the project was “imperiled within and without.” That said, Grey claims that the team is already somewhat united and looking to move forward from its previous warring past.

“Everyone’s really excited about what we can do. No one on the team is negative or down on the project. Everyone’s really focused on their task and wants to see Sushi succeed and move to the next level and really thrive,” he said, hoping the exchange will, “Come out the other side of this bear market, fully positioned with a fresh product stack to capture back some of the marketshare that it has lost from its competitors and then, you know, innovate in some areas where it can.”

As for how he intends to provide leadership, Grey said that transparency will be key to his role — something that he hopes will lead to less drama and controversy. Beyond that, Grey wants to provide a clear vision and then hand out resources and autonomy to the team to deliver on that vision.

“If you’re going to be in a leadership role, you’re going to have to be open. You’re going to have to hold yourself to those accountability standards. And that’s how I plan to move forward,” he said.

Finding a path to sustainability

Grey said that SushiSwap’s future will ultimately depend on its sustainability model. His goal is to make the exchange become profitable, without relying on token emissions, and fix the project’s token economics so it draws in value rather than being extractive. 

“I think if we’re able to do that on all three fronts and we’re able to keep the team in alignment, which I’m confident that we can do, that we’ll have a good opportunity to make Sushi a success,” he said.

A chart showing Uniswap and SushiSwap trading volumes.

SushiSwap has lost a lot of market share against Uniswap over the last year. Image: The Block Research.

The exchange currently passes most of the fees to its liquidity providers, taking just a fraction — some 0.005% of trades — to build up its treasury. Grey said the goal isn’t to redirect all the fees to the treasury but instead find new ways to generate revenue. 

Grey said he’s working on a future product roadmap that will set out what the team will execute on in 2023. He intends to finish what he calls the “Sushi Revitalization Plan” in the next two months. 

But he only has so long to turn the project around. The SushiSwap treasury has around 10 months of runway, he said, and it’s mostly denominated in the project’s native SUSHI token — meaning it could get cut short. 

Adapting to regulatory pressure

On top of SushiSwap’s challenges over internal team management and product market fit, the project has to wrestle with growing regulatory concerns. 

The CFTC has gone after another DAO, Ooki DAO, claiming it to be an unincorporated association responsible for providing unlicensed trading services. If the agency gets its way, this will impact DAOs connected to projects that provide financial tools.

“I think that regulators are kind of in a phase where they’re vying for priority for regulation. And so they’re making moves to kind of establish their dominance,” Grey said, adding that this is playing out between the SEC and the CFTC in the courts.

SushiSwap is already making moves to protect itself. The DAO has just considered a vote in favor of a new structure that would require the team to create a Cayman Islands-based foundation, a Panamanian foundation and a Panamanian corporation. These legal entities will underpin various parts of the project, including its governance structure.

Grey said the structure was based on advice from Fenwick & West, the law firm that represented WhatsApp during its acquisition by Meta. He said the firm had done a few of these structures with other projects and that, with all of this in mind, the team had put it to the community, which voted unanimously in favor — suggesting perhaps there’s more unity there than it might seem.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Tim Copeland

Layer by Layer: Solana Moves to Improve Network Performance

Quick Take

  • In this weekly series, we dive into some of the most interesting data and developments across the Layer 1 blockchain landscape, from DeFi and bridges to network activity and funding
  • Solana is unique among L1 chains for its execution-focused architecture that relies on a close integration between validator software and hardware
  • A litany of performance and downtime issues in the past year has highlighted the challenges of optimizing the protocol through frequent mainnet upgrades
  • The latest release (v1.13.4) introduces a major change with the activation of the QUIC protocol and discontinuation of UDP, setting the stage for future stress tests of its new transaction processing capabilities

This research piece is available exclusively to
members of The Block Research.
You can continue reading
this Research content on The Block Research.

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Author: Kevin Peng

Analysis of Meta’s (f.k.a. Facebook) Q3’22 Earnings

Quick Take

  • October 26, 2022 Meta (f.k.a Facebook) reported Q3’22 earnings 
  • Shares closed at $130.90 / share and traded down (20.3%) to $104.30 / share in after-hours trading on Meta’s underperformance
  • Reported advertising Q3’22 quarterly revenue of $27.2bn, a (3.3%) and (3.7%) decline QoQ and YoY, respectively 
  • Reported Reality Labs Q3’22 quarterly revenue of $0.3bn, a (48.9%) and (36.9%) decline QoQ and YoY, respectively 
  • Reported Q3’22 quarterly operating income of $5.7bn, a (45.4%) and (31.9%) decline QoQ and YoY, respectively 
  • Reported Q3’22 quarterly net income of $4.4bn, a (52.2%) and (34.3%) decline QoQ and YoY, respectively
  • Meta’s quarterly diluted EPS fell to $1.64 / diluted share outstanding from $2.46 in Q2’22 and $3.22 in Q3’21

This research piece is available exclusively to
members of The Block Research.
You can continue reading
this Research content on The Block Research.

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Author: Greg Lim

Fantom to automatically detect smart contract bugs with Watchdog

Fantom has deployed an automated smart contract monitoring system called Watchdog, to strengthen the security of decentralized apps on its blockchain.

Developed in partnership with blockchain security firm Debaub, Watchdog will automatically look for buggy code in smart contracts that could become the root cause of security attacks, Fantom Foundation said in an announcement. It will be particularly focused on attacks plaguing decentralized finance (DeFi) apps.

“We’re incredibly excited to bring a new level of safety and security to the ecosystem with Watchdog,” said Michael Kong, chief executive officer at Fantom Foundation. “Developers require access to cost-effective, efficient, and trustworthy smart contract auditing tools. Watchdog delivers just that, and will set a new standard for security.”

Fantom Foundation said Watchdog will automatically scan for issues across smart contracts in the Fantom ecosystem. Should a vulnerability be detected, security firm Dedaub will notify the project, and assist them in analyzing the risks and support the project team in fixing the vulnerability in time.

The automatic analysis of smart contract logic may not necessarily guarantee protection against attacks as some complex bugs may go undetected. For this reason, Watchdog is aimed at supplementing expensive third-party audits, rather than fully replacing them. 

Even though the DeFi industry has experienced strong growth since 2020, it has seen a corresponding jump in security attacks. The first quarter of 2022 saw $1.3 billion worth of cryptocurrency stolen, 97% of which was stolen from DeFi apps, according to data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Vishal Chawla

Tinder co-founder’s Jam Fund backs Fun’s $3.9 million raise

Fun, a blockchain software development company, raised $3.9 million in a pre-seed round led by Tinder co-founder Justin Mateen’s Jam Fund. 

Other investors include Soma Ventures, Nomo Ventures and Great Oak Ventures, according to a company release. 

Fun is founded by 23-year-old Alex Fine and Mario Baxter, a former machine learning engineer at Meta. It will build applications and tools on top of the Odsy network. 

“We want to build wallet infrastructure, we want to enable users to have more seamless access to multi-chain wallets to multi-chain accounts and those accounts should not behave in the primitive way that multi-sigs behave where every transaction is subject to the same signing rules,” said Fine in an interview with The Block. 

What is the Odsy network?

The Odsy network is a decentralized access control layer that emerged from stealth in August. It features a primitive, which is a segment of code on the blockchain, known as dynamic decentralized wallets (DWallets).  

DWallets are blockchain agnostic and can sign certain transactions using universally accepted algorithms. The primitive aims to help move away from the more centralized process of holding a private key directly. 

“We’re focusing on a few different ideas,” Fine said. “A lot of them are around multi-chain interoperability and how wallets interact with that. We can’t really release our products on Odsy until Odsy is released. So, our plan is to work closely with them, such that at mainnet launch, once the validators are up and running, we’re very well positioned to take our products to market.” 

The Odsy network is still being developed. Omer Sadika, co-founder of the network, said in an interview that a testnet could go live in the next four to six months. 

Becoming the ConsenSys of the Odsy network

Fun aims to become the ConsenSys of the Odsy network, helping to build out applications that leverage the DWallet primitive.  

It’s the second company to receive backing on the network. The first is DWallet Labs, which raised $5 million in August to support organizations building on Odsy and provide professional services to the Odsy Foundation. 

“We’re trying to build protocols and solutions are that are more generic,” Sadika said. “Unlike Fun that are trying to build solutions that are specific and for a specific user. Our goal at DWallet Labs is to focus more on the infrastructure.”

Despite only announcing the round today, Fun closed the $3.9 million round in March, just before the bear market, Fine said. The proceeds are being used to hire development talent. 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Kari McMahon

Hong Kong plans to legalize retail crypto trading: Bloomberg

Hong Kong’s government plans to allow retail investors to trade crypto on locally licensed exchanges as part of a wider effort to position the city as a center for virtual asset service providers, according to Bloomberg.

A mandatory licensing regime for crypto trading platforms that is due to begin in March will allow retail trading, Bloomberg reported, citing unnamed sources. Details of the new regime are expected to be announced on Monday at an annual fintech conference in the city where senior government and regulatory officials are scheduled to speak.

Currently, only two crypto exchanges are licensed to operate in Hong Kong and they are limited to offering a narrow range of services to sophisticated investors only. The city’s regulator, the Securities and Futures Commission, is also looking at allowing licensed exchanges to offer a wider range of coins and tokens on their platforms, Bloomberg reported.

A SFC spokesperson declined to comment to Bloomberg.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Benjamin Robertson

Hacker uses $2,700 to drain $15.8 million from Team Finance

Team Finance has suffered a malicious exploit with the attacker draining $15.8 million worth of tokens from the protocol.

Team Finance is a DeFi platform that helps other projects lock their liquidity. This is done to reduce the risk of what’s known as rug pulling — where a project’s liquidity is withdrawn, causing the value of the token to crash. 

Today’s attacker targeted the liquidity tokens under Team Finance’s custody, according to PeckShield. The attack affected four projects, namely CAW (A Hunters Dream), Dejitaru Tsuka, Kondux, and Feg. CAW was the most impacted in the incident with the attacker removing $11.5 million worth of its liquidity tokens.

The DeFi liquidity locker confirmed the incident, stating that the attacker exploited its audited version 2 to version 3 migration function. PeckShield stated that the flaw in the migration function allowed the attacker to manipulate the price of liquidity tokens when transferring from v2 to v3. This price skewing allowed the attacker to earn a significant profit after the migration process was completed.

“We have temporarily paused all activity through team finance until we are certain this exploit has been remedied. All funds currently on Team Finance are not at further risk of this exploit,” Team Finance stated.

The attacker used 1.76 ether ($2,700) to launch the attack, PeckShield noted. The attacker’s wallet address still holds the proceeds from the exploit, including $6.43 million in the DAI stablecoin and 880 ETH ($1.36 million).

Team Finance also urged the exploiter to get in touch to arrange a bounty payment. Such arrangements are becoming commonplace in the DeFi space amid a spate of recent high-profile hacks and exploits.

Team Finance joins a number of DeFi protocols to suffer malicious exploits in October with the month shaping up to be a record-breaking one for crypto security incidents. Earlier in the month, Mango Markets suffered a $114 million exploit with the attacker claiming that it was simply a “highly profitable trading strategy.”

 

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Bitcoin miner Core Scientific to run out of cash ‘by the end of 2022 or sooner’

Texas-based bitcoin miner Core Scientific revealed it is in serious financial trouble.

Its cash resources will run out by the end of 2022 or sooner, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Oct. 26. It will not make payments due in late October and early November with respect to several of its equipment and other financings.

Core Scientific held 24 bitcoins (worth about $495,000 at today’s prices) and approximately $26.6 million in cash at the time of the filing, down from 1,051 bitcoins and approximately $29.5 million in cash just a few weeks ago on Sept. 30.

The company said it has been severely impacted by the prolonged decrease in the price of bitcoin, the increase in electricity costs, the increase in the global bitcoin network hash rate and litigation with crypto lender Celsius.

Celsius, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection earlier this year, invested $54 million in Core Scientific in July 2021 as part of an over $200 million investment in bitcoin mining.

Core Scientific claims it is still owed $5.4 million for services related to hosting Celsius Mining. Celsius filed a motion in response, saying its bankruptcy status protects it from enforcement action and legal proceedings by creditors.

The company is in the process for exploring a number of potential strategic alternatives with respect to the company’s capital structure, including hiring strategic advisers, raising additional capital or restructuring its existing capital structure.

“The company may seek alternative sources of equity or debt financing, delay capital expenditures or evaluate potential asset sales, and potentially could seek relief under the applicable bankruptcy or insolvency laws,” it said.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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Author: Callan Quinn


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