FreeCryptoCurrency.Me

Free stocks and money too!

Author: samwsimpson_lyjt8578

Velodrome says team member stole $350,000 from the project’s wallet

Velodrome, a decentralized exchange (DEX), has identified a former team member as being the person responsible for a $350,000 theft that occurred earlier in August, the platform announced on Saturday.

The DEX platform said anonymous coder “Gabagool”—known for his Twitter handle Gabagool.eth—was responsible for the theft following an investigation. Velodrome reported in August a breach of one of its team wallets and stated that the attacker had drained $350,000 from the project.

Gabagool has built a following by being among a group of on-chain sleuths regularly exposing fraudulent activities by nefarious actors in the DeFi space. 

“The Velodrome team has severed our relationship with Gabagool and are working with legal counsel to determine the best next steps,” the DEX platform added in its announcement. Velodrome also assured users that the incident did not affect their funds.

In an interview with The Block in August, when the hack occurred, Gabagool did state that the team was investigating the incident and that the targeted wallet held the team’s private salary funds.

Velodrome is a successful implementation of the vested escrow ve (3,3) model pioneered by Yearn Finance creator Andre Cronje. The project is a fork of the Solidly DEX built by Cronje that was supposed to launch ve (3,3) on the Fantom network. The platform crossed $100 million in total value locked on the Optimism network in July. Optimism is an Ethereum Layer 2 network.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Three biggest stories from past week in the crypto space

There is seldom a dull moment in the crypto news cycle and the past week was no different.

The US Treasury sanctioned open-source code for the first time, Ethereum’s transition to proof-of-stake passed another milestone and the institutional bitcoin investment space welcomed a major player.

Here are three of the biggest stories from this past week:

Tornado Cash sanctioned by US Treasury

The US Treasury imposed sanctions on crypto mixer Tornado Cash by adding 44 Ethereum and usd coin (USDC) wallets associated with the service to its Specially Designated Nationals list. US authorities said the action was in connection with reports that North Korean hackers were using the mixer to launder proceeds from several high-profile crypto hacks.

Monday’s sanctions triggered widespread criticisms from several quarters in the crypto space. These criticisms increased when Dutch authorities arrested a Tornado Cash developer on Friday.

Tornado Cash has faced de-platforming issues on multiple fronts all week. The mixer’s website, email and GitHub have been taken down. The same happened with Tornado Cash’s Discord server and community page.

USDC stablecoin issuer Circle also froze the mixer’s funds in the sanctioned wallets. Crypto apps including DeFi protocols and node providers have begun blocking access to users with wallets that have Tornado Cash transactions in their history.

Goerli testnet merge succeeds

Ethereum developers executed the Goerli testnet merge on Wednesday. This marked the final dress rehearsal for the mainnet merge when Ethereum will transition from proof-of-work (PoW) to proof-of-stake (PoS).

The mainnet merge now has a tentative date. Ethereum core developers said on Thursday that the event will likely happen in mid-September — 15th or 16th.

Not everyone in the Ethereum ecosystem supports the merge. There are reports of a miner-led hard fork of the blockchain to maintain the PoW status quo. Those at the heart of this movement said on Friday that an ETHPoW chain was inevitable. Ethereum co-creator Vitali Buterin added to the conversation, saying an ETHPoW fork was unlikely to succeed.

BlackRock makes crypto splash

The $9 trillion asset manager announced its first crypto offering: a private bitcoin (BTC) trust for institutional investors. This BlackRock product offers US institutional investors direct exposure to spot BTC.

The announcement came barely a week after the asset management giant partnered with Coinbase. BlackRock’s deal with Coinbase will see the former being able to offer corporate clients access to crypto investment products via Coinbase Prime.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Vauld says it disagrees with asset freeze order by Indian authorities

Embattled Asian crypto lender Vauld says it “respectfully disagrees” with the recent freezing of some of its assets by Indian authorities, the company said in a news release on Saturday.

India’s Enforcement Directorate (ED) froze 3.7 billion rupees ($46 million) of the company’s assets, as previously reported by The Block. The financial crimes investigator said the asset freeze was in connection with a money laundering case.

Vauld’s statement said that the crypto lender had received and obeyed the ED summons to provide certain documents to investigators. It added that the freeze order was in connection with an account belonging to a former customer of the platform that had since been deactivated. Vauld also said that it follows strict customer identification protocols and expressed disappointment at the enforcement action.

“We are seeking legal advice on our best course of action in order to protect the interests of the company, its customers, and all the stakeholders. We have fully cooperated with the Enforcement Directorate and will continue to extend our cooperation to ensure we continue to remain a safe place for customers to transact and own cryptocurrencies,” today’s announcement said.

Vauld is one of the many crypto lenders currently facing a liquidity crisis. The company ceased customer withdrawals in July and owes $402 million to its creditors. The crypto lender has received a three-month moratorium from a Singapore High Court as it seeks a path forward to resolve its financial problems.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Osato Avan-Nomayo

Skynet Labs to shut down after failing to raise funds 

Skynet Labs, a Boston-based blockchain company formerly known as Nebulous, said it is shutting down because it cannot raise more funds. 

The company, which had raised $9.6 million in seven funding rounds since 2014, said in a blog post that it “has been unable to complete its next round of fundraising and will be shutting down.”  

CEO David Vorick said in the post that associated company Skynet, a decentralized storage and app hosting platform, will remain online. “Thankfully, Skynet as a platform will be able to continue operating: all user files will remain online and key portions of the infrastructure will continue to be actively developed.” 

Vorick said of Skynet Labs that it was “with great sadness that we will be letting the members of our team go, even though we have every need for and appreciation of their efforts.” 

In October 2020, Skynet Labs launched a new feature for Skynet called SkyDB, a platform for developers who want to build decentralized social media platforms. 

Skynet Labs last raised $3 million in a funding round led by Paradigm in September 2020. 

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Mike Millard

Ethereum killers are great for investors but little else, Blockchain.com’s Smith says

Backing Layer 1 blockchains has proven an incredibly successful bet in the past and may remain so — despite none of them truly threatening Ethereum’s crown — according to Blockchain.com co-founder and CEO Peter Smith.

If the likes of Solana, Avalanche and Near Protocol were the first wave of so-called Ethereum killers, Aptos and Sui — brand spanking new Layer 1 blockchains based on Move, a programming language originally developed by Facebook engineers — are the second.

Sui developer Mysten Labs is reportedly in talks to raise hundreds of millions of dollars from investors, while the team behind Aptos has already banked $350 million across two raises this year.

Yet Ethereum remains very much alive — and the dominant protocol on which to conduct decentralized business. Indeed, it’s in the final stages of switching to a proof-of-stake model in an effort to make the network cheaper to use and more energy efficient.

Yet despite the growing competition, it’s little surprise that investors continue to plow into base layer blockchains, according to Smith — because they can still prove incredibly profitable. 

“None of these alternative Layer 1s have come close to beating Ethereum, but they have made investors a lot of money,” he told The Block in an interview. “If you’re an early investor in a Layer 1 that gets some kind of scale, even if it’s small scale, that’s generated phenomenal returns for you.”

“That’s where it becomes necessary in this conversation to differentiate between ‘is this stuff going to have a huge and meaningful impact on users and daily lives and building the future of finance?’ from ‘can we make money?’ Because the two things are not always one-to-one.”

In the wider world of venture capital, it’s unusual to see investors backing multiple startups within one niche — in part because they run the risk of conflicts of interest between companies that may become competitors. Not so in crypto. Some venture capitalists have backed multiple projects whose mission is to take down Ethereum. Solana and Aptos, for instance, both count Andreessen Horowitz, Multicoin Capital, Jump Crypto, BlockTower Capital, ParaFi Capital and others as backers.  

For Smith, the rationale for backing Layer 1 blockchains is clear: they are capable of delivering eye-watering returns in relatively short order, irrespective of whether they succeed in challenging Ethereum. 

“We’re seeing a lot of investors cycle out of successful Layer 1 bets from the last cycle — Solana, Avalanche, Near — and into new Facebook-related Layer 1 bets,” he says.

The cycle of life

Between the start of 2021 and November that year, the market capitalization of SOL — Solana’s native token — shot from less than $100 million to nearly $80 billion, per CoinGecko data. It has since dropped back to around $15 billion. Were early backers of the project, who would typically have acquired tokens instead of equity, to have cashed out even a fraction of their holdings at the top, they would be supremely in the black.

“I think there’s some capital reflexivity at play where there’s a lot of incentive to keep betting on Layer 1s to take down Ethereum, because you’re very in the money on that strategy already. Even though, ironically, no Layer 1 has ever come close to taking down Ethereum,” says Smith.

There is nothing ostensibly wrong with such thinking. It is, as Smith points out, a free market. Indeed, he thinks it likely that a lot of the capital for backing the first wave of Ethereum challengers came from successful bets on bitcoin and ether — or at least the knowledge, among investors’ limited partners, of how successfully such bets panned out. The question Smith poses is instead whether successive Layer 1 investments are a productive use of capital.

“The thing that I find kind of hard to take seriously with some of the Layer 1s being launched now is: what are you bringing to the market that is that much better than Solana, Avalanche, Near, as a backup to Ethereum?” says Smith. “And each one of these chains would have their answer, but at the end of the day all users care about is stability and how much it costs to transact. And so I think that’s where it gets kind of complicated for me to see — is this the best application of capital, both human and financial at the time?”

A sizable slug of the money poured into new wave Layer 1s thus far has gone to incentive schemes, which were all the rage late last year.

Avalanche set aside close to half a billion dollars in its native AVAX tokens across two incentive programs in August 2021 and March this year, all in an effort to lure developers and projects into its ecosystem. The total value locked (TVL) on the blockchain surged from around $160 million in early August 2021 to a high of over $12 billion by December, according to DeFi Llama data. TVL had dipped to roughly $10 billion by mid-April this year, before nosediving to the current level of $2.5 billion.

The health of the wider crypto market is also a factor here. Solana, which has not rolled out a landmark incentive package, has experienced a decline in TVL that is similar to Avalanche’s across the same period.

“So far, it’s not clear that any of these chains have really had staying power,” Smith says. Ethereum’s TVL has also declined, according to DeFi Llama’s data, albeit less dramatically — falling from around $160 billion in November last year to $84 billion today.

Despite his scepticism, Smith concedes that any issues with Ethereum’s much-anticipated switch to proof-of-stake consensus — known as “the merge” among the crypto cognoscenti — will mean it’s once again “game on” for rival blockchains. That includes both Solana and the first wave and the new Move-based protocols.

“The challenge for all of those blockchains is that you really have to hope that something goes wrong for them to be successful,” says Smith. “If Ethereum delivers on the merge and on the sharding roadmap, there isn’t going to be a huge reason for a lot of those chains to exist.”

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Ryan Weeks

Crypto prime brokerage Floating Point Group secures VASP registration in Cayman Islands

Crypto-focused prime brokerage Floating Point Group has secured registration as a virtual asset service provider (VASP) in the Cayman Islands.

“With our current regulatory posture in the Cayman Islands and our business structure, Floating Point Group is able to hold customer assets safely and ensure that its customer’s assets are protected from its own creditors in the unlikely event that the company becomes bankrupt,” the firm said in a press statement. 

Floating Point Group has about 100 customers and surpassed $10 billion in cumulative customer trading volume earlier this year, co-founder Kevin March said. It recently released a new crypto asset management platform called FlowVault.

Hoboken, New Jersey-based Floating Point Group was founded by MIT students in late 2017. The company closed a $10 million Series A round in September 2021 with participation from several investors, including Tribe Capital, Coinbase Ventures and Anthony Scaramucci. That funding followed a $2 million seed round backed by investors such as AngelList co-founder Naval Ravikant.

The Cayman Islands Monetary Authority recognized the company’s subsidiary Floating Point Group International as a registered VASP on April 21, according to a government database. The self-governing British territory passed a law in 2020 to establish a regulatory framework for digital assets, known as the “VASP Law.” 

“It is incredibly important right now, of all times, to lean into the regulatory frameworks that have been provided for us in each of the places we do business,” John Peurifoy, Floating Point Group CEO and co-founder 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.

Go to Source
Author: Kristin Majcher

Bitcoin mining stock report: Friday, August 12

As the week of trading comes to an end, most bitcoin miners showed positive results.

Bitcoin’s value rose above $24,000 on Friday, trading at almost $24,200 by the end of the day, according to data from TradingView.

Hut 8’s stock rose by 18.92% on Nasdaq, a day after revealing its second-quarter earnings. In terms of percentage change from Monday, the company’s shares also had the highest performance among the companies tracked by The Block (+42.51% on Nasdaq).

Core Scientific, which also announced its second-quarter earnings report on Thursday, after market close, saw its stock go up by 3.7%. The miner posted an $862 million net loss and $164 million in revenues.

Here’s how crypto mining companies performed on Friday, August 12:

An overview of how miners fared over the week of trading:

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Catarina Moura

Ethereum Name Service: An Essential Web3 Building Block

Quick Take

  • Ethereum Name Service (ENS) boosts Ethereum’s user-friendliness by mapping machine-readable identifiers onto human-readable names
  • Governance is enforced through a DAO that encourages community members to actively shape the future of the protocol
  • Uncoupled from NFTs’ bleak market conditions, interest in ENS domain names has exploded lately

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

Go to Source
Author: Thomas Bialek

Coinbase shares shrug off S&P downgrade

Coinbase shares were 5% higher on Friday as investors appeared to largely shrug off yesterday’s S&P downgrade. 

The rating agency’s move cited the company’s disappointing earnings report earlier this week, in which the cryptocurrency trading platform reported a $1.1 billion loss for the second quarter. S&P Global Ratings cut Coinbase’s long-term issuer credit rating and senior unsecured debt ratings to BB from BB+ days.

“The downgrade reflects our view that weak earnings have weakened the company’s coverage ratios and that cyclical variations for Coinbase have increased beyond our previous expectations due to market share erosion and a higher risk of margin compression,” the agency said. “Moreover, competitive risk has intensified in the crypto exchange sector, with the company’s market share decreasing this year.”

S&P has a negative outlook on the company and said further ratings cuts may follow.

On Aug. 9, Coinbase reported trading volume of $217 billion for the second quarter, down from $309 billion in the previous period. The company narrowed the range for its annual forecast for MTUs to 7 to 9 million from between 5 million and 15 million as crypto prices tumbled in the first half of 2022.

Adding to the negative news, the company revealed in a regulatory filing after the results that its staking activities are being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Tighter regulation could threaten revenue growth, including by curtailing the growth of its staking activities, which S&P said accounted for 8% of total revenue in the first half of 2022, compared with 1% in the prior year.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Christiana Sciaudone

Indian authorities freeze $46 million worth of Vauld’s assets

India’s Enforcement Directorate (ED), a law enforcement agency that investigates financial crimes, has frozen assets worth 3.7 billion rupees (around $46 million) belonging to Vauld, a troubled crypto lender.

ED conducted searches on an Indian company called Yellow Tune Technologies and found that this company, a client of Vauld’s Indian entity Flipvolt Technologies, was involved in a money laundering case, according to a statement on Friday. The case is linked to Chinese loan apps that were involved in digital lending in India.

Since 2019, most Chinese companies were reportedly entering India for lending business by establishing fintech apps, but as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was not giving them a non-banking financial company (NBFC) license, they were making agreements with local NBFCs.

“While doing fund trail investigation, ED found that large amount of funds to the tune of Rs 370 Crore were deposited by 23 entities including accused NBFCs and their fintech companies into the INR wallets of M/s Yellow Tune Technologies Private Limited held with Crypto Exchange M/s Flipvolt Technologies Private Limited. These amounts were nothing but proceeds of crime derived from predatory lending practices,” ED said.

It went on to say that Yellow Tune Technologies — with assistance from Flipvolt — helped accused fintech companies in avoiding regular banking channels and taking out all the fraud money in the form of crypto assets.

ED further said that Vauld failed to provide the complete trail of crypto transactions made by Yellow Tune Technologies and that it maintains lax know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) processes.

“By encouraging obscurity and having lax AML norms, it has actively assisted M/s Yellow Tune in laundering the proceeds of crime worth Rs 370 Crore using the crypto route. Therefore, equivalent movable assets to the extent of Rs 367.67 Crore lying with Flipvolt Crypto-exchange in the form of Bank and Payment Gateway Balances worth Rs 164.4 Crore and Crypto assets lying in their pool accounts worth Rs 203.26 Crore, are frozen under PMLA, 2002, till complete fund trail is provided by the crypto-exchange,” said ED.

ED’s action is the latest blow for Vauld, which last month halted client withdrawals and owes a total of $402 million to creditors, as The Block reported at the time. Of that sum, $363 million — or 90% — comes from individual retail investors’ deposits.

Vauld has sought protection from creditors. Earlier this month, it received three months from the Singapore High Court to continue exploring its options. Vauld now has until November 7 to decide its path forward.

Vauld is currently in a due diligence process by rival Nexo for a potential acquisition deal. It remains to be seen whether the deal goes through, given these latest developments.

This is ED’s second such move in the crypto space in recent days. Last week, the Indian law enforcement agency froze bank balances worth 647 million rupees belonging to WazirX, a local crypto exchange.

© 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.

Go to Source
Author: Yogita Khatri


Follow by Email
Facebook20
Pinterest20
fb-share-icon
LinkedIn20
Share