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Crypto exchange giants will reportedly run ads during Super Bowl

America’s largest crypto exchanges are reportedly set to run ads during this year’s Super Bowl, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Coinbase, Crypto.com, and FTX are among the several cryptocurrency companies looking to run ads during one of America’s biggest showpiece sporting events of the year. Last year’s Super Bowl attracted an estimated 91.6 million views on TV.

The news comes as the latest example of the brand power associated with crypto companies in recent times.

At an estimated $7 million, the price of a 30-second ad spot on NBC for next Sunday’s Super Bowl has gone up by more than $1.6 million compared to the average cost over the last four years.

This significant jump in ad rates seems to have done little to deter America’s biggest crypto exchanges from showcasing their businesses during Sunday’s gridiron showpiece.

The likes of FTX and Crypto.com have previously made headlines for hefty sponsorship deals. In November, Crypto.com spent $700 million in cash to rename the Staples Center in Los Angeles to the Crypto.com Arena.

Most of the deals have been in the sporting arena with these companies splashing the cash to ink deals with athletes and organizations across football, baseball, Formula 1, and cricket among others.

These crypto exchanges also continue to attract significant investor attention. FTX recently attained a $32 billion valuation on the back of a $400 million Series C funding round.

© 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

[SPONSORED] Profile Photos on Social Media Can Now Include NFTs, Starting New Trend for Early Adopters Like The Novatar

Twitter has recently added verification for crypto wallets, making NFT avatars, such as Novatars, the cornerstone of a new type of social identity.

In September 2021, Twitter announced that the platform will support NFT profile photos, and begin a verification process to ensure ownership rights prior to use on the site.

NFT profile photos used on twitter have ranged from pixelated animals to other digital figures, but Novatar is bringing a human element to the mix.

Novatars, which reflect the spirit of the new digital reality as much as possible, are NFT avatars that age much like humans, bridging the gap between real and digital identities.

The Novatar collection upgrades the idea of an NFT profile picture by bringing the technological solution instead of a regular image.

At this moment The Novatar is poised for future success for a good reason. NFT collection of futuristic aging avatars perfectly matches the demands of upgraded Twitter as well as social media platforms of the new era. The project is also inclusive by featuring different genders, races, ages and styles throughout the collection. The goal being to give social media users more opportunities to build their identity in the digital space.

Celebrating diversity with Novatars
The cutting-edge aging NFT avatars represent a community of diverse digital personalities, ready to become your digital ID in a new era of social networks.
It has it all – a variety of races, genders, professions, cool styles, and individual designs of each member of the large community of NFT Novatars.
The diversity spreads over the LGBTQ community as well making The Novatar one of the only projects that empower almost all groups of society.

This winter’s hottest NFT drop represents a limited collection of 25K NFT baby avatars of diverse races, distinctive appearances, and facial expressions. These NFT babes can mature after minting and become adults. The Novatars’ external appearance and other features depend on their genetic packages. This makes some Novatars rarer than others. For example, genes responsible for sexual orientation or profession will not be developed for all mature Novatars. It’s also important to know that the maturing procedure is irreversible: once aged, Novatar cannot revert to a previous stage once matured.

While the NFT owners are deciding what their digital identity will be in the social network, The Novatar is offering one of the best avatar options currently available in the market.

© 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: Sponsored

Privacy-focused blockchain project Aleo raises $200 million from SoftBank, Tiger, and others

Aleo, a blockchain project focused on privacy through zero-knowledge-proof technology, has raised $200 million in a Series B funding round.

SoftBank Vision Fund 2 and Kora Management co-led the round, with Tiger Global, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), Samsung Ventures, Slow Ventures, and Sea Capital also participating.

As part of the deal, SoftBank and Kora have each acquired one board seat at Aleo; however, the seats are yet to be assigned to specific executives, Aleo’s CEO and CTO Howard Wu told The Block.

This was an equity funding round and will help Aleo build a company that provides services on top of its blockchain network, said Wu. “A good analogy we have made is Git vs. GitHub. Git is an open-source protocol used by millions of developers worldwide, and GitHub has built a lucrative and viable business by layering on a suite of products that add even more utility for the end-user (aka developer),” said Wu.

Aleo’s blockchain network is currently in testnet, and its mainnet is scheduled to launch in the third quarter of this year. When asked how Aleo is different from other blockchains that already utilize zero-knowledge-proof technology, Wu said most other projects use the technology to solve the scalability issue on Ethereum. 

Aleo, on the other hand, has developed its own Layer 1 blockchain that significantly improves both scalability and privacy, he said.

Aleo uses a new computation system called Zexe. Short for zero-knowledge execution, Zexe helps make off-chain computation with on-chain verification by default for scalability and privacy. Wu published a paper on Zexe last year along with Zcash’s Sean Bowe and a few academics. He is also a blockchain advisor at the University of California, Berkeley.

According to a16z, which led Aleo’s Series A round last year, Zexe is a template for a blockchain “that is entirely private and that scales far beyond most blockchains that are live today.”

Aleo has also created its own programming language called Leo, which will let developers build decentralized and private applications more easily, according to Wu.

But how will Aleo attract developers to its network, given the Layer 1 blockchain space is already so competitive? Wu said, “We’re confident that when developers experience how intuitive it is to write and deploy applications within Aleo, we’ll see even greater adoption than we already have.”

Aleo recently launched a $1 million developer grants program, and it has had more than 80 applicants so far, said Wu. The project now plans to expand that program to $5 million to attract more developers.

Aleo will launch its mainnet with “Aleo credits,” which will work like its native token. The purpose of Aleo credits (similar to AWS credits) is to serve compute credits, said Wu. One credit can be subdenominated into 1000 “gates,” which are used to price computations. “Every program in Aleo is Turing-decidable, meaning the exact size of the computation can be known upfront. The size is measured by the number of gates (like logic gates) and thus priced accordingly using credits,” he said.

There are currently 34 people working for Aleo, and the project is looking to expand the team across various roles, including engineering, business development, and operations, to achieve its goals. 

The Series B round brings Aleo’s total funding to date to $228 million. Last April, the project raised $28 million.

© 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: Yogita Khatri

Crypto firm Wirex launches in the US, almost a year later than planned

UK fintech Wirex has today launched its services in the US, almost one year after its original launch date of April 2021.

Wirex CEO Pavel Matveev says it currently has 300,000 US customers on its waiting list. In the US, the company sees Coinbase as a key competitor and believes it can compete with the exchange by offering zero exchange rates.

Wirex allows its users to buy, hold and exchange fiat currencies — such as US dollars and cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin and ether — in an account linked to a debit card. 

Spearheaded by its US CEO Harold Montgomery, the company has partnered with Zero Hash to get local permissions to hold cryptocurrencies, and the Ohio-based Sutton Bank in order to issue its debit card in the country.  

Delayed launch

Last year, one month before announcing its April US launch, the company temporarily paused UK sign-ups following discussions with the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) regarding anti-money laundering (AML) compliance. This followed a Fintech Futures report that customers were being locked out of their accounts without explanation. 

“We voluntarily took restrictions after our conversation with the FCA,” says Matveev. “We’re progressing well, we resumed our services for existing customers. And we’re planning to resume onboarding of new customers relatively soon, but it takes time with the regulators.”

Matveev says that the talks with the FCA are “unrelated” to the delayed launch. He pointed instead to the company having committed resources to its APAC launch, coupled with time constraints related to integrating with local partners in the US. 

Currently, the fintech firm is registered with the FCA on a temporary basis as a cryptoasset firm following a January 2020 announcement that the authority would become the AML supervisor for companies in the digital asset space. It’s on track to meet the end of March deadline to register with the FCA on a permanent basis, says Matveev.  

© 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: Tom Matsuda

Bud Light partners with Nouns DAO for its upcoming Super Bowl ad

Beer giant Anheuser-Busch’s Bud Light has partnered with Nouns DAO (a decentralized autonomous organization) for its Super Bowl ad airing on Sunday. 

Bud Light’s senior director of digital Corey Brown told The Block that the partnership will help the beer brand further authenticate itself in the NFT space. “As part of the partnership, Nouns has gifted Bud Light NEXT with a Nouns NFT in exchange for the famous Nouns glasses to be featured in our Super Bowl commercial,” said Brown.

Nouns DAO is a generative NFT project on the Ethereum blockchain. Its avatars are based on nouns: people, places, and things. 

The ad will be for Bud Light NEXT, Bud Light’s new no-carb beer. Last month, the brand launched its first NFT project, Bud Light N3XT, featuring 12,722 unique tokens.  

Working with the DAO will allow Bud Light to meet consumers where they are, according to Brown. “Similar to how Bud Light NEXT will provide us the opportunity to bring more fans into the Bud Light portfolio, the Bud Light N3XT Collection, our partnership with Nouns DAO and entry into the NFT space will allow us to engage with established and new fans in an entirely different way,” he 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: Anushree Dave

Millegan voted out of key role at ENS after controversial comments surface

Brantly Millegan has been voted out of his role as a community steward of the organization that governs Ethereum Name Service (ENS).

The vote to oust Millegan from the ENS DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) came on Sunday afternoon after a tweet from 2016 surfaced over the weekend — sparking instant controversy. In the tweet, Millegan had branded homosexual people evil, denied the existence of transgenderism, and described contraception as a perversion.

ENS is a popular purveyor of Ethereum-linked domain names that take the form of NFTs and can be used as usernames within crypto ecosystems.

DAOism

In a blog post, ENS stated that a majority of its community stewards had voted to remove Millegan from his role as a community steward, with 75% for the motion.

The post noted that Millegan, a Catholic, defended his views in a recent Twitter spaces session. He also tweeted that he believes in “the mainstream traditional Christian positions held by the world’s largest religion.”

The episode sparked fierce backlash on social media over the weekend. Many observers, including Uniswap Labs CEO Hayden Adams, claimed Millegan’s views are antithetical to the mantra of DeFi and web3. ENS echoed those sentiments in its blog post.

In a separate post, ENS said that Millegan could face further disciplinary action, including his immediate suspension while the community decides what to do; being asked to step down from his leadership roles at ENS (he is currently director of operations); removal as a director from the ENS foundation through a DAO vote; and his removal from True Names Limited, a Singapore-based non-profit entity that leads the development of ENS.

Millegan was contacted for comment but did not respond by press time.

© 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: Ryan Weeks

Outlook 2022: The many faces of crypto scalability

Ha Duong is Principal at Ocean Investment and Director of Crypto Strategies at BIT Capital, based in Berlin.

If 2020 was the year of DeFi and 2021 the year of NFTs, I believe 2022 will be the year that crypto scalability will show its many faces.

A lot of what has been happening over the past months has been driven by a debate about an increasing need for scalability in crypto networks. The near future will show alternative approaches to crypto scalability.

I also expect the design space of dApps to drastically expand once we have moved past the current evolution stage of crypto.

From Ethereum killers to modular blockchains

Since CryptoKitties first clogged the Ethereum network in 2017, many more situations have appeared that show how the current state of the main smart contract platform is not yet fit for mass adoption. The Scalability Trilemma shows how difficult it is to enhance scalability without compromising on other important dimensions such as decentralization & security.

What is the crypto ecosystem actually trying to solve for?

In the most naive sense, developers and speculators are looking for solutions that provide the highest transaction throughput. One of the difficulties with scaling transaction throughput is that the demand for transactions is very volatile so the capacity needs to be able to scale up and down depending on network needs. Even the most optimized centralized networks show that sometimes a sudden spike in transaction demand can cause the whole network to stand still – as we have witnessed with exchange downtimes in crypto and with outages of major CDNs in the traditional tech world. The reason for that is that the physical world (chips for computing and short or long-term data storage) needs to supply what the digital world demands (as in fetching, sending, editing data) and the physical world will always move with slower speed – especially when global (physical) supply chains are already running at max capacity.

The interaction between physical and digital is quite relevant in the discussion of how crypto scalability will evolve in the future. Simply increasing block sizes for greater transaction throughput requires more powerful hardware to run full nodes and thus, will increase entry barriers, leading to less decentralization of the network. That tradeoff already led to a divide in the Bitcoin community which created Bitcoin Cash. Larger block sizes is not the only way in which that tradeoff can materialize. If a network requires transaction validators to perform more complex computations or handle more short-term data that will lead to a similar increased need for specialized hardware or a lot of RAM, thus excluding most long-tail users to validate transaction integrity in the network and leading to a more centralized network in the long run.

One key theme I expect to see more in 2022 is the greater adoption of modular architectures instead of monolithic blockchains. The first generation of smart contract platforms tried to do everything from data storage to full Turing-complete compute in one. In the future, we will see the stack broken down into data availability and consensus, block verification & building, transaction sequencing & block proposing, and general-purpose or application-specific compute.

Transition from monolithic to modular architectures. Source: Celestia

Ethereum’s most promising scalability solutions all address some areas or combinations of the stack: Sharding addresses data availability, consensus and block building while Rollups allow transactions to be processed on layer 2 with security tied to layer 1 through validity or fraud proofs. Validiums and Volitions are other interesting approaches using validity proofs to follow and more platforms leveraging these technologies will likely reach mainnet in 2022.

With modular architectures maturing, I expect a decreasing demand for alternative monolithic layer 1 smart contract platforms in crypto in the future. For many existing or aspiring specialized smart contract platforms, the decision to bootstrap security from scratch and build a monolithic chain with known long-term scalability issues will be less attractive than running as a layer 2 on top of a secure data availability + settlement layer. Ethereum will benefit as current negative network effects due to network congestion will be turned to positive network effects again due to greater data availability and security in a data sharding + rollup-centric world.

Visualization of a Rollup contract. Source: Vitalik Buterin

At the same time, I expect to see some interesting new developments of even more modular approaches, e.g. through separate data availability & consensus layers that do not perform any computations themselves. One key issue to watch out for is composability between the various modular building blocks and even though some initial solutions are already proposed, we will need to see at scale how the modular crypto world evolves.

No matter how attention will be channeled between Fat Protocols and thinner ones, in the end, developers of decentralized applications will benefit from greater flexibility.

The widening design space for dApps post scalability

Overall, I expect greater scalability and improved UX e.g. through abstraction of blockchain interactions to widen the design space for dApps in Web3. Many design choices in user interfaces but also in the nature of the dApps themselves are constrained in the current architectures of the platforms they are built on top of.

For example, we saw a rise in Automated Market Makers and Liquidity Pools as an alternative to Limit Order Book Exchanges in Defi. That is not because AMMs are generally more effective (you don’t see AMMs on Wall Street) but rather due to the fact that AMMs are an ideal solution for the computation-constrained environment of current Web3 development – the constant posting, editing and canceling of limit orders by millions of users would congest the network overall and consume lots of gas for each user individually. With more scalability, we may expect the return of the limit order book in DeFi.

That may again have effects on true Defi yields. With limit order books and less dependence on AMMs, there may be less need for liquidity mining programs and less need for cash or stablecoins in DeFi due to increased capital efficiency. The current Curve wars may end and capital may find its way to more productive uses again.

Thanks to increased scalability, DeFi may go beyond elementary financial primitives and compose complex use cases that can drive more real-world user demand e.g. building a full-fledged DeFi bank. One of the areas that are currently truly exciting is DeFi options where we see DeFi succeeding where CeFi has failed – providing robust options markets in crypto beyond bitcoin and ether options. However, there are no secondary markets for DeFi options for now and hence, the potential for market participants to hedge or express their views through options is still limited. If scalability enables feasible limit order book exchanges and decreases the minimum clip size of a trade (through lower transaction costs), a liquid DeFi options secondary market may become reality.

I have also spent some time looking at the crypto gaming space over the last few weeks. As a former passionate gamer, I sadly noticed that many current games are implemented to only involve a few very basic types of interactions which more or less look like DeFi yield farming in-game environment packaging. Besides the growing involvement of traditional game developers and more gaming talent flow, increased scalability will also enable truly long-term engaging crypto games and new NFT use cases in the future.

Increased demand for tools and middleware in a multi-chain and multi-layer world

A modular multi-chain and multi-layer crypto ecosystem will also require more tooling, infrastructure and middleware solutions than what is currently available. Existing or new crypto networks will carve out a position in the marketplace that focuses on this new paradigm.

Maybe, existing cloud storage protocols will expand their offering to evolve into a full data availability + consensus network. Potentially, other networks appear that focus on providing pure computation resources as a service focused on processing zero-knowledge proofs for zk-Rollups. Indexing protocols for querying network data out of different data layers and cross-chain & cross-layer oracles or composability & liquidity layers will continue evolving as well.

These are all only a few basic ideas that probably need much more time and thought but they show that the way various crypto protocols interact with each other is subject to change with a possible upcoming transition to a modular crypto world.

Conclusion

We’re still at the very beginning of being able to grasp what that all means. I’m curious to explore how tokenomics and value capture evolve in such a modular world and what other effects can be expected e.g. impacts on MEV and DeFi composability. The expansion of blockspace as a massive supply-side shock will have its effects on most crypto use cases and the investment cases behind them.

During this transition period, many opportunities for entrepreneurs, talent, investors and ecosystem participants of any type will arise. New protocols will emerge, old ones will pivot and some will become obsolete. With the open nature of crypto, there will always be a multitude of approaches and I’m excited to see all of them advancing and evolving throughout 2022 and beyond.

© 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: Contributor Network

Tether responds to CoinDesk’s intervention in ongoing reserves information case

Tether has responded to CoinDesk’s intervention submission in the latest filing related to the freedom of information court battle, claiming the conflict centers on its settlement agreements with the NYAG — not the arguments of the news outlet. 

CoinDesk formally joined the legal proceedings between Tether and the New York Attorney General last month, vying to become an official party in the case since its Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) requests (FOIL) sit at the center of the dispute. In its latest filing, Tether argues that the conflict rests on facts of the agreement between the firm and the NYAG, and that the news outlet shouldn’t be able to “renegotiate” the terms by inserting itself into the case.

The context

The conflict began in June of last year, when the news outlet filed a Freedom of Information Law request (FOIL), asking for documents detailing Tether’s reserve breakdown. Tether and its parent company iFinex submitted this information to the NYAG as part of a settlement agreement in February over the alleged co-mingling of funds. New York’s Freedom of Information Law enables members of the public to request access to government records.

At first, the FOIL officer denied the request, but CoinDesk won access on an appeal. Tether responded by asking a New York court to compel the NYAG to deny the request on the grounds that the requested information constituted trade secrets, could compromise its competitive edge and damage relationships. As the conflict centers on CoinDesk’s request, the news outlet petitioned to intervene or become a stated party in the case, which allows it to present its own evidence and arguments. 

At the time, Tether responded in a statement pointing out that CoinDesk shares an investor, Digital Currency Group, with stablecoin issuer and Tether competitor Circle. After the statement, CoinDesk updated its coverage of the legal case with disclosure of DCG’s investment.

The arguments

Tether’s filed response to CoinDesk’s intervention makes similar mention of the alleged conflict of interest. 

“While CoinDesk tells this Court that it ‘adheres to strict rules of journalistic ethics’ its own reporting on this proceeding did not disclose to its readers this glaring conflict of interest, until Tether and others complained,” said the filing. 

Tether uses this to support its argument that the reserve documents do constitute trade secrets and could cede advantage to competitors like Circle. 

“No private business would disclose publicly the investment strategies critical to its profitability and ability to differentiate itself from the competition,” said the filing. “Doing so would give the competition unfair insight that could be exploited.”

Furthermore, Tether contends that the powers to resolve the conflict remain with the NYAG, since the settlement agreement it made with the office sets the terms of public disclosure. Tether contends that because the question at hand is whether or not the NYAG should produce the documents, and CoinDesk does not have the power to produce those documents, it should not be on equal footing in the case. Because the NYAG procedure initially rejected the FOIL request, Tether contends that the procedure shouldn’t be manipulated by CoinDesk’s intervention.

“The only true Respondents here are the ones named in the Petition (OAG and the individual Appeals Officer),” said the filing. “The Court should therefore disregard CoinDesk labeling itself as a Respondent, and at all events should not allow CoinDesk’s misleading labels to alter OAG’s clear procedural default—which is grounds alone to grant the Petition [to block access].”

It goes on to point out that the material arguments are the ones centering on the existing settlement between itself and the NYAG, stating, “CoinDesk should not be able to insert itself after the fact to essentially renegotiate the agreed terms.”

© 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: Aislinn Keely

Bank of England is ‘highly unlikely’ to develop a retail wallet for CBDC, says official

A senior manager at the Bank of England says the 327-year-old institution is “highly unlikely” to develop a retail-facing wallet that could be used to store and spend digital currency. 

The question of whether the United Kingdom’s central bank will issue a so-called Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) is far from settled. The Bank plans to publish a consultation paper setting out its assessment of the merits of what some have dubbed the ‘Britcoin’ later this year. 

But while CBDC issuance remains an open question, the launch of an accompanying wallet appears to have been ruled out. 

“I think it’s safe to say it’s highly unlikely that the Bank would issue a retail wallet,” said Katie Fortune, a senior manager in the central bank’s CBDC unit. Fortune said it is more likely that wallets that could support a British digital currency will be produced by the private sector. 

That is not the case elsewhere, however. A pilot version of e-CNY, the mobile wallet for China’s digital yuan, went live on iOS and Android app stores in January. In El Salvador, citizens are encouraged to use state-backed wallet Chivo to manage their bitcoin, which was made legal tender in the country last year. 

Technical questions

Wallets aside, most other technical questions relating to the Bank of England’s CBDC work remain open.

It is not yet even clear, according to Fortune, whether any CBDC issued by the central bank would need to be underpinned by blockchain technology — a form of digital ledger that supports most major cryptocurrencies. 

“That’s still a really open question for us. It’s not taken as a given that it is built on a blockchain, it’s not taken that it’s not,” she said, adding that the Bank has been canvassing a wide range of views through its CBDC forums, whose members include representatives from banks, fintech firms and academics. 

If the central bank chooses to move forward with a CBDC after publishing its consultation paper later this year, it would then enter a development phase that would involve “working up some prototypes,” Fortune said. She does not see a CBDC launching in the UK until 2025 at the earliest.  

Coin fallout

One consideration for the Bank of England as it continues to explore a CBDC launch is what impact such a currency may have on commercial banks in the UK. 

Sir John Cunliffe, deputy governor of the Bank of England, said in November 2020 that it is not the job of central banks to protect commercial banks from the impact of digital currencies. Fortune echoed that point.

“Financial stability is [the Bank’s responsibility] — it’s one of our mandates,” she said. “But preserving current business models isn’t. So we do care, but it’s not that things must stay the same.”

© 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: Ryan Weeks

Financial disclosures show Ted Cruz made a January 25 bitcoin purchase

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) made a bitcoin purchase during the recent dip, according to new financial disclosures with the US Senate. 

A disclosure dated February 4 shows Cruz made a bitcoin purchase valued between $15,001 and $50,000. Cruz made the purchase on January 25 using River. On the day of the purchase, bitcoin price was hovering just under $37,000.

Today, bitcoin price rallied above $40,000 for the first time since January 20.  

Cruz has become a crypto advocate in recent months, introducing a resolution for merchants on Capitol Hill to accept cryptocurrency payments and pushing for amended language to address industry concerns in the hotly-debated infrastructure bill.

Cruz introduced an amendment to remove the language in the bill aimed at tightening reporting requirements for digital asset brokers. Some crypto industry players worried the broker definition as it stands is too broad, and could encompass entities that can’t feasibly report the required information. While other senators sought to revise the rules with their amendments, Cruz pushed to cut the provision entirely.

Ultimately, none of these amendments passed before the infrastructure bill was signed into law. The task of clarifying the broker definition now rests with the Treasury. 

Cruz’s state of Texas has also emerged as a bitcoin mining hub as miners seek to take advantage of the state’s deregulated energy market in the wake of China’s crackdown on crypto mining.  

© 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: Aislinn Keely


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