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An overview of NFT fractionalization protocols

Quick Take

  • “The Doge NFT” is currently the most valuable fractionalized NFT with an implied valuation of $158 million
  • There are currently two ways to fractionalize NFTs: fractionalizing a single NFT or homogenizing multiple similar ones
  • Fractionalizing NFTs helps create liquidity that facilitates price discovery and democratizes NFT ownership

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Author: Eden Au

Treasury preps stablecoin framework as officials fear stability, redemption risks: report

Citing anonymous sources, Bloomberg reports that a coming Treasury report on stablecoins will highlight risks like the inability to redeem stablecoins for their underlying assets and potential runs on crypto assets as major concerns. 

The Treasury report on stablecoins is highly anticipated. Hitherto, stablecoin regulation in the U.S. has happened almost exclusively at the state level. The coming report is expected to set the framework for a new federal approach to the industry.

Fiat-backed stablecoins, and especially those tied to the value of the U.S. dollar, are some of the most traded crypto assets on the market. There are, however, major concerns about the nature of their actual backing and their use in manipulating markets. 

Under Secretary Janet Yellen, the Treasury and other financial regulators have been scrutinizing stablecoin operators closely.

Alongside the coming report from the Treasury, the Financial Stability Oversight Council is reportedly considering launching an investigation into the threat that stablecoins pose.

© 2021 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: Kollen Post

Blockchain-based music platform Audius raises $5 million from music industry giants

Audius, a blockchain-based music streaming platform with over six million monthly users, announced Thursday that it raised $5 million from some of the music industry’s top people.

Investors in Audius include artists such as Katy Perry, The Chainsmokers, Nas, Jason Derulo, Pusha T, Mark Gillespie, as well as industry leaders like former Sony Music CEO Martin Bandier, CEO of the investment firm K5 Global Michael Kives, and CEO of the performance rights organization SESAC John Josephson. 

This year has seen more artists enter the digital asset and blockchain space — especially Katy Perry, who is releasing an NFT collection in December of this year, and the ever-bullish Jason Derulo, owner of a CryptoPunk NFT. 

“I’ve known that blockchain will change the world since I invested in Coinbase five years ago and I believe it might be the most important technology to ever hit the music industry,” said the rapper Nas in the statement. “Everyone who uploads to Audius can be an owner, you can’t say that about any other platform.”

Audius is a San Francisco-based company founded in 2018. To date, it has raised $8.6 million with contributions from Coinbase Ventures, Pantera Capital, Multicoin Capital, and other investors. In mid-August of this year, Audius became the first streaming platform to integrate with the video-sharing giant TikTok. Audius also has its own token, $AUDIO. 

© 2021 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: MK Manoylov

Former OpenSea exec’s NFT trading did not break the law, but it could provoke regulators

Quick Take

  • OpenSea says it is implementing new procedures after a now-former executive was caught trading NFTs with inside knowledge. 
  • While legal sources say the actions didn’t break the law, it could draw the ire of regulators who are already applying heavy scrutiny to the industry. 
  • On Thursday, OpenSea said that Nate Chastain, former head of product, had been asked to resign. 

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Author: Frank Chaparro

How ‘World of Women’ Became a Celebrity NFT Phenom

It’s an open secret that women are under-represented in the world of crypto. Which helps explain why the newest non-fungible token (NFT) collectibles mega-hit, World of Women, is such a welcome jolt of energy for the space. “The mission of my art was always to showcase women, and put them in the spotlight, and bring more diversity into the space,” says Yam Karkai, who launched the NFTs with her partner Raphael Malavieille.

The duo launched the collection on July 27… and it sold out overnight. Its many fans include internet entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk, prominent NFT collector Pransky, and YouTuber Logan Paul, who publicly offered to gift Reese Witherspoon a World of Women that looks like the actress.

Jeff Wilser is the author of seven books including “Alexander Hamilton’s Guide to Life,” “The Book of Joe: The Life, Wit, and (Sometimes Accidental) Wisdom of Joe Biden” and an Amazon Best Book of the Month in both non-fiction and humor.

Karkai and Malavieille are not crypto-insiders. They don’t have a history in the space. In something of a meet-cute, the real-life couple met in Paris five years ago, where Karkai was studying acting. (Her pre-NFT life includes theater, scriptwriting and digital illustration.) When NFT collections blew up, they realized this could be a way to more widely distribute Karkai’s art. They worked as a team. Karkai drew and created, Malavieille (with a background in project management) focused on the operations.

The results? Now the floor price of World of Women is 1.5 ETH, or roughly $5,100, meaning that the combined value of the project (10,000 NFTs) is at least $51 million. Karkai and Malavieille share how they launched the collection, the steps they took to promote inclusivity, and what it’s like to suddenly become crypto phenoms.

CoinDesk: So how’d this get started?

Yam Karkai: Well, I felt like I was not reaching a broad enough audience with my 1 / 1 art, in my opinion, for the message and the change that I want to see in this space. So why not do a collectible project that’s women instead of apes, or pandas, or bears? Because women are beautiful, and they’re important, and they’re relevant.

What are some of the reactions you’ve seen?

Karkai: Women telling me, “I’m a woman of color. I’m from Kenya or I’m from India. And it’s the first time there is an avatar that looks like me, and that I feel like could be me or anyone in my family.”

I’m guessing that when you launched, it was very important to be inclusive. Can you talk about that?

Karkai: So, creating the base woman that would be able to be any ethnicity, or any type of person, was extremely important to me. There were a lot of sketches, and a lot of trial and error. But I finally designed a woman that has a round face, so she could be skinny or she could be plus-size; we don’t know because it’s a bust portrait, and we don’t know what the body looks like.

And I also worked to create a shape of eyes that could pass as potentially Asian, or European, or African, etc.

How about skin tones?

Karkai: I was inspired by Fenty Beauty, Rihanna’s makeup line. She has the most diverse skin tone range ever, like in the history of makeup. And I named them respectfully because I saw some projects naming their skin tones black, yellow, and white, and for me that was incredibly disrespectful.

What other cultural sensitivities did you consider?

Karkai: First of all, no religious references. I’m half Middle Eastern, so I really wanted to have a Nazar necklace – the evil eye necklace. But I told myself, no, I’m not going to do that, because if I start putting in stuff from my culture, I’ll need to include everyone else’s, and it’s going to be impossible to please everybody. So no religious things, no political references, and nothing that could be mistaken as disrespectful.

Raphael Malavieille: And then there was the concern for cultural appropriation…

Karkai: For example, when I was drawing hairstyles, Raph came by and he was like, “Hey, why don’t you do a big afro hair?” But I didn’t want to do that because this is a generative project [10,000 unique combinations are generated from the “base assets” that Karkai draws], after all, and if a white girl with blue eyes ends up with an afro, it’s going to look like she’s dressing up as an African-American woman. And that is literal cultural appropriation. That’s the same reason why I didn’t do African braids, or I didn’t include a Muslim veil.

Your social media accounts have exploded. What’s your secret for the crazy fast growth?

Malavieille: While Yam was actually doing the art, I was researching the space. I looked at all the projects that were higher quality, like The Wicked Craniums, or the Bulls on The Block, or the Deadheads. I looked at all of those that would sell out very fast, and have a lot of hype at the time of launching.

And then I was like, okay, this is the methodology, this is what they do. And mostly what works well is to do a giveaway. So we bought from those other projects, we bought some assets, and we used them for giveaways to bring their community to see our project.

Read More: How NFTs Became Art, and Everything Became an NFT | Jeff Wilser

Smart. You guys are both so new to the space. What are your friends’ reactions?

Karkai: When we tell our friends what’s going on in this space and what we’re doing, half of them are like, “Wow, that’s amazing. That’s crazy.” The other half are like, “I don’t get this. What is this s**t? What are you talking about? How is that even possible? Can I do the same thing? Can I like be rich tomorrow if I sell something?”

How has it felt to see your collection reach so many people, and to be embraced the way it has?

Karkai: At the beginning I was nervous, but when I saw that people were reacting the way I dreamed they would react, it felt really, really good, and it felt like it was making a difference. Every day, I still get messages from people thanking me for the project and saying that they believe in it so much.

And the community we’ve built is full of positivity, and with people honestly believing that this is the change that the space needs. So, for me, that is extremely rewarding. It’s all I ever wanted really.

Malavieille: Yeah. And it’s definitely a reason we can’t and don’t take holidays.

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Author: Jeff Wilser

Fidelity Digital finds 90% of surveyed investors find digital assets appealing

Fidelity Digital Assets, the crypto-focused wing of global asset manager Fidelity, has published the results of a survey that interviewed 1,100 investors across the globe. 

The study surveyed 408 American, 299 Asian, 393 European investors on their investment behavior and view of digital assets such as cryptocurrency. Of the survey participants, 312 were financial advisors and 302 were high net worth investors. 

As per the report, 90% of surveyed investors found digital assets appealing, particularly for their “high potential upside.” Eight in ten also felt digital assets could belong in a portfolio. 

For the barriers halting widespread adoption of digital assets, 54% of investors said that price volatility created and 44% noted a lack of fundamentals to gauge their proper value. 

Overall, 52% of surveyed investors said they have invested in digital assets, with Asian and European investors more likely to do so than those based in the U.S. 

The market conditions of 2020 following the COVID-19 pandemic pushed investors toward digital assets, according to the report, as it had also pressured central banks to adopt central bank digital currencies and piqued the federal government interest in blockchain technology.

© 2021 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: MK Manoylov

Why Revolut is paying for WeWork membership in bitcoin

Revolut has announced that it has used bitcoin to pay for office space for 300 employees in a WeWork in Dallas – its largest office in the United States.

But why has the British neobank, which is valued at a cool $33 billion, opted to use bitcoin in this way?

The answer is in part to save money, and in part to underscore a commitment to crypto, according to a Revolut spokesperson.

“We are a strong believer in crypto having real-life use cases in the future of payments. The advantage of paying in crypto is the ability to make nearly instant payments without middlemen who charge large international remittance fees,” they said.

The spokesperson added that while Revolut doesn’t currently allow its 15 million customers to pay for goods and services using crypto, it is “working towards a future of everyday use cases for crypto in payments.”

The fintech firm has been offering trading in cryptocurrencies since 2017, but didn’t allow customers to transfer bitcoin out of the app and into personal wallets until May this year. It has also been rapidly adding tokens – including Dogecoin – as part of a plan to ramp up its crypto activities.

The why and how

Revolut’s spokesperson also explained exactly how the company is executing the WeWork deal.

Revolut sent WeWork a mutually agreed amount of bitcoin equivalent to the dollar value of the Dallas lease payment. It is the first time the startup has paid a corporate invoice in crypto.

“Equipped with crypto expertise and a trading desk that trades millions of dollars’ worth of crypto a day for our crypto product, we were able to easily purchase the required amount of crypto at a good rate through our exchange partners,” said the spokesperson. 

Revolut did not disclose which crypto exchanges it worked with.

WeWork announced that it would accept cryptocurrency as a form of payment in April, with the aim of enhancing “flexibility and optionality” for members, according to a press release.

© 2021 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

Polychain and Three Arrows Capital lead $230 million investment in Avalanche

Avalanche, the proof-of-stake blockchain promising the industry’s fastest smart contracts, has raised $230 million in a token sale to institutional investors.

Polychain and Three Arrows Capital led the round alongside R/Crypto Fund, Dragonfly, CMS Holdings, Collab+Currency, Lvna Capital and a group of unnamed angel investors and family offices, according to a press release. 

The capital injection will be used to further support efforts to boost decentralized finance (DeFi) activity on the platform, as well as to support new enterprise tools. Part of the funds will be used to facilitate grants, token purchases and other forms of investment for projects seeking to build on Avalanche.

“This will go to fostering the growth of the DeFi ecosystem, NFTs, collectibles, and also some new innovative systems that are coming out on top of this,” said Emin Gün Sirer, director at the Avalanche Foundation. He declined to share more detail on those systems, other than that hinting that they would represent “new asset types.”

Avalanche already rolled out a $180 million liquidity mining incentive scheme in an effort to lure DeFi developers in August — a move that preceded similar steps by rival blockchains, such as Algorand.

Launched in September 2020, Avalanche currently supports more than 225 projects, including well-known DeFi organizations like Tether, SushiSwap, Chainlink, Circle and The Graph.

Investing via tokens

Investors in the $230 million round — which Avalanche described as a “private sale of tokens” — purchased AVAX, Avalanche’s native token, instead of equity.

Those tokens give investors the right to participate in governance voting, thereby influencing the development of the platform. They also gain financial exposure to the price of AVAX, which has hit all-time highs in September, according to CoinMarketCap.

Gün Sirer said the platform’s new investors “know what to do with their coins in the DeFi ecosystem.”

“Buying tokens especially with a lock up represents a bet on the growth of that ecosystem and mass. And whether or not that bet pans out depends on a lot of actors, but it represents a belief in the growth of the ecosystem overall — whereas equity is a bet on a single entity,” he added.  

© 2021 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

El Salvador brings Chivo ATMs to the US

El Salvador has brought its Chivo bitcoin ATMs to several U.S. cities, a move aimed at making it easier and cheaper to send remittances abroad to friends and family in the Central American country. 

El Salvador now counts 50 of the commission-free Chivo ATMs in 10 U.S. locations where local legislation permits them, President Nayib Bukele said in a series of Sept. 13 tweets. They include: Los Angeles and San Francisco, California; Dallas, El Paso, Houston, Laredo and McAllen, Texas; Doral, Florida; Atlanta, Georgia and Chicago, Ill. The Chivo map also shows two locations in Columbus, Ohio.

About 2.3 million Hispanic people of Salvadoran origin (including U.S. citizens) were living in the U.S. as of 2017 according to the Pew Research Center. Absent from the above-mentioned list is the greater Washington, D.C. area, which has one of the largest Salvadoran populations.

Salvadorans can create a Chivo account using their national ID number. Chivo members can use the ATMs to make withdrawals and recharge accounts and can use the wallet app to make payments or send either bitcoin or dollars to friends and family. Chivo users don’t have to pay a commission.

Bukele estimates that more than 500,000 users have signed up for the wallet, which rewarded citizens with a $30 bonus in Bitcoin for signing up. The government had previously noted an estimate of 50,000 people already using bitcoin in the country before the launch.

Remittances have largely consisted of sending money digitally from abroad and picking it up in cash at the destination point, with popular services including Western Union, MoneyGram and Ria. But thanks to El Salvador’s new law requiring companies to accept bitcoin, digital payment options at stores are growing. People can now choose to use a wallet like Chivo to pay for a hamburger at McDonald’s or diapers at Dollarcity even if they don’t have a bank account.

Bukele has estimated that Salvadorans spend $400 million a year on remittance fees. In 2018, remittances from the U.S. reportedly made up 21% of El Salvador’s GDP.

Bukele also acknowledged the well-documented technical problems with the rollout of the Chivo wallet, which debuted on Sept. 7. alongside the ATMs and went offline for a time due to glitches. The president claims that the government has solved 95% of the issues, including problems with bank transfers and blocked accounts. 

The quick rollout of the wallet since El Salvador voted to make bitcoin legal tender in June has raised privacy concerns, and developers pointed out several concerning bugs in its first days.

© 2021 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: Kristin Majcher

Celo picks up key hires from a16z, Facebook’s Novi and Google

cLabs, the team building the mobile-first, proof-of-stake blockchain Celo, has picked up a few big hires in the last few weeks, according to a statement provided to The Block.

This month, cLabs hired Danielle Andrzejewski as head of commerce, to focus on international business partnerships for the Celo Alliance for Prosperity — a collaboration of more than 100 member companies. She comes from VC firm a16z, which backs Celo, where she co-led its fintech go-to-market team. (See this article for more details on VC firms helping out their portfolio companies with talent acquisition.)

At the same time, cLabs onboarded Chris Ostrowski as a partner in the public sector team. Ostrowski was formerly the chief revenue officer of the London-based Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum think tank and managing director of its Digital Money Institute. Between 2008 and 2017, he was also an election candidate for the U.K.’s Labour Party.

In June, the organization hired Alberto Martin as its head of product. Martin joins after an 18 year stint at Google. He spent a long time working on the Chrome OS Platform before becoming director of product management for payments, where he was responsible for “all money movement at Google,” per his LinkedIn profile.

In May, cLabs also sniped Eric Nakagawa from Facebook’s Novi project, where he was in charge of open source strategy and community efforts. Prior to that he had worked for Facebook for four years leading developer advocacy. Nakagawa will look to grow Celo’s developer community.

© 2021 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


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