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Yuga Labs tech demo draws thousands of Otherside land holders

Yuga Labs, creators of the Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT collection, completed the first load test on Wednesday afternoon of the Otherside metaverse.

The test for the game — which lets users turn their NFTs into playable characters — lasted approximately 25 minutes. There was a gas-less signature to verify Otherdeed ownership and enter the test.

The feedback from land holders — which Yuga Labs will incorporate into the final version — was generally positive. Adam Hollander, who owns 20 Otherdeeds, initially had trouble logging into the platform. But he managed to get in and was “extremely impressed” by the stress test, he said on Twitter. He added that thousands of active players were able to run around as 3D models without lag. 

tropoFarmer, an NFT collector, streamed the event on Twitch. His reaction was similar to Hollander’s.

“Insanely smooth, no visual nor input lag,” he said on Twitter. “Movement felt fluid and enjoyable + supporting 2500+ users concurrently in a single instance is insanely impressive.” 

The experience on Wednesday appeared to be a bare-bones version of what will come on July 16. Today’s test featured a white space and over two thousand avatars roaming within it.

“Thanks everyone who came out to stress test this,” said Bored Ape Yacht Club co-founder Garga.eth on Twitter. “Had about 2.5k concurrent users running around in the neutral space. Tons of great info compiled to make sure First Trip goes smoothly, and taking all your notes from Discord as well.”

Screenshot of the test. [Credit: Adam Hollander]

© 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

Fantom community voting on whether to use burn fee to fund projects

The Fantom community is currently voting on whether it should set up a fund to support projects in the network’s ecosystem, funded by transaction fees that are currently burned.

This vote is based on a governance proposal that was submitted by Fantom Foundation director of business development Sam Harcourt. It calls for the creation of an on-chain Ecosystem Support Vault that will hold funds dedicated towards funding projects, ideas, and other proposals on the Fantom Opera network.

This vault will draw funds from transaction fees on the Fantom network. Specifically, a third of the fees that would otherwise have been burned — this is where transaction fees are destroyed instead of going to the network validator — will go toward funding the vault.

Voting on the proposal started on July 5 and will end on October 3. It can be accessed through fWallet, Fantom’s default wallet. Currently voters are in favor but it is only at a 2.78% participation rate so this is early days. It needs see this rise to 55% for it to reach quorum.

The Fantom Opera network currently burns 30% of all transaction fees as a means of inducing disinflationary pressure on FTM, the network’s native coin. Harcourt’s proposal, if passed, will reduce the amount of FTM that gets burned on a daily basis.

Fantom’s Special Fee Contract (SFC) will custody the funds meant for the vault. The SFC is responsible for distributing rewards to stakers and delegators on the network.

According to the governance proposal, projects looking to apply for a grant from the vault will have to submit a request through the network’s governance portal using fWallet. The community will then vote whether or not to grant the request.

If granted, the Foundation will pay out the grant sum via on-chain transaction automation services like LlamaPay. The Foundation also said it will work to create its own automated payment function for the vault.

© 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 Riot moves hardware fleet out of New York hosting facility

Bitcoin miner Riot is moving a part of its fleet out of New York and into its new Whinstone facility in Texas, in an effort to lower operational costs.

About 5,700 of the company’s rigs are currently offline, according to a monthly update published Wednesday.

That resulted in a reduction of the miner’s operating hash rate from 4.6 exahash per second (EH/s) at the end of May to 4.4 EH/s.

Riot says the move out of New York will allow it to cut third-party hosting fees and lower power costs. The company has also entered into a miner swap agreement with another bitcoin “mining counterparty.” All the rigs that were previously in Coinmint’s facility in Massena, NY are expected to be redeployed in June, per Riot’s statement.

Riot deployed 4,676 S19j Pro rigs at Whinstone in June and is set to receive 6,333 additional ones in July. The miner expects to reach 5.0 EH/s once they are all deployed. It also forecasts reaching 12.5 EH/s by January of 2023.

In June, Riot produced 421 BTC and sold 300, generating $6.2 million. As of June 30, it held 6,654 BTC.

Throughout the month, the company curtailed energy consumption by 8,648 megawatt-hours. Riot coordinates efforts with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) to power down at times when the grid is under stress and electricity prices go up.

“We view this as an important part of our partnership-driven approach with ERCOT and our commitment to being a good corporate citizen in our communities,” said CEO Jason Les. “Participation in the 4CP program also reduces Riot’s energy costs in the proceeding year.”

Last month, high temperatures in Texas led to record-breaking power use levels for the month of June.

© 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: Catarina Moura

Binance set to drop bitcoin trading fees to zero on select pairs globally

Global crypto exchange Binance announced on Wednesday that it will remove bitcoin trading fees for thirteen stablecoin and fiat combinations

From July 8 onwards users of the platform will be able to trade these thirteen combinations with zero fees, including — BTC/USDT, BTC/BUSD, BTC/USDC, BTC/EUR, BTC/TRY — the exchange said.

The announcement comes as part of its fifth anniversary celebrations, which will take place over the next two weeks. It went on to say that users will be able to trade the pairs fee-free until further notice. 

CEO Changpeng Zhao said the move is in line with the company’s “user-first philosophy,” before adding that “Binance has always strived to provide the most competitive fees in the industry.”

Trading fees have become talking point across the industry as exchanges jostle for position ahead of a forecasted ‘crypto winter.’ In addition to Binance.US dropping fees Coinbase has begun to merge its Coinbase Pro features onto its main site, while maintaining the same fees offered on the Pro platform. 

Wednesday’s announcement comes just two weeks after its American affiliate Binance.US cut bitcoin trading fees to zero for select pairs, becoming the first US exchange to do so in the process.

In a research note on June 27 Goldman Sachs said, “we are not particularly concerned about the recent announcement by Binance.US to reduce fees on bitcoin pairs on its exchange given Binance.US’s size relative to COIN (only 13% of COIN’s volumes in May).”

Given the prominence of Binance globally, compared to its budding US affiliate, today’s announcement could impact its competitors. 

© 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: Adam Morgan McCarthy

Ondo Finance raises $10 million in public token sale

Ondo Finance, a decentralized finance (DeFi) startup that provides structured investment products, has raised $10 million in a public token sale.

Sharing the news exclusively with The Block on Wednesday, Ondo Finance said more than 16,500 people bought its native ONDO token during the sale, which was conducted via CoinList on May 12 and 13 — just days after the implosion of the algorithmic stablecoin TerraUSD (UST).

Around 2% of ONDO’s total supply was offloaded through the sale, Nathan Allman, co-founder and CEO of Ondo Finance, told The Block. The total supply of ONDO is 10 billion. The token’s fully diluted valuation currently stands at $525 million, Allman added.

Ondo’s public token sale comes two months after the firm raised $20 million in Series A funding co-led by Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund and Pantera Capital.

Ondo was founded last year by Allman and Pinku Surana — two former Goldman Sachs employees — to provide structured products built on top of decentralized exchanges.

The products, known as “vaults,” offer fixed and variable yields. Depositors in fixed yield vaults receive a fixed percentage of yield over their initial investment. Depositors in variable yield vaults receive all excess returns after the fixed yield vaults receive their payout.

“Like a traditional investment bank, Ondo aims to be a hub matching those who have capital with those who need it through the creation of customized financial products that organizations can offer to investors,” said Allman.

With fresh capital injection, Ondo plans to continue building its platform and developing new products. “We are focused on creating structured products that use smart contracts to decompose on-chain income streams from token issuers into tranches with different levels of risk, appealing to risk-averse institutions as well as more risk-tolerant retail,” said Allman.

The public token sale brings Ondo’s total funding to date to $34 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

CleanSpark sold nearly all 339 bitcoin it mined in June

Bitcoin miner CleanSpark increased its production in June by almost 9% compared with the previous month, mining a total of 339 BTC.

The company also sold nearly all bitcoin mined in June, according to a production update published on Wednesday.

CleanSpark brought in roughly $8.4 million from the sale of 328 bitcoin (at an average of $25,644 per BTC). Bitcoin lost about a third of its value over the month of June, going from around the $30,000 mark at the beginning of June to close to $20,000 now.

CleanSpark has been less rigorous about holding on to its mined bitcoin than others in the industry, instead choosing to sell some each month. It held a total of 561 BTC as of June 30. “We won’t blindly accumulate bitcoin at the cost of diluting our shareholders and taking on unnecessary debt,” CEO Zach Bradford said during the first-quarter 2022 earnings call in early May.

Still, even the miners who have historically maintained a policy of holding onto their coins have been selling recently. Last month, Core Scientific sold 7,202 BTC — about 89% of the bitcoin holdings it had at the end of May. Bitfarms also gave up 3,000 BTC to pay down part of a $100 million loan.

Earlier this month, CleanSpark announced that it acquired 1,800 mining rigs, adding over 0.252 exahash per second (EH/s) to its bitcoin mining capacity. Currently, it operates a fleet of roughly 28,500 bitcoin miners with a hash rate exceeding 2.8 EH/s.

“We were able to secure the contract at an exceptional price because of our strategic relationships and the unique circumstances that current market conditions have created,” said Bradford.

The company also said in the statement Wednesday that it is closer to becoming exclusively a bitcoin miner, having exited the switchgear business it was involved in last month. Per that agreement, CleanSpark was released from all liabilities while still maintaining the right to certain receivable rights and prepaid deposits. 

“This move strengthens our balance sheet and frees up working and human capital for our high-value, bitcoin mining business,” said Bradford.

© 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: Catarina Moura

Bitcoin is the ‘Holy Grail’ of accounting, says Core Scientific founder

Episode 61 of Season 4 of The Scoop was recorded remotely with The Block’s Frank Chaparro and Darin Feinstein, founder of Core Scientific.

Listen below, and subscribe to The Scoop on AppleSpotifyGoogle PodcastsStitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts. Email feedback and revision requests to podcast@theblockcrypto.com.


With bitcoin’s market cap hovering around $380 billion — down from over $1.25 trillion last November — lately much attention has been paid to bitcoin’s price action in the mainstream media.

Although headlines often focus on bitcoin’s economic component, they are missing the most important aspect of the technology, according to Darin Feinstein, founder of bitcoin mining company Core Scientific. According to Feinstein, “The root of what this technology is, it’s a new accounting technology — that’s the base.”

In a new episode of The Scoop, Feinstein explains the significance of the technology underlying the bitcoin blockchain, and why he thinks it represents the first innovation in the field of accounting in over 700 years.

Feinstein says his background in accounting helped him see bitcoin’s potential back in 2011,

“I read somewhere about the immutability of the ledger, and as an accountant, it caught my eye. Then I said, ‘That’s impossible, there’s no such thing as an immutable ledger,’ — that’s the holy grail of accounting.”

The ledger is the technology responsible for fundamentally organizing society, he says.

“There’s nothing more important to your life, in terms of how you function every day, then all of the ledgers that exist that people rely on to know where you are, and what you’re doing, and what you own.”

After spending months researching bitcoin, Feinstein concluded that not only is it an immutable ledger, but one that removes human risk from the equation:

“It disrupts the world because you now have a permanent accounting ledger that nobody can manipulate, you can’t commit fraud on it, you can’t alter it, you can’t claim human error — the records are the records. It’s the first time in human history you have truth on-chain ever.”

During this episode, Chaparro and Feinstein also discuss:

  • Bitcoin mining energy usage
  • The Byzantine General problem
  • Bitcoin versus credit card transaction settlement

This episode is brought to you by our sponsors Chainalysis & IWC Schauffhausen

About Chainalysis
Chainalysis is the leading blockchain data platform. We provide data, software, services, and research to government agencies, exchanges, financial institutions, and insurance and cybersecurity companies in over 60 countries. Backed by Accel, Addition, Benchmark, Coatue, Paradigm, Ribbit, and other leading firms in venture capital, Chainalysis builds trust in blockchains to promote more financial freedom with less risk. For more information, visit www.chainalysis.com.

About IWC Schaffhausen
IWC Schaffhausen is a Swiss luxury watch manufacturer based in Schaffhausen, Switzerland. Known for its unique engineering approach to watchmaking, IWC combines the best of human craftsmanship and creativity with cutting-edge technology and processes. With collections like the Portugieser and the Pilot’s Watches, the brand covers the whole spectrum from elegant timepieces to sports watches. For more information, visit IWC.com

© 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: Davis Quinton and Frank Chaparro

The Current State of Bitcoin ASIC Marketplace

Quick Take

  • Apart from declining profitability, mining companies are also bleeding on the equipment front as ASIC miner value depreciates.
  • Meanwhile, the hefty remaining equipment payables have started to cause some companies to step back from previous expansion plans.
  • Mining companies’ spendings on property, plant and equipment have already slowed down over 22’Q1 compared to 21’Q4.
  • In this piece, we take a further look at the current state of the bitcoin ASIC miner marketplace.

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: Wolfie Zhao

How a fake job offer took down the world’s most popular crypto game

Rarely has a job application backfired more spectacularly than in the case of one senior engineer at Axie Infinity, whose interest in joining what turned out to be a fictitious company led to one of the crypto sector’s biggest hacks.  

Ronin, the Ethereum-linked sidechain that underpins play-to-earn game Axie Infinity, lost $540 million in crypto to an exploit in March. While the US government later tied the incident to North Korean hacking group Lazarus, full details of how the exploit was carried out have not been disclosed. 

The Block can now reveal that a fake job ad was Ronin’s undoing. 

According to two people with direct knowledge of the matter, who were granted anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the incident, a senior engineer at Axie Infinity was duped into applying for a job at a company that, in reality, did not exist.  

Axie Infinity was huge. At its peak, workers in Southeast Asia were even able to earn a living through the play-to-earn game. It boasted 2.7 million daily active users and $214 million in weekly trading volume for its in-game NFTs in November last year — although both numbers have since plummeted.

Earlier this year, staff at Axie Infinity developer Sky Mavis were approached by people purporting to represent the fake company and encouraged to apply for jobs, according to the people familiar with the matter. One source added that the approaches were made through the professional networking site LinkedIn. 

After what one source described as multiple rounds of interviews, a Sky Mavis engineer was offered a job with an extremely generous compensation package. 

The fake “offer” was delivered in the form of a PDF document, which the engineer downloaded — allowing spyware to infiltrate Ronin’s systems. From there, hackers were able to attack and take over four out of nine validators on the Ronin network — leaving them just one validator short of total control. 

In a post-mortem blog post on the hack, published April 27, Sky Mavis said: “Employees are under constant advanced spear-phishing attacks on various social channels and one employee was compromised. This employee no longer works at Sky Mavis. The attacker managed to leverage that access to penetrate Sky Mavis IT infrastructure and gain access to the validator nodes.”

Validators fulfill various functions in blockchains, including the creation of transaction blocks and the updating of data oracles. Ronin uses a so-called “proof of authority” system for signing transactions, concentrating power in the hands of nine trusted actors.

An April blog post on the incident from blockchain analysis firm Elliptic explains: “Funds can be moved out if five of the nine validators approve it. The attacker managed to get hold of the private cryptographic keys belonging to five of the validators, which was enough to steal the cryptoassets.”

But after successfully infiltrating Ronin’s systems through the fake job ad, the hackers had control of just four out of the nine validators — meaning they needed another in order to take control. 

In its post-mortem, Sky Mavis revealed that the hackers managed to use the Axie DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) — a group set up to support the gaming ecosystem — to complete the heist. Sky Mavis had asked the DAO for help dealing with a heavy transaction load in November 2021. 

“The Axie DAO allowlisted Sky Mavis to sign various transactions on its behalf. This was discontinued in December 2021, but the allowlist access was not revoked,” said Sky Mavis in the blog post. “Once the attacker got access to Sky Mavis systems they were able to get the signature from the Axie DAO validator.”

A month after the hack, Sky Mavis had increased the number of its validator nodes to 11, and said in the blog post that its long-term goal was to have more than 100.  

Sky Mavis declined to comment on how the hack was carried out when reached. LinkedIn didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment.

Earlier today, ESET Research published an investigation showing that North Korea’s Lazarus had abused LinkedIn and WhatsApp by posing as recruiters to target aerospace and defense contractors. But the report did not tie that technique to the Sky Mavis hack. 

Sky Mavis raised $150 million in a round led by Binance in early April. The proceeds will be used alongside the company’s own funds to reimburse users affected by the exploit. The company said recently that it would begin returning funds to users on June 28. After coming to a sudden halt at the time of the hack, Ronin’s Ethereum bridge also relaunched last week.

The rate of DeFi hacks has accelerated rapidly this year, topping $2 billion in total funds lost, according to The Block Research data. On January 1, the number stood at $760 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: Ryan Weeks

Ethereum developers activate the merge on Sepolia testnet

On Wednesday, Sepolia, one of Ethereum’s public testnets, has undergone the merge. With this, Ethereum developers have take another step closer to the merge on the main blockchain later this year.

In this event, Sepolia’s proof-of-work chain (execution layer) “merged” with its proof-of-stake beacon chain (consensus layer) at around 2 PM UTC. To make this happen, node operators on the testnet’s proof-of-work and proof-of-stake sides had to update their client software in tandem.

The goal of this exercise was to check if the validator nodes from both of Sepolia’s two chains can work together. The same process is set to happen with the Ethereum mainnet merge event. While no date has yet been set, it is expected to happen before the end of this year.

Performing the merge on a public testnet functions as a dry run for the main network. Furthermore, the exercise is likely going to help client firms uncover and fix software issues ahead of the mainnet deployment.

Ethereum developers have planned to test the merge on three public testnets. Two of which have now happened: Ropsten and Sepolia. There is now only the Goerli testnet left to be merged in the coming weeks.

© 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


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