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The Protocol: A Quantum Threat to Bitcoin?

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Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk’s weekly wrap-up of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech development. I’m <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/author/marc-hochstein/» target=»_blank»>Marc Hochstein</a>, CoinDesk’s deputy editor-in-chief for features, opinion and standards.

In this issue:

What does Google’s quantum computing chip mean for Bitcoin?

Dev’s defection highlights Ethereum’s growing Solana problem

OrdinalsBot inscribes largest-ever file on Bitcoin blockchain

Polygon touts speed of Plonky3 proving system

Crypto’s most influential techies of 2024

Network News

NEED FOR SPEED: Polygon Labs claims its newest proving system, Plonky3, is the fastest on the market. (Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum’s creator, apparently <a href=»https://x.com/VitalikButerin/status/1851771622551883845?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw» target=»_blank»>agrees</a>.) A proving system is at the core of <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/consensus-magazine/2024/01/11/what-are-zero-knowledge-proofs/#:~:text=Zero%2DKnowledge%20Proofs%20(ZKPs)%20are%20protocols%20that%20help%20prove,revealing%20details%20of%20the%20transaction.» target=»_blank»>zero-knowledge rollups</a>, and a crucial component for transactions that rely on cryptographic security. It is the main piece of technology that creates proofs that summarize off-chain transactions, which are then sent back to a base blockchain (in this case, Ethereum). “If a zkVM is a car, you could look at the proving system as being the engine, so Plonky3 is kind of what makes everything work,” Brendan Farmer, a co-founder at Polygon, tells CoinDesk’s <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/author/margaux-nijkerk» target=»_blank»>Margaux Nijkerk</a>. The quicker a proof is generated, the less computing time that must be paid for. “If we improve speed, then we’re improving costs,” Farmer said. “And so what this does is it makes ZK rollup really competitive in terms of costs.” In January 2022, Polygon released <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2022/01/10/polygon-stakes-claim-to-fastest-zero-knowledge-layer-2-with-plonky2-launch» target=»_blank»>its previous proving system</a>, called Plonky2, claiming then that it was the fastest one on the market. Plonky3, the new and improved version that has more flexibility, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/07/16/polygons-new-zk-proving-system-plonky3-comes-as-open-source-toolkit» target=»_blank»>was released</a> in July.

IN AWE OF THE SIZE OF THIS LAD: Bitcoin inscriptions project OrdinalsBot minted what it says is the largest file ever on the oldest and most valuable blockchain: the last in a collection of 1,500 «Pizza Ninjas.» It’s part of a phenomenon in the Bitcoin development community known as «four meggers,» which are files that take up an entire block on the network. They are called four meggers because they are almost 4 megabytes (MB) big (the maximum size of each block of transactions on Bitcoin). Ordinal collectors consider them valuable due to their visibility on the blockchain. «There’s more than just bragging rights behind wanting to have the largest file on Bitcoin,» said Toby Lewis, co-founder of OrdinalsBot. «Four meggers will be on the Bitcoin blockchain forever and they already hold significant market value.» Bitcoin inscriptions, similar to non-fungible tokens (NFTs) on Ethereum, were made possible by the Ordinals protocol. It allows data to be «inscribed» onto individual satoshis, or «sats» (the smallest unit of BTC at 1/100,000,000 of a full bitcoin), making each one unique and potentially valuable. <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/09/bitcoin-four-meggers-ordinals-bot-inscribes-largest-ever-file-on-the-og-blockchain?_gl=1*291ojw*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTkxMDQ3NzE3MS4xNzMzOTI4NzU0*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkyODc1My4xLjAuMTczMzkyODc1My4wLjAuMjk0ODcyNDk1″ target=»_blank»>Read more</a>.

JUMPING SHIP: Ethereum’s place near the top of the crypto market is unquestioned from the perspective of market cap. Beneath the surface – at the product, developer and decision-making levels – the original smart contracts platform continues to take a beating from Solana, one of its closest competitors. Ethereum and its many closely-linked networks are still the most important, influential, and largest platforms for decentralized finance. That lead is beginning to erode, however, with many newcomers to crypto choosing Solana’s speed and low fees. The dynamic was further punctuated Monday with news that longtime Ethereum ecosystem developer Max Resnick was moving into Solana’s orbit, abandoning his job at the developer studio Consensys. «There’s just so much more possibility and potential energy in Solana,» Resnick said in an interview with CoinDesk. He framed the decision as rooted in his own career path, but noted «frustration» with Ethereum’s inability to adapt contributed to the move. Ethereum lacks a streamlined process for making quick changes. Some see that as a point of strength for a decentralized network, while others, like Resnick, see it as a hindrance for long-term success. <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/09/ethereum-dev-max-resnick-defects-to-solana-citing-frustration?_gl=1*291ojw*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTkxMDQ3NzE3MS4xNzMzOTI4NzU0*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkyODc1My4xLjAuMTczMzkyODc1My4wLjAuMjk0ODcyNDk1″ target=»_blank»>Read more</a>

MOST INFLUENTIAL: This week, for the tenth time, CoinDesk has selected the people who defined the year in crypto: Our <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/coindesk-news/2024/12/05/most-influential-2024″ target=»_blank»>Most Influential list</a>. (Here was <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2015/12/23/coindesks-most-influential-people-in-bitcoin-and-blockchain-2015?_gl=1*11liyma*_up*MQ..*_ga*NjY3NTE3MjMyLjE3MzM5MzUwMDE.*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzNTAwMS4xLjAuMTczMzkzNTAwMS4wLjAuMTA5NTg5MjgxOQ..» target=»_blank»>the first edition in 2015</a>.) Most Influential highlights personal achievements in the last calendar year. People are chosen for their projects, ideas, leadership, personality, or notoriety. There is a top 10 of the most Most Influential – people we feel had outsize influence or led the most important projects. Then, we profile another 40 people who were only a little less influential. (Certain prominent people in crypto – Vitalik Buterin, say – would naturally be Most Influential every year. But we choose not to feature the same names each time.) Among the tech luminaries we highlighted in this year’s series were <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/lily-liu-solana-s-powerhouse-ambassador?_gl=1*1guajxo*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTY5OTQ5OTY0OC4xNzMzOTMwOTQ0*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzMDk0NC4xLjAuMTczMzkzMDk0NC4wLjAuMjA2Mzg5NzYwMQ..» target=»_blank»>Solana’s Lilly Liu</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/optimism-s-jing-wang-and-the-widely-adopted-op-stack» target=»_blank»>Optimism’s Jin Yang</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/eigen-layers-sreeram-kannan-king-of-the-professor-coins?_gl=1*1guajxo*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTY5OTQ5OTY0OC4xNzMzOTMwOTQ0*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzMDk0NC4xLjAuMTczMzkzMDk0NC4wLjAuMjA2Mzg5NzYwMQ..» target=»_blank»>EigenLayer’s Sreeram Kannan</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/robin-linus-scaling-crypto-s-premier-network?_gl=1*12ja6zi*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTY5OTQ5OTY0OC4xNzMzOTMwOTQ0*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzMDk0NC4xLjAuMTczMzkzMDk0NC4wLjAuMjA2Mzg5NzYwMQ..» target=»_blank»>BitVM’s Robin Linus</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/sergio-demian-lerner-making-bitcoin-more-programmable?_gl=1*1jbg03b*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTYxMDA3MTE5OC4xNzMzOTMzMDQ2*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzMzA0NS4xLjAuMTczMzkzMzA0NS4wLjAuMTAzNzIwNzEyNg..» target=»_blank»>Rootstock’s Sergio Lerner</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/steve-yun-driving-web3-adoption-via-telegram» target=»_blank»>TON’s Steve Yun</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/illia-polosukhin-a-crypto-ai-pioneer» target=»_blank»>NEAR’s IIlia Polosukhin</a>, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/greg-osuri-delivering-on-de-pin?_gl=1*1pyj53f*_up*MQ..*_ga*NzY0NTY0MjM0LjE3MzM5Mzg5NTU.*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzODk1NC4xLjAuMTczMzkzODk1NC4wLjAuMTAzOTY5NDMzMQ..» target=»_blank»>Akash Network’s Greg Osuri</a>; <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/eric-wall-udi-wertheimer-and-francisco-alarcon-upgrading-bitcoin-with-covenants» target=»_blank»>Bitcoin’s Taproot Wizards founders</a> … and of course, <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/coindesk-news/2024/12/10/satoshi-nakamoto-the-mystery-that-probably-will-never-be-solved?_gl=1*nzhdg*_up*MQ..*_ga*MTYxMDA3MTE5OC4xNzMzOTMzMDQ2*_ga_VM3STRYVN8*MTczMzkzMzA0NS4xLjAuMTczMzkzMzA0NS4wLjAuMTAzNzIwNzEyNg..» target=»_blank»>Satoshi Nakamoto</a>, whose secret identity remains a parlor-game topic after all these years. (Writing that last piece was downright cathartic for me.) Find all the profiles <a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/coindesk-news/2024/12/05/most-influential-2024″ target=»_blank»>here</a>.

WHAT DOES GOOGLE’S QUANTUM COMPUTING CHIP MEAN FOR BITCOIN?

Google’s new quantum computing chip could mean bitcoin (BTC) is finished.

That was the sentiment for some on Monday as the internet giant unveiled Willow, a quantum supercomputer that can perform certain computational tasks in just five minutes that would take classical supercomputers an astronomical amount of time—specifically, 10 septillion years (or one followed by 24 zeroes; a trillion trillion).

10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. Such an amount of time is greater than the existence of the entire universe at 13.8 billion years.

In superficial theory, such a powerful computer could mean no passwords are safe, encrypted messages are intercepted, nuclear weapons codes are found out, and almost anything can be unlocked by brute-forcing combinations of numbers and letters.

But it isn’t all doom and gloom yet.

While quantum computing does indeed pose significant threats to current security systems, it’s not a master key to the universe, at least not right now. And there is no looming threat to Bitcoin, either.

Quantum computing leverages the principles of quantum mechanics, using quantum bits or qubits instead of traditional bits. Unlike bits which represent either a 0 or 1, qubits can represent both 0 and 1 simultaneously due to quantum phenomena like superposition and entanglement. This allows quantum computers to perform multiple calculations at once, potentially solving problems that are currently intractable for classical computers. Willow uses 105 qubits and demonstrates an exponential error reduction as the number of qubits increases. This is a critical step towards building a practical, large-scale quantum computer, said Google CEO Sundar Pichai.

Bitcoin uses algorithms like SHA-256 for mining and ECDSA for signatures, which might be vulnerable to quantum decryption. And the short answer is that quantum computers, even advanced ones like Google’s Willow, do not possess the scale or error correction capabilities needed to immediately decrypt widely used encryption methods like RSA, ECC (used in Bitcoin transactions), or AES (used in securing data).

If quantum computers like Willow reach a scale where they can easily factor in large numbers, they could potentially break these encryption schemes, compromising wallet security and transaction integrity. That would require quantum computers with millions or even billions of “qubits” with extremely low error rates, far beyond the current technology.

“Google claims to have demonstrated ‘below threshold’ error correcting capabilities with their latest quantum chip,” said Chris Osborn, founder at Solana ecosystem project Dialect, in a post on X (formerly Twitter). «‘Below threshold’ is industry jargon for turning physical qubits, which are noisy, s*itty quantum bits that are basically useless, into logical qubits, which are multi-qubit abstractions that correct for errors & let you actually perform real computation.” he added.

It takes roughly 5,000 logical qubits «to run Shor’s algorithm to break encryption. In other words, millions of physical qubits are needed to break encryption. Google’s chip today: 105 physical qubits,” Osborn noted.

Until then, cryptocurrencies (and other sectors) have time to develop quantum-resistant algorithms.

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/tech/2024/12/10/what-does-googles-quantum-computing-chip-mean-for-bitcoin» target=»_blank»>CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL ARTICLE BY COINDESK’S SHAURYA MALWA</a>

Money Center

Hole in the wallet

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/business/2024/12/10/magic-edens-5-b-token-airdrop-raises-crypto-wallet-security-questions» target=»_blank»>Magic Eden’s $5B Token Airdrop Raises Crypto Wallet Security Questions</a>

Deals and grants

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/business/2024/12/10/binance-partners-with-circle-to-push-usdc-stablecoin-adoption-across-the-globe» target=»_blank»>Binance Partners With Circle to Push USDC Stablecoin Adoption Across the Globe</a>

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/business/2024/12/11/stablecoin-trading-startup-perena-tries-its-luck-on-solana» target=»_blank»>Stablecoin Trading Startup Perena Tries Its Luck on Solana</a>

Happy perp-day

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2024/12/11/as-bit-mex-turns-10-the-market-is-still-thankful-for-the-perpetual-swap» target=»_blank»>As BitMEX Turns 10, the Market Is Still Thankful for the Perpetual Swap</a>

Regulatory and policy

<a href=»https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2024/12/10/el-salvador-and-argentina-regulators-sign-agreement-to-help-develop-crypto-industry» target=»_blank»>El Salvador and Argentina Regulators Sign Agreement to Help Develop Crypto Industry</a>

Calendar

Dec. 4-5: <a href=»https://indiablockchainweek.com/» target=»_blank»>India Blockchain Week</a>, Bangalore

Dec. 5-6: <a href=»https://www.theblock.co/post/283406/the-block-launches-emergence-a-premier-conference-for-the-digital-assets-industry» target=»_blank»>Emergence</a>, Prague

Dec. 9-12: <a href=»https://adfw.com/» target=»_blank»>Abu Dhabi Finance Week</a>

Dec. 11-12: <a href=»https://newyork.theaisummit.com/» target=»_blank»>AI Summit NYC</a>

Dec. 11-14: <a href=»https://www.taipeiblockchainweek.com/» target=»_blank»>Taipei Blockchain Week</a>

Jan 9-12, 2025: <a href=»https://www.ces.tech/» target=»_blank»>CES</a>, Las Vegas

Jan. 15-19: <a href=»https://www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forum-annual-meeting-2024″ target=»_blank»>World Economic Forum</a>, Davos, Switzerland

January 21-25: <a href=»https://329b0589.isolation.zscaler.com/profile/2332cf23-bc6a-418b-a941-f595d0e3ea25/zia-session/?controls_id=22337358-9ef1-4c14-8042-bae40f505928&region=pdx&tenant=cac35314c425&user=065ae33aa0b7fd8bb4e9ae9286b2fcf7c62d677db428d6cd9b6e4d01e6ffa098&original_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwagmi.miami%2F&key=sh-1&hmac=5349b2cbc41b5242c21267747a0dc197c5cb3cc3c860fe73f8de2f049e1adea8″ target=»_blank»>WAGMI conference</a>, Miami.

Jan. 24-25: <a href=»https://adoptingbitcoin.org/capetown-2024/» target=»_blank»>Adopting Bitcoin</a>, Cape Town, South Africa.

Jan. 30-31: <a href=»https://planb.sv/» target=»_blank»>PLAN B Forum</a>, San Salvador, El Salvador.

Feb. 1-6: <a href=»https://satoshiroundtable.org/» target=»_blank»>Satoshi Roundtable</a>, Dubai

Feb. 19-20, 2025: <a href=»https://consensus-hongkong2025.coindesk.com/» target=»_blank»>ConsensusHK</a>, Hong Kong.

Feb. 23-24: <a href=»https://www.nftparis.xyz/» target=»_blank»>NFT Paris</a>

Feb 23-March 2: <a href=»https://www.ethdenver.com/» target=»_blank»>ETHDenver</a>

May 14-16: <a href=»https://consensus2025.coindesk.com/» target=»_blank»>Consensus</a>, Toronto.

March 18-19: <a href=»https://blockworks.co/event/digital-asset-summit-2024-london/home» target=»_blank»>Digital Asset Summit</a>, London

May 27-29: <a href=»https://x.com/LasVegasLocally/status/1817280637457551831″ target=»_blank»>Bitcoin 2025</a>, Las Vegas.

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Business

HBAR Retreats Amid Constrained Range Trading and Diminishing Volumes

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HBAR spent much of the past 23 hours locked in a narrow range, oscillating between $0.23 and $0.24 in what amounted to just 2% volatility. The token briefly touched session highs at $0.24 on Sept. 16 around 18:00 UTC before sliding lower, ultimately finding repeated support near $0.23. Multiple rebound attempts from that level throughout Sept. 17’s morning trading hinted at a potential price floor, though conviction remained limited.

Market activity tapered alongside the price drift. Trading volumes fell steadily after an early spike, underscoring weakening participation and suggesting that bullish momentum has largely faded. The constrained range and muted volatility reinforced the impression of indecision, with buyers and sellers unwilling to press for a breakout.

The final hour of the observed period offered a sharper display of market sentiment. At 13:33 UTC on Sept. 17, HBAR sold off abruptly from $0.24 to $0.23, accompanied by an outsized 2.56 million in volume just three minutes later. Yet the coin staged a measured recovery, climbing back to end near session highs, encapsulating the day’s push and pull between sellers and opportunistic dip buyers.

Overall, HBAR slipped 1% across the 23-hour window. While the establishment of support around $0.23 provides some stability, declining volumes and sustained downward pressure leave the market vulnerable. The swift sell-off and subsequent rebound illustrate the uncertainty still shaping HBAR’s outlook, with bearish sentiment prevailing but tempered by signs of technical resilience.

HBAR/USD (TradingView)

Technical Indicators Assessment

  • Price action demonstrated consolidation within a 2% range between $0.23-$0.24 resistance and support thresholds.
  • Volume contracted from 45.7 million to 4.7 million tokens indicating deteriorating market participation.
  • Multiple rebounds at $0.23 support level suggest potential price floor establishment.
  • Acute sell-off at 13:33 followed by recovery indicates volatile intraday sentiment fluctuations.

Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

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Business

The Protocol: ETH Exit Queue Gridlocks As Validators Pile Up

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Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk’s weekly wrap of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech development. I’m Margaux Nijkerk, a reporter at CoinDesk.

In this issue:

  • Ethereum Faces Validator Bottleneck With 2.5M ETH Awaiting Exit
  • Is Ethereum’s DeFi Future on L2s? Liquidity, Innovation Say Perhaps Yes
  • Ethereum Foundation Starts New AI Team to Support Agentic Payments
  • American Express Introduces Blockchain-Based ‘Travel Stamps’
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Network News

ETHEREUM VALIDATOR EXIT QUEUE FACES BOTTLENECK: Ethereum’s proof-of-stake system is facing its largest test yet. As of mid-September, roughly 2.5 million ETH — valued at roughly $11.25 billion — is waiting to leave the validator set, according to validator queue dashboards. The backlog pushed exit wait times to more than 46 days on Sept. 14, the longest in Ethereum’s short staking history, dashboards show. The last peak, in August, put the exit queue at 18 days. The initial spark came on Sept. 9, when Kiln, a large infrastructure provider, chose to exit all of its validators as a safety precaution. The move, triggered by recent security incidents including the NPM supply-chain attack and the SwissBorg breach, pushed around 1.6 million ETH into the queue at once. Though unrelated to Ethereum’s staking protocol itself, the hacks rattled confidence enough for Kiln to hit pause, highlighting how events in the broader crypto ecosystem can cascade into Ethereum’s validator dynamics. In a blog post from staking provider Figment, Senior Analyst Benjamin Thalman noted that the current exit queue build up isn’t only about security. After ETH has rallied more than 160% since April, some stakers are simply taking profits. Others, especially institutional players, are shifting their portfolios’ exposure. At the same time, the number of validators entering the Ethereum staking ecosystem has been steadily rising. Ethereum’s churn limit, which is a protocol safeguard that caps how many validators can enter or exit over a certain time period, is currently capped at 256 ETH per epoch (about 6.4 minutes), restricting how quickly validators can join or leave the network. The churn limit is meant to keep the network stable. With more than 2.5M ETH lined up, stakers on Sept. 16 face 44 days before even reaching the cooldown step. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.

IS L2 DEFI EATING AT ETHEREUM’S L1 DEFI?: Ethereum is in the midst of a paradox. Even as ether hit record highs in late August, decentralized finance (DeFi) activity on Ethereum’s layer-1 (L1) looks muted compared to its peak in late 2021. Fees collected on mainnet in August were just $44 million, a 44% drop from the prior month. Meanwhile, layer-2 (L2) networks like Arbitrum and Base are booming, with $20 billion and $15 billion in total value locked (TVL) respectively. This divergence raises a crucial question: are L2s cannibalizing Ethereum’s DeFi activity, or is the ecosystem evolving into a multi-layered financial architecture? AJ Warner, the chief strategy officer of Offchain Labs, the developer firm behind layer-2 Arbitrum, argues that the metrics are more nuanced than just layer-2 DeFi chipping at the layer 1.In an interview with CoinDesk, Warner said that focusing solely on TVL misses the point, and that Ethereum is increasingly functioning as crypto’s “global settlement layer,” a foundation for high-value issuance and institutional activity. Products like Franklin Templeton’s tokenized funds or BlackRock’s BUIDL product launch directly on Ethereum L1 — activity that isn’t fully captured in DeFi metrics but underscores Ethereum’s role as the bedrock of crypto finance. Ethereum as a layer-1 blockchain is the secure but relatively slow and expensive base network. Layer-2s are scaling networks built on top of it, designed to handle transactions faster and at a fraction of the cost before ultimately settling back to Ethereum for security. That’s why they’ve become so appealing to traders and builders alike. Metrics like TVL, the amount of crypto deposited in DeFi protocols, highlight this shift as activity is moved to L2s where lower fees and quicker confirmations make everyday DeFi far more practical. — Margaux Nijkerk Read more.

EF STARTS DECENTRALIZED AI TEAM: The Ethereum Foundation (EF) is creating a dedicated artificial intelligence (AI) group to make Ethereum the settlement and coordination layer for what it calls the “machine economy,” according to research scientist Davide Crapis. Crapis, who announced the initiative on X, said the new dAI Team will pursue two priorities: enabling AI agents to pay and coordinate without intermediaries, and building a decentralized AI stack that avoids reliance on a small number of large companies. He said Ethereum’s neutrality, verifiability and censorship resistance make it a natural base layer for intelligent systems. The EF is a non-profit organization based in Zug, Switzerland, that funds and coordinates the development of the Ethereum blockchain. It does not control the network but plays a catalytic role by supporting researchers, developers and ecosystem projects. Its remit includes funding upgrades such as Ethereum 2.0, zero-knowledge proofs and layer-2 scaling, alongside community programs like the Ecosystem Support Program. The foundation also organizes events such as Devcon to foster collaboration and acts as a policy advocate for blockchain adoption. In 2025, EF restructured to handle Ethereum’s growth, emphasizing ecosystem acceleration, founder support and enterprise outreach. The new dAI Team represents a continuation of this shift toward specialized units addressing emerging technologies. — Siamak Masnavi Read more.

AMERICAN EXPRESS DABBLES IN BLOCKCHAIN TRAVEL STAMPS: American Express has introduced Ethereum-based «travel stamps» to create a commemorative record of travel experiences. The travel experience tokens, which are technically NFTs (ERC 721 tokens), are minted and stored on Coinbase’s Base network, said Colin Marlowe, vice president of Emerging Partnerships at Amex Digital Labs. The travel stamps, which can be collected anytime a traveler uses their card, are not tradable NTF tokens, Marlowe said, and neither do they function like blockchain-based loyalty points — at least for the time being. “It’s a valueless ERC-721, so technically an NFT, but we just didn’t brand it as such. We wanted to speak to it in a way that was natural for the travel experience itself, and so we talk about these things as stamps, and they’re represented as tokens,” Marlowe said in an interview. “As an identifier and representation of history the stamps could create interesting partnership angles over time. We weren’t trying to sell these or sort of generate any like short term revenue. The angle is to make a travel experience with Amex feel really rich, really different, and kind of set it apart,” he said. Fireblocks is also involved, supporting Amex as its Wallet-as-a-Service provider for the passport product, a Fireblocks representative said. The Amex travel app also includes a range of tools for travels and Centurion Lounge upgrades, the company said. – Ian Allison Read more.

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In Other News

  • Blockchain-based real world asset (RWA) specialists Centrifuge and Plume have launched the Anemoy Tokenized Apollo Diversified Credit Fund (ACRDX), backed by a $50 million anchor investment from Grove, a credit infrastructure protocol within the Sky Ecosystem. The fund gives blockchain investors exposure to Apollo’s diversified global credit strategy, spanning direct corporate lending, asset-backed lending and dislocated credit, a type of mispriced debt due to market stress and lack of liquidity. ACRDX will be distributed through Plume’s Nest Credit vaults under the ticker nACRDX, making the strategy accessible to institutional investors on-chain. By packaging Apollo’s portfolio in tokenized form, the fund aims to lower entry barriers and increase transparency for investors seeking exposure to private credit markets, according to a press release. — Ian Allison Read more.
  • Google is taking a step toward merging artificial intelligence (AI) and digital money, rolling out a new open-source protocol that lets AI applications send and receive payments, which includes support for stablecoins, digital tokens pegged to fiat currencies such as the U.S. dollar, according to a press release. To incorporate stablecoin rails, Google teamed up with the U.S.-based crypto exchange Coinbase, which has been developing its own AI-integrated payments infrastructure. The company also worked with the Ethereum Foundation and coordinated with more than 60 other organizations, including Salesforce, American Express and Etsy, to cover traditional finance use cases. The move builds on Google’s earlier work to establish a standard for “AI agents.” These digital agents may eventually handle complex tasks, such as negotiating mortgages or shopping for clothes, without direct human input. — Oliver Knight Read more.
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Regulatory and Policy

  • Contrary to claims from the U.S. banking industry, stablecoins do not pose a risk to the financial system, according to the chief policy officer at crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN), Faryar Shirzad. Banks’ claims that they do are are myths crafted to defend their revenues, he wrote in a blog post. «The central claim — that stablecoins will cause a mass outflow of bank deposits — simply doesn’t hold up,» Shirzad wrote. «Recent analysis shows no meaningful link between stablecoin adoption and deposit flight for community banks and there’s no reason to believe big banks would fare any worse.» Larger lenders still hold trillions of dollars at the Federal Reserve and if deposits were really at risk, he argued, they would be competing harder for customer funds by offering higher interest rates rather than parking cash at the central bank. According to Shirzad, the real reason for banks’ opposition is the payments business. Stablecoins, digital tokens whose value is pegged to a real-life asset such as the dollar, offer faster and cheaper ways to move money, threatening an estimated $187 billion in annual swipe-fee revenue for traditional card networks and banks. He compared the current pushback to earlier battles against ATMs and online banking, when incumbents warned of systemic dangers but, he said, were ultimately trying to protect entrenched profits. — Jesse Hamilton Read more.
  • U.S. SEC Chair Paul Atkins said crypto’s time has come, pledging to modernize the U.S. securities rulebook and expand “Project Crypto” to bring markets on-chain. Speaking in Paris on Sept. 10 at the OECD’s inaugural Roundtable on Global Financial Markets, Atkins said the SEC is shifting away from enforcement-driven policymaking and will provide clear rules for tokens, custody, and trading platforms. “Policy will no longer be set by ad hoc enforcement actions,” he said, calling the new approach “a golden age of financial innovation on U.S. soil.” Atkins said most tokens are not securities and promised bright-line rules for determining when crypto assets fall under SEC oversight. He said entrepreneurs must be able to raise capital on-chain without “endless legal uncertainty” and pledged a framework for platforms that integrate trading, lending, and staking under one license. Custody rules will also be updated to allow investors and intermediaries multiple options. — Siamak Masnavi Read more.
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Bullish Shares Rise 5% Ahead of Earnings After Crypto Exchange Secures New York BitLicense

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Shares of Bullish (BLSH) rose 5% to $53.12 on Tuesday after the crypto platform secured a BitLicense from the New York State Department of Financial Services, a crucial regulatory approval that opens the door to offering spot trading and custody services to institutional clients in New York.

With the license, Bullish’s U.S. arm — Bullish US Operations LLC — can now legally serve advanced traders in the financial capital of the U.S., an important step in the company’s push to expand domestically. Until now, Bullish was only regulated in Germany, Hong Kong and Gibraltar. Bullish’s global parent is also CoinDesk’s parent company.

The license comes just a day after Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest significantly increased its exposure to the company. The ARK Innovation ETF (ARKK) acquired 120,609 shares while ARK Next Generation Internet ETF (ARKW) picked up 40,574 shares, together worth about $8.21 million.

Bullish, which runs a trading platform aimed at institutional investors, will report second-quarter earnings after markets close on Wednesday.

Earlier this week, investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW) initiated coverage on the company with a «market perform» rating and a $55 price target. The firm called Bullish “a rare public play” on a crypto exchange built for institutions and noted that its entry into the U.S. could drive growth. KBW sees domestic expansion as a key catalyst.

Bullish debuted on the New York Stock Exchange in August through a direct listing. Its stock surged to $104 on opening day before closing at $68. Since then, shares have fallen 22%, with today’s BitLicense announcement providing a boost.

If Bullish succeeds in expanding its footprint in the U.S., it could emerge as a legitimate competitor to Coinbase, according to brokerage firm Bernstein. The firm said success will depend on the platform’s ability to execute on its U.S. launch plans, currently targeted for 2026, Bernstein said.

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