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Superstate Expands Into Tokenized Equities; SOL Strategies to Be First Listing

Superstate, the tokenized asset management firm behind the $650 million USTB token, is moving into stock tokenization with a new blockchain-based marketplace for public equities, first available on Solana (SOL).
The platform, called Opening Bell and unveiled on Wednesday, allows companies to create tokenized versions of SEC-registered shares—not derivatives or synthetic assets—and trade directly on blockchain rails.
Unlike current practices that rely on centralized stock exchanges and multi-day settlements, Opening Bell supports real-time, around-the-clock trading and programmable securities. The platform targets both already public firms on traditional stock exchanges and late-stage private companies seeking access to liquidity.
Canadian investment firm SOL Strategies said it plans to be the first issuer on the platform, listing its stock for on-chain trading on Solana pending regulatory approval.
Tokenization has become one of the hottest trends in finance. Asset managers and even central banks are experimenting with putting real-world assets—bonds, funds, equities—onto blockchains to improve efficiency and broaden access.
It’s a huge opportunity: tokenized assets are projected to become a multitrillion-dollar market this decade, according to reports by McKinsey, BCG, 21Shares and Bernstein.
While the technology is advancing quickly, industry leaders including BlackRock’s Larry Fink and Robinhood’s Vlad Tenev have urged regulators to provide clearer guidelines. The SEC plans to hold a roundtable on tokenization next week, with Superstate general partner Alex Zozos expected to join the discussion.
Superstate registered its digital transfer agent with the SEC earlier this year, laying groundwork to align tokenized securities with the current regulatory framework.
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SEC, Ripple Ink $50M Settlement Agreement, Ask NY Judge for Green Light

Ripple Labs and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) have officially reached a deal that, if approved by a judge, will bring their years-long legal battle to a close.
According to a settlement agreement filed in New York on Thursday, both parties have agreed to a $50 million penalty — a portion of the $125 million fine initially imposed last year by Judge Analisa Torres of the Southern District of New York (SDNY), and a tiny fraction of the massive $2 billion fine initially requested by the SEC.
In her 2023 ruling, Judge Torres found that Ripple violated securities laws in selling its native XRP token to institutional investors, but did not violate securities laws in putting XRP on exchanges for retail customers to buy in a suit originally brought in 2020 under then-SEC Chair Jay Clayton (who’s now the Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York).
The SEC, then under the leadership of former Chair Gary Gensler, appealed Torres’ ruling, prompting Ripple to cross-appeal. Under the settlement agreement, both parties agree to drop their cases. The Thursday filing confirms Ripple’s announcement in March that it had reached an in-principle settlement agreement with the SEC.
Read more: Ripple to Get $75M Of Court-Ordered Fine Back from SEC, Drops Cross Appeal
The settlement comes amidst the SEC’s full-scale retreat from a host of crypto investigations and litigation that began under Gensler’s tenure. After U.S. President Donald Trump took office in January and appointed crypto-friendly Paul Atkins to serve as the SEC’s new chairman, the agency has done an about-face on crypto regulation.
XRP climbed 9% on the news, continuing a 24-hour increase in value.
Ripple did not respond to CoinDesk’s request for comment.
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Anna Kazlauskas: Data Ownership in the Age of AI

You’re swimming in data. You’re creating new data every day. If your health app counts your steps? That’s new data. The Oura ring that’s tracking your bio-metrics? Valuable data. Your social media posts, even the stupid jokes that got zero likes? More data.
This is all data that AI companies would love to harvest. You can’t build good AI without good data, which is why many view data as the “new oil’ in the race for AI. The problem, though, is that while your data is valuable in theory, the reality is that it’s hard to monetize your own personal data, as you have no leverage as an individual. (Open AI isn’t knocking at your door to buy your old tweets.)
Enter Vana. “I think data is this fundamental resource powering the next generation of AI, and really the next generation of our digital economy,” says Anna Kazlauskas, co-founder of Vana and CEO of Open Data Labs. “A lot of people frankly just don’t realize that they actually own their data.”
But you do own your data. And it’s valuable… if you can somehow join forces with millions of others who also own their data. This would give you bargaining power. And that’s the mission of Vana: To create an ecosystem for user-owned data, which in turn fuels user-owned AI.
That ecosystem involves a mix of Data DAOs (a “labor union” for data), decentralized data marketplaces, the recently launched VRC-20 token, and a new collaboration with Flower Labs to build the world’s first user-owned foundational model. (Exhibit A that Decentralized AI is creeping into the mainstream: The Vana/Flower collaboration was covered by WIRED.)
Kazlauskas will give a keynote at the AI Summit at Consensus 2025 outlining this vision, and she gives a glimpse here. And she sees the momentum shifting. “We’re already starting to see this shift where more people realize that, ‘My data is really important to AI’ and ‘I’m actually the owner of that.’” She predicts that in a few years, over 100 million users will be onboard. In 10 years? “World population. Above 10 billion.”
Interview has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.
Why is user-owned data so important to you?
Anna Kazlauskas: Most people assume data is owned by the platforms that it’s sitting on, but that’s not the case. In the same way that when you put your car in a parking lot, the parking lot doesn’t own your car. You can always take it back. You have full ownership over it.
And there’s a huge amount of money being made today, mostly by big tech companies, off of that data, but users are the legal owners. So I think it’s important that we restore that ownership, both from a user perspective and from a developer’s perspective.
Can you connect the dots of how this helps developers?
As a developer, especially in an AI world, having access to the right data is really important. And it’s super hard to do right now, because most of the data is locked up within the walled gardens of big tech. So many of my really smart friends who do stuff in AI go work at the big labs, because that’s where the data is and that’s where the compute is. But that doesn’t have to be the case.
How do Data DAOs fit into this vision exactly?
So a DataDAO is kind of like a labor union for data. Where basically you have a large group of people who pool their data together, and then can make collective decisions over what happens to that data.
The reason why that’s important is that your data, on its own, is not that useful, right? It’s much more useful when there’s a big pool of it. When there’s enough of it to train an AI model.
What are some of the Data DAOs you’re most excited by?
There are a few in the health space that are really interesting. There’s an early one that’s actually doing full exports of patient medical records, which I think can really help advance a lot of research in the space. There’s some related to biometrics, sleep, and health. There’s one with the DLP [Driver Loyalty Program] Labs; they’re building car data. And within their data-set, the Tesla data is really interesting because most people think about Tesla as valuable because they have a data lead, right? Actually, the users can get a lot of that data-set.
You’re pivoting from theory to practice with the new collaboration with Flower Labs to build COLLECTIVE-1. What’s the goal there?
COLLECTIVE-1 is the first user-owned foundation model. Usually when people think about a foundation model, they typically think of one company running a very large training job in a single data center, right? Like OpenAI. And the reason why it’s typically done in a centralized way is because it requires, one, a whole lot of compute power, and two, a whole lot of data.
Flower AI is kind of the leader in federated [decentralized] training. They’ve done a really great job of building these great open source libraries. They’ve come in from the training side and the algorithm side. And with Vana, we really focus on that data piece, right? So we basically have all this data that people can train on. Then you give users end-ownership of the model, and users can decide on what the model is allowed to do? So this is the first foundation model of its kind.
And the theory is that eventually, with better data, you can build AI that’s not just competitive with the central players but better, is that right? So it’s not just about ideology, but also performance.
Exactly, yeah that’s 100% right. From a decentralized context, I think often people agree in principle that, “Yes, we should have AI that’s owned by the people. We should have decentralized AI.” But what’s the thing that we can actually do better in a decentralized context? Data is the answer. For each company, they only have their single slice of a data-set. Apple’s got their data. Google’s got their data. But if you’re going through the user, you can cut across platforms and actually build better data-sets than any single company. Data is the secret sauce that makes it all work.
Love it. Thanks Anna, see you at the AI Summit in Toronto.
Jeff Wilser will host the AI Summit at Consensus 2025, and is host of The People’s AI: The Decentralized AI Podcast.
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Coinbase Stock Falls After Earnings Disappoints Wall Street on Market Volatility

Shares of Coinbase (COIN) fell nearly 3% in post-market trading after it reported a significant drop in revenue in the first quarter of the year, missing analyst estimates, as markets cooled amid economic uncertainty in the U.S.
The crypto exchange said it recorded $2 billion in revenue, down from $2.27 billion in the fourth quarter and lower than Street estimates of $2.1 billion. The company also reported earnings per share of $0.24, missing the average analyst estimate of $1.93, according to FactSet data.
Trading volume fell 10% to $393.1 billion quarter over quarter and transaction revenue came in at $1.3 billion, about 19% lower than in the fourth quarter.
“Q1 saw increased average Crypto Asset Volatility with BTC reaching a new all-time high price in January. However, crypto prices dropped alongside broader market declines driven by tariff policy and macroeconomic uncertainty,” Coinbase wrote in a letter to shareholders.
Analysts at J.P. Morgan, Barclays, and Compass Point had all slashed their forecasts before the earnings report as crypto trading volume slowed sharply since January amid uncertainties about the future of the U.S. economy.
Trading platform Robinhood (HOOD), whose retail-focused clientele is often compared to Coinbase’s trader base, in April reported a 13% drop in transaction-based revenue.
Coinbase’s $2.9 billion acquisition of derivatives exchange Deribit, however, positions it as the new leader in global crypto options trading, overtaking Binance and other rivals. The move sets the stage for a new chapter in derivatives markets — one that investors will be watching closely.
Read more: Coinbase’s $2.9B Deribit Deal a ‘Legitimate Threat’ for Peers, Wall Street Analysts Say
UPDATE (May 8, 20:43 UTC): Adds additional paragraph at the end and share price decline.
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