Vers le futur Instagram des NFT ? Coinbase lance une beta qui fera date

L’instagram des NFT ! – La version beta de la marketplace NFT du célèbre exchange crypto Coinbase est enfin en ligne. Cela intervient plus de six mois après que la société ait annoncé son intention d’ouvrir une liste d’attente. De ce fait, plus de 8,4 millions de personnes attendaient impatiemment Coinbase NFT. La liste d’attente indiquait que la marketplace serait disponible pour tous les plus de 18 ans « dans les semaines à venir ». Dans un premier temps, seuls certains utilisateurs pourront toutefois acheter ou vendre des NFT.

Coinbase NFT, entre la marketplace et les réseaux sociaux

L’exchange crypto Coinbase a déclaré que les bêta-testeurs de sa marketplace NFT peuvent enfin créer des profils en ligne et acheter et vendre des NFT. Lors d’un point de presse, le vice-président des produits et de l’écosystème de la société, a laissé entendre que la marketplace serait un croisement entre les réseaux sociaux et d’autres plateformes NFT comme OpenSea.

« S’il est vrai que l’achat et la vente de NFT constituent aujourd’hui une grande partie de l’écosystème, ce que nous avons appris en discutant avec de nombreux clients et créateurs, c’est qu’il ne suffit pas d’acheter et de vendre. Il y a aussi l’aspect communautaire. »

Sanchan Saxena, vice-président des produits et de l’écosystème de Coinbase

Coinbase NFT, futur géant des tokens non-fongibles ?

Selon Saxena, la plateforme offrira des opportunités d’engagement entre les utilisateurs et les créateurs. Comme de nombreux réseaux sociaux, Coinbase NFT permettra aux utilisateurs de suivre les profils des créateurs. Ils pourront également commenter les œuvres d’art et parcourir un flux personnalisé pour découvrir de nouveaux NFT en fonction de leurs engagements et de leurs achats.

En ce qui concerne la modération des commentaires, il a déclaré que la plateforme fonctionnerait sur le principe que les utilisateurs et les législateurs connaissent « la loi du pays ». Selon l’exécutif de Coinbase, le personnel « n’est pas chargé de juger ce qui est bien et ce qui ne va pas, tant que c’est légal ».

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Coinbase avance quand le marché recule

La marketplace étant en version bêta, Coinbase a déclaré qu’il n’y aurait pas de frais de transaction pendant une durée limitée. L’exchange vise aussi à réduire les frais de gaz pour les transactions Ether (ETH) en s’associant à 0x Labs. Les utilisateurs peuvent choisir d’utiliser leurs propres portefeuilles cryptos ou le portefeuille de Coinbase.

Selon Coinbase, l’exchange prévoit d’ouvrir l’accès à sa marketplace NFT aux utilisateurs en fonction de leur position sur la liste d’attente. La plateforme était, depuis un moment, annoncée accessible à tous les plus de 18 ans « dans les semaines à venir ». De plus, Coinbase a déclaré qu’il prévoyait de « décentraliser davantage de fonctionnalités » comme les commentaires des utilisateurs à l’avenir.

Coinbase NFT, entre la plateforme sociale et le marché de NFT.

Au moment de la rédaction, plus de 8,4 millions d’adresses e-mail figuraient sur la liste d’attente de Coinbase NFT. L’exchange crypto a embarqué plus de 89 millions d’utilisateurs vérifiés échangeant 547 milliards de dollars en volume trimestriel à la plateforme.

Coinbase est l’un des rares exchanges qui tentent de participer aux ventes de NFT. Le principal échange de cryptomonnaies (en termes de volumes), Binance, a lancé une marketplace en juin 2021 visant à minimiser les coûts de transaction. Aussi, FTX et sa branche américaine ont introduit la leur en septembre. De ce fait, les utilisateurs peuvent désormais échanger des NFT entre les blockchains Solana et Ethereum.

Selon les données de DappRadar, OpenSea se classe au premier rang des marchés NFT avec environ 130 millions de dollars en volume sur 24 heures. Cependant, les récentes performances de vente d’un NFT du tweet de genèse de Jack Dorsey suggèrent que le marché pourrait ralentir. Un utilisateur avait pourtant acheté l’image pour 2,9 millions de dollars en 2021.

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L’article Vers le futur Instagram des NFT ? Coinbase lance une beta qui fera date est apparu en premier sur Journal du Coin.

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What are Bridges? Illicit use of bridges

By Heidi Wilder, Special Investigations Manager & Tammy Yang, Blockchain Researcher

Illicit actors are often attracted to the newest forms of technology, and bridges are unfortunately no exception to that rule. Illicit actors are defined as individuals or groups conducting illicit activity, such as scams, thefts, or other illegal activity, on the blockchain. In the previous section of this blogpost, we covered the Wormhole and Ronin bridge exploits.

Analyzing the use of Ethereum bridges by illicit actors in January 2021 through April 2022, we find that Ronin, Wormhole, followed by Polygon and Anyswap have the most volume flowing through them.

To date, Ronin bridge’s exploit that took place in late March is the largest hack in the DeFi space, totalling more than $540 million in funds stolen (as of the day of the bridging of funds). We discussed this exploit in more detail in our previous blockpost. Unsurprisingly, this hack makes up the largest illicit volume with the Ronin bridge.

Wormhole’s Ethereum-Solana bridge was attacked in February 2022, leading to a loss of over $250m.

Polygon’s bridge was primarily abused by Polynetwork’s exploiter (although funds were returned), the bZx hackers, and the AFK System rug pull. The bZx hackers appear to have literally gone back and forth between chains to decide which ones were best to consolidate funds. Ethereum won in the end.

Anyswap BSC bridge was primarily used as a bridge by the Bunny Finance flash loan attackers, Squid Game rug pull and Vee Finance hackers.

Why would illicit actors want to bother bridging at all?

Illicit actors’ reasons for bridging funds between networks are both similar and different compared to the general population of bridge users. Possible reasons include:

Consolidation. Combining funds through bridging makes them easier to handle and to generally then launder onwards.Obfuscation. Bridging over funds to other networks adds another layer of complexity to tracing funds on-chain. Tracing funds that travel through a bridge requires tracing capability on both networks and linking them through the bridge.Faster and cheaper transactions and to use assets that are not native to the network. Bringing over funds to other faster and cheaper networks can aid illicit actors in transferring their funds more rapidly at a lower cost. The added ability to access assets that aren’t native to the network allow both licit and illicit actors to gain price exposure to a non native asset, while also enjoying the benefits of the other network.To access a broader selection of dApps. As blockchain monitoring has become increasingly popular, so has scrutiny of illicit activity:

a) Instead of immediately cashing out, some illicit actors will choose to bridge over funds and then yield farm with them for a period of time, which has the benefit of passing time and earning interest on their proceeds.

b) Alternatively, illicit actors will also leverage certain DeFi protocols that help break the chain in order to obfuscate the true source of funds.

But how are illicit actors employing these methods in practice? What happens after someone has bridged over funds to another chain? Can you track through a bridge to the other side?

Because of the transparency of the blockchain and of many bridge protocols, we can trace through various bridges to identify the ultimate destination of funds.

Below are some recent examples of how illicit actors are employing bridges and how we can trace through bridges to identify the ultimate destination of funds.

Consolidation and obfuscation — as seen with an NFT phishing scheme

NFT phishing scams are nothing new, but the scale at which NFT phishing scams are occurring on social media is rampant. In this particular case, we observed several Murakami Flower phishing scams, among other popular impending NFT releases.

In this case, we observed that several of these scams bundled together their ill gotten ETH in a novel way.

Instead of pooling their ETH together on Ethereum, they bridged over the funds to the Secret Network, which was likely an attempt to obfuscate the source and destination of funds.

Although they may have bridged over funds to the Secret Network, they continued to bridge over to the same address over and over again. Consolidating funds from various phishing schemes allowed them to better get a grasp on their funds.

Accessing a broader set of dApps — an example of using bridges to then yield farm with ill gotten gains with the Squid Game rug pull

In November 2021, the Squid Game token rug pulled. Although the token was launched on Binance Smart Chain (BSC), funds were bridged over to Ethereum. While this was likely for obfuscation purposes, it was also to gain access to Ethereum-based dApps.

In particular, once the attackers bridged over funds to Ethereum, they opted for two yield farming strategies, which allowed them to earn interest on their ill gotten gains.

The first, was to swap funds to USDT and to supply liquidity to the ETH/USDT Uniswap pool (one of the deepest pools on Uniswap). The second was to take the ETH and to lend it on Compound.

While the attackers have begun to cash out, they have not only waited out the heat but have also made some interest while doing so.

Accessing a broader set of dApps — an example of using a bridge to access DeFi protocols to break the chain of traceability with a malware operation

A malware and ransomware operation primarily sourced funds from victims in Bitcoin over the years. However, in the latter half of 2021, the operation began to bridge over funds to ETH using Ren.

This allowed the attackers to mint renBTC. Using a particular protocol, Curve.Fi Adapter, the operators were able to immediately swap the newly minted renBTC for WBTC. Both renBTC and WBTC are BTC-backed tokens on the Ethereum blockchain. It’s important to note that the attackers specifically wanted WBTC though, which they could then deposit to Compound.

Compound is a DeFi protocol that allows users to earn interest on their deposits. When a user deposits funds into Compound, such as ETH, they are provided with cETH or Compound ETH in return, which can be exchanged through Compound for the original ETH amount deposited plus interest earned. Alternatively, users can also use the cETH as collateral to then borrow other tokens.

And that’s exactly what the malware operations did. They used cBTC as collateral to then borrow stablecoins from Compound, particularly USDT and DAI. And with those stablecoins they then cashed out at various exchanges.

The idea here is that the malware operators were attempting to obfuscate the true source of their funds and to make it seem like they received funds directly from Compound.

What can we do about this?

Because of how public, traceable and permanent the blockchain is, we can leverage it to not only identify illicit actors bridging funds across blockchains but also to stop them. The primary mechanism for this is blockchain analytics.

Here are some steps we can take as an industry to combat illicit actors’ bridging of funds:

Work with blockchain intelligence providers to identify cross-chain transactional flows to quickly identify when illicit funds have hopped from one network to another;Block illicit actors addresses’ on both sides of a bridge;Monitor inputs and outputs of protocols that are heavily abused by illicit actors who bridge over funds.

Using these and other tools we aim to preserve the integrity of the ecosystem while also encouraging innovative concepts, like bridges, to expand the crypto economy.

What are Bridges? Illicit use of bridges was originally published in The Coinbase Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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Coinbase Ventures Q1 recap and market outlook

Around the Block from Coinbase Ventures sheds light on key trends in crypto. Written by Connor Dempsey

TLDR:

Despite the market downturn, Q1 was another highly active quarter for crypto venture funding.On the infrastructure side, we’re seeing a ton of activity within cross-chain solutions and DAO tooling. New layer-1s are still being incubated.Familiar DeFi primitives developed on Ethereum are expanding into newer layer 1s, and Polkadot is picking up steam.NFT projects are focused on bringing more utility to the space, with Yuga Labs making serious waves over the quarter.The rise of Axie Infinity has attracted successful traditional gaming devs to build in Web3, with South East Asia emerging as a hotbed of activity.

After peaking in November 2021, liquid crypto markets fell into the new year and more or less treaded water in Q1. The private markets, however, kept up the torrid pace set last year.

According to data from The Block, Q1 2022 saw a record of $12.5 billion in venture funding — a figure that has increased for seven consecutive quarters. Coinbase Ventures was busy as well, closing 71 new deals in Q1, generally targeting early stage investments. We will note that we’re starting to see signs of a slow down, particularly with later stage investments, that will likely be visible in our Q2 activity.

Deal volume is a reflection of the continued influx of new companies and projects being formed in the space. This is aided by the low startup costs that crypto & Web3 companies enjoy thanks to open-source code and the ability to bootstrap or self-fund via token issuance.

CBV overview

As a refresh:

Coinbase Ventures advances crypto & Web3 by partnering with exceptional founders who share Coinbase’s mission of creating more economic freedom for the world.We’ve been recognized as one of the most active corporate VCs in the world by deal count.Ventures partners with founding teams at the earliest stages and throughout their journey. We invest across all categories within the cryptoeconomy, seeking to align ourselves with the best and brightest minds in the space.To date, we’ve invested in 300+ teams building everything from layer 1 protocols, Web3 infrastructure, centralized on-ramps, decentralized finance, NFTs, metaverse technologies, developer tooling, and more.

We generally break down our investments across six categories. Within these six categories, here’s how our activity shook out in Q1 ‘22.

Given that we invest in projects in their infancy, our activity can offer a lens into what the industry has in store in the near future. With that, let’s dive into some of the trends and themes that we identified in Q1.

Cross-chain & Web3 infrastructure bloom

In the early days of crypto, Bitcoin and Ethereum dominated. With new layer 1s coming online in recent years, ecosystems outside of BTC/ETH have exploded, and there are now more than 10 chains hosting over $1B in value.

The growing value across multiple networks has brought an increasing need for value on one chain to flow to another. As such, we’re continuing to see cross-chain infrastructure being built out to facilitate activity between blockchains (CBV Q1 investments: LayerZero, ZK Link, LiFi, Foxchain, Socket, Composable Finance).

Even with the multi-chain future assured, we’re still seeing new experimental layer 1s in development. Our investments in Aptos (general purpose L1 from former Diem employees), Celestia (modular blockchains), and Subspace (Proof-of-Archival consensus) suggest that the industry is not done innovating at the base layer. It also begs the question — will the dominant layer 1s of today someday be usurped? Time will tell.

Further up the stack, there’s more tooling on the way to help DAOs and Web3 communities flourish. Solutions for payroll (Diagonal, Zebec), social engagement & networking (Taki, Backdrop, Bonfire), and commerce (Rain) all point to a future where these online communities can coordinate more seamlessly.

DeFi’s multi-chain proliferation

Speaking of the multi-chain world, we’re seeing familiar patterns emerge across these burgeoning layer 1 networks. Basically, Ethereum set the tone for the foundational apps and protocols needed for an ecosystem to thrive: an AMM (Uniswap), money markets (Compound/Aave), an oracle (Chainlink), and yield aggregators (Yearn.Finance) to name a few.

For an emerging layer 1 to compete, teams understand they’ll need those same foundational primitives. As such, it’s becoming common to see Ethereum’s DeFi building blocks replicated across layer 1s like Solana, Avalanche, NEAR, Polkadot, etc. Betting on these foundational protocols is a good way to gain exposure to a broader ecosystem: a playbook we followed in Q1.

For example, from our Q1 investments, Aurigami on NEAR and Solend on Solana resemble Compound. Katana and Francium on Solana resemble Yearn.finance. Redstone resembles Chainlink, leveraging Arweave for cheaper storage to offer oracle services to longer tail tokens and NFT data feeds. And while these projects resemble apps first created on Ethereum, they’re each innovating in unique and differentiated ways.

Polkadot Cometh

Elsewhere in DeFiland, we were particularly active in the Polkadot ecosystem in Q1. With the long-awaited launch of Polkadot parachains arriving at the end of 2021, we’re seeing momentum around DOT pickup steam.

You can think of Polkadot as a network that you can launch layer 1s on top of. Each of these layer 1s, called parachains, are capable of interoperating with one another. With parachains live, Polkadot is now capable of hosting user applications.

We’ve now invested in 4 of the 5 live parachains (Acala, Moonbeam, Parallel Finance, and Astar) and waded deeper into the DOT waters in Q1 with investments in Composable Finance, Satori, and Coinbase alum Luke Youngblood’s new project: Moonwell.

NFT expansion pack

After a breakout summer, NFT sales have come back down to earth a bit from their earlier highs. Below the surface, however, innovation is more vibrant than ever.

Where NFT activity in 2021 centered around simple buying and selling (aka flippin’ JPEGs), the next wave of projects are building utility around NFTs. NiftyApes and PawnFi, for example, are working to bring liquidity to NFT holders by letting them take out loans collateralized by their NFTs. Platforms like Cymbal aim to bring more community and social features around NFT ownership.

Yuga Labs, the studio behind Bored Ape Yacht Club, made waves this quarter by raising at a $4B valuation to build a BAYC branded metaverse. Next, they acquired the IP rights to NFT collections CryptoPunks and Meebits. They capped it off by announcing a movie trilogy (produced by Coinbase) where BAYC NFT holders can submit their NFTs to be cast in the films and get paid a licensing fee — an interesting new experiment with on-chain licensing.

GameFi 2.0

Blockchain based gaming had its coming out party in 2021 centered around the rise of Axie Infinity. Sales of Axie Infinity NFTs peaked at a staggering $848M in August before falling precipitously. (Note that despite the obvious trend reversal and a major hack, Axie still posted a respectable $30M in March NFT sales).

Axie’s multi-billion dollar run was enough to put the entire gaming world on notice and the next wave of blockchain based games have been quietly raising ever since. Notably, many of the teams raising have track records building highly successful mobile, web, and AAA games (Clockwork Labs, Block Tackle, Summoners Arena, Third Time, Avalon).

The blockchain based games of the future will infuse crypto NFTs into more familiar Web2 gaming formats — MMORPGs, FPS, MOBA etc. Other CBV portfolio companies like Joyride will make it easier for game devs to integrate crypto/NFTs into existing titles.

At present, South East Asia is establishing itself as the center of the crypto-gaming world, led by the Philippines and Vietnam, among others. We’re particularly excited by developments in this region and the progress of Vietnamese based gaming guild and CBV portfolio company Ancient8.

Ventures outlook

Amidst a shaky macro picture, many crypto investors are on edge. More frequently, we’re getting asked how the market downturn will affect CB Ventures’ activity. To date, there’s no shortage of high quality entrepreneurs building in crypto and Web3. It isn’t however unreasonable to expect a slowdown should prices continue to sag, similar to what’s been observed in broader venture funding (down 19% QoQ). Regardless, our strategy won’t change much.

It bears reminding that some of the most successful projects of today were funded during the bear market of 2018/19. In that light, our early investments in projects like Compound, OpenSea, Polygon, Arweave, Starkware, Blockfi, NEAR, and Messari among others come to mind. As such, we’ll continue to invest in quality founders and projects moving the industry forward regardless of broader market conditions.

It also bears repeating just how much the investible Web3 landscape has broadened: DeFi, NFTs, DAOs, metaverses, and gaming are all evolving across a rich array of layer 1s. Then there’s cross-chain infrastructure to stitch all together as well layer-2 solutions to help it all scale. Not to mention a thousand other ideas not yet dreamed up. In other words, there’s more than enough innovation taking place to keep the CB Ventures’ team busy indefinitely.

This website does not disclose material nonpublic information pertaining to Coinbase or Coinbase Venture’s portfolio companies.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed on this website are those of the authors who may be associated persons of Coinbase, Inc., or its affiliates (“Coinbase”) and who do not represent the views, opinions and positions of Coinbase. Information is provided for general educational purposes only and is not intended to constitute investment or other advice on financial products. Coinbase makes no representations as to the accuracy, completeness, timeliness, suitability, or validity of any information on this website and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use. Unless otherwise noted, all images provided herein are the property of Coinbase. This website contains links to third-party websites or other content for information purposes only. Third-party websites are not under the control of Coinbase, and Coinbase is not responsible for their contents. The inclusion of any link does not imply endorsement, approval or recommendation by Coinbase of the site or any association with its operators.

Coinbase Ventures Q1 recap and market outlook was originally published in The Coinbase Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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NFT : L’assaut des marques de l’industrie de la mode

Les marques de mode n’hésitent plus à se lancer dans le secteur très en vogue des NFT. C’est le cas de la célèbre maison de mode Louis Vuitton qui vient d’ailleurs d’opérer une mise à niveau sur son jeu, lancé il y a quelques mois. Explications Louis Vuitton et les NFT Louis Vuitton fait partie […]

L’article NFT : L’assaut des marques de l’industrie de la mode est apparu en premier sur Cointribune.

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La plateforme NFT de cricket Rario lève 120 millions de dollars

La plateforme de cricket NFT Rario a levé 120 millions de dollars lors de son tour de table de série A mené par Dream Capital, la branche d’investissement de Dream Sports. Alpha Wave Global (anciennement Falcon Edge Capital) a également participé à ce tour de table et rejoint ainsi les investisseurs existants, à savoir Animoca Brands, […]

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YouHodler lance une chasse au trésor dans le métaverse de Decentraland

Plateforme spécialisée dans les prêts de cryptomonnaies, YouHodler a décidé de faire une incursion dans le métaverse de Decentraland afin de promouvoir ses NFT. Elle a donc décidé d’y organiser une chasse au trésor avec à la clé 30 000 dollars en tokens MANA à gagner. Les détails dans la suite de cet article. 10 000 dollars de tokens […]

L’article YouHodler lance une chasse au trésor dans le métaverse de Decentraland est apparu en premier sur Cointribune.

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NFT : De la weed virtuelle dans le métavers ?

Difficile de trouver plus légitime que Snoop Dogg pour introduire les premières drogues sous forme de NFT au sein d’un métavers. Le célèbre rappeur américain vient en tout cas de mettre l’idée sur pied, en collaboration avec le créateur de NFT Champ Medici ! L’initiative devrait passer par la plateforme Mobland. Des fermes d’herbe numériques sur Mobland ! Par le biais d’un communiqué, la plateforme métavers Mobland a annoncé qu’elle allait lancer une collection exclusive de NFT. Celle-ci représentera des fermes d’herbes numériques. Les NFT seront le fruit de la collaboration entre le rappeur américain Snoop Dogg et Champ Medici, […]

L’article NFT : De la weed virtuelle dans le métavers ? est apparu en premier sur Cryptonaute.

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Le token ZRX connaît une envolée alors que Coinbase s’associe à 0x pour sa marketplace NFT

La principale plateforme d’échange crypto a fait équipe avec le protocole 0x (ZRX) pour alimenter son nouveau marché NFT. La nouvelle a provoqué un bond important du prix du token natif de 0x, le ZRX. Partenariat avec Coinbase Coinbase a déclaré que sa plateforme NFT utilisera le « puissant support de swap NFT multi-chaîne » du protocole 0x, […]

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Faits saillants 21 avril: Cryptos mixte, journée forte pour les pièces de mème sur le thème des chiens

Le marché de la cryptographie dans son ensemble était mitigé aujourd’hui, la majorité des 20 meilleurs cryptos enregistrant de légères pertes. Le prix du Bitcoin a rebondi en heures asiatiques, entraînant des gains pour de nombreux autres cryptos. Il s’échangeait pour un peu moins de 42 000 $ au moment de la rédaction.

Top cryptos

La plupart des cryptos ont vu leur valeur varier de +/- 1 à 3 %. Tous les 10 premiers sont plats. Le protocole NEAR, classé 18e, a inversé les gains récents, en baisse d’environ 4 % aujourd’hui.

Top déménageurs

Le mouvement était similaire en dehors du top 20. Les pièces de confidentialité connaissent une reprise. Monero en est un excellent exemple, en hausse de 6 % au cours des dernières 24 h. EOS en est un autre, gagnant 8 %. Le THETA de Theta Network a également ajouté 6 % à sa valeur.

CAKE, la pièce de monnaie de la bourse PancakeSwap et du market maker automatisé, est en hausse de 10%. L’une des raisons possibles de son essor est la campagne en cours PancakeSwap et BSC Easter, dans laquelle les deux plateformes distribuent 15 000 $.

Zilliqa, la première blockchain publique au monde à s’appuyer entièrement sur un réseau partagé, a ajouté 9 % à sa valeur aujourd’hui.

Le plus grand gagnant du top 100 est de loin le jeton ZRX de 0x, qui a gagné 52 % après avoir annoncé un partenariat avec le principal échange de crypto Coinbase pour alimenter le nouveau marché social NFT de ce dernier.

Kava est sur une trajectoire ascendante à l’approche de la mise à niveau de Kava 10 Mainnet. Il sera mis en ligne le 10 mai. Le kava a ajouté 15 % à sa valeur aujourd’hui.

Synthetix, un protocole de financement décentralisé qui offre une exposition en chaîne à une grande variété d’actifs crypto et non crypto, est à la 100e place avec des gains de 7 % au cours des dernières 24 heures.

Les plus grands perdants sont Loopring (-7%), GMT de STEPN (-6%) et ApeCoin (-9%), qui voient tous la fin des récents rallyes.

Tendance

C’est un jour fort pour les pièces de mèmes canins. Dogelon Mars a gagné 50% sur les rapports d’une prochaine cotation sur Binance, et la reprise a été soutenue par le rebond du prix du Bitcoin.

Une autre pièce meme, Shiba Rewards, est en hausse de 229% aujourd’hui. Ses créateurs disent qu’ils l’ont fait par frustration en raison de nombreux nouveaux projets comportant des impôts élevés, la majorité collectée allant aux développeurs plutôt qu’aux investisseurs.

Le jeton SHREW a été conçu pour être un jeton de récompense à faible taux d’imposition et comporte une taxe d’achat et de transfert de 0 %.

L’article Faits saillants 21 avril: Cryptos mixte, journée forte pour les pièces de mème sur le thème des chiens est apparu en premier sur Coin24.

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