TL;DR Shiba Inu collaborates with Zama to integrate Fully Homomorphic Encryption (FHE) into its Shibarium layer-2 solution, aiming to enhance data privacy and security for transactions and smart contracts. Despite the development, SHIB’s price fell by over 6% in the past 24 hours. However, it remains up on a two-week scale due to recent rallies.
Bitcoin dipped 3.7% over the past 24 hours while XRP, ADA, DOT and LINK plunged over 5%. SOL, ETH outperformed. Even with the decline, BTC is on track to finish September with a nearly 7% return, its best performance since 2013. ByteTree's Charlie Morris contemplated whether the expectation for a strong October is so widespread
Taiwan’s FSC opens investment channels for professional investors, allowing access to high-risk foreign digital asset ETFs while maintaining a cautious stance on market risks.
Bitcoin appears to have defied the historical trend of negative return for September, with almost 9% in gains for the month. At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading above $64,000. As such, experts are now betting on a more favourable market conditions and a continued bullish trend for the world’s leading crypto asset. Room
On September 27, bitcoin (BTC) reclaimed a trading price of $66,500 for the first time since late July. This surge was accompanied by bullish sentiments from many investors. Instead of going higher, the leading crypto asset has tanked below $64,000 at press time. Blockchain market intelligence platform Santiment shares insight into a possible reason behind
Bitcoin’s recent price surge toward $66,000 has led to heightened optimism, but the market now faces a potential retracement phase. The $66K resistance level is proving to be a formidable barrier, and BTC is likely to undergo a period of consolidation or correction before determining its next major trend. Technical Analysis By Shayan The Daily
Follow Aaron on Nostr or X. It’s difficult to find a more fundamental threat to Bitcoin’s continued existence than mining centralization. If —say— there are only a few mining pools, there is a very real possibility that these organizations face regulatory pressure of the kind that exchanges have also had to deal with: they could
The renowned Harvard psychologist B.F. Skinner once opined that the "real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do." This witty observation underscores a once crucial point: that our trust in technology hinges on human judgment. It's not machine intelligence we should worry about, but the wisdom and responsibility of those who control