Tin tức công nghệ blockchain là tin tức về các loại công nghệ, thế hệ Blockchain ở Việt Nam và trên thế giới.
Công nghệ Blockchain là một cơ chế cơ sở dữ liệu tiên tiến cho phép chia sẻ thông tin minh bạch trong một mạng lưới kinh doanh. Cơ sở dữ liệu chuỗi khối lưu trữ dữ liệu trong các khối được liên kết với nhau trong một chuỗi. Dữ liệu có sự nhất quán theo trình tự thời gian vì bạn không thể xóa hoặc sửa đổi chuỗi mà không có sự đồng thuận từ mạng lưới.
Bạn có thể sử dụng công nghệ blockchain(chuỗi khối) để tạo một sổ cái không thể chỉnh sửa hay biến đổi để theo dõi các đơn đặt hàng, khoản thanh toán, tài khoản và những giao dịch khác. Hệ thống có những cơ chế tích hợp để ngăn chặn các mục nhập giao dịch trái phép và tạo ra sự nhất quán trong chế độ xem chung của các giao dịch này.
BOME, the third-largest meme coin, rose sharply on Oct. 14 as Bitcoin recovered back to levels seen at the beginning of last week.
The Book of Meme (BOME), a Solana-based meme coin, rose sharply by over 25% in the last 24 hours to $0.008841, its highest level in 2 months, according to crypto.news data.
BOME‘s price surge propelled its market cap to $610 million, positioning it as the 131st-largest digital asset. Daily trading volume spiked by over 195%, reaching $928 million, with most activity concentrated on Binance, followed by Gate.io and Bitget.
Simultaneously, futures open interest experienced a significant increase. Data from CoinGlass shows open interest in BOME futures hit a record $131.12 million, more than doubling from last week’s low of $57 million.
The rally coincided with a broader market upswing, as Bitcoin (BTC) and other altcoins saw sharp price increases. The global crypto market grew by 2.6%, rising from $2.27 trillion to $2.33 trillion.
According to CoinGlass, this surge led to $167.2 million in liquidations, with $101.6 million coming from short traders. This suggests many investors were caught off guard by the bullish momentum, having bet against the rising prices.
The sudden surge in liquidations likely contributed to the upward pressure on prices as short positions were forced to close, further fueling the market’s rally.
Community sentiment around BOME has been bullish, with 71% of 3,792 traders on CoinMarketCap expecting short-term price gains. Similarly, sentiment on X has also turned positive, with several analysts and traders predicting strong upward momentum for altcoins.
According to pseudo-anonymous trader Bluntz, BOME had successfully broken through a key daily resistance level of $0.0085, which it had struggled to overcome since Aug. 24. He anticipates further upward movement for the meme coin, supported by a significant increase in daily trading volume and Bitcoin’s recent upward momentum.
Another trader noted that BOME had broken out of a falling wedge on the 1-day chart, a bullish indicator, adding that the meme coin could potentially retest 80%-120% above its current price levels.
BOME’s rally coincided with a surge in the global meme coin market, which increased by 1.4% over the last 24 hours. According to CoinGecko, the combined market cap of all tracked meme tokens now exceeds $57.6 billion.
In an Oct. 11 post on X, analyst Moustache predicted that the altcoin market is nearing an “up-only season, ” citing the Altcoin Season Index, which has been developing an Inverse Head and Shoulders pattern—one of the most bullish formations in technical analysis—over the last 3.5 years.
This often precedes a major breakout, suggesting altcoins may soon enter a sustained rally, reversing years of stagnation and downward pressure.
In my previous article on real estate tokenization, I explored how this promising innovation has stalled despite the early excitement around its potential. The truth is that tokenization without a clear economic purpose is doomed to remain a niche concept. We have yet to see the broad adoption we anticipated because the economic rationale just isn’t there.
For years, I’ve advocated for a blockchain estate registry, which would introduce title tokens that directly represent property rights, not just securities or investment claims. While governments have been slow to adopt this idea, I’ve continued to explore how tokenization can serve a real, practical purpose in real estate.
And then it struck me: an innovative approach that merges tokenization with decentralized finance to create a fourth way to acquire property. Something entirely different—what I’ve named IVVIA. Derived from the Latin ‘IV via,’ meaning the fourth way, IVVIA offers a new path for property acquisition.
Introducing the fourth way: IVVIA
We all know the traditional paths to acquiring real estate: cash, mortgages, or leasing. Each of these has its drawbacks. Cash purchases are unattainable for many, mortgages come with long-term commitments and high fees, and acquiring through a lease offers no path to ownership or investment returns. So, what if there was a fourth way that combined the benefits of ownership and investment with the flexibility of tokenization?
The idea of IVVIA is rather simple—it allows a property buyer, let us call them an “ivviator,” to gradually purchase their home by acquiring tokens that represent fractions of the property. It’s similar to a mortgage in that buyers can make monthly payments, but without the rigidity of a bank loan. Instead, they partner with real estate investors—called “ivviatees”—who hold the tokens. The ivviators buy these tokens over time at market value, much like paying off a mortgage, but with far more flexibility and fewer fees.
Unlike a mortgage, where you’re locked into a 20-year financial agreement, IVVIA lets you buy out tokens at your own pace. If the ivviator (home occupier), say, needs to move to another city, they can sell their accrued tokens at market value and walk away. Investors, on the other hand, enjoy liquidity. They can sell their tokens to the ivviator or on the open market at any time.
The relations are governed by a smart contract, which automates many of the routine transactions, from token sales to monthly rent payments. The beauty of this model lies in its flexibility and transparency, all powered by blockchain.
The economics of IVVIA: A real-world scenario
To test the feasibility of this concept, I turned to two decades of historical market data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, including information on property prices, mortgage rates, rent, and bank deposit rates. I modeled the potential outcomes for both traditional mortgages and the IVVIA system, and the results were striking.
Let’s consider the case of Alice, who, in 2004, bought a two-bedroom house in Auburn, a middle-ring suburb of Sydney, for $520,000. With a 20% down payment of $104,000, she took out a 20-year mortgage at an average interest rate of 6.44%. This meant monthly repayments of $3,175. Over 20 years, her total expenses, i.e., the loan interest and the house price, amount to $866,000. Fast forward to 2024, and the property is now valued at $1,400,000. If Alice decides to sell, her net profit would be $533,000 ($1.4M minus $866K in total costs).
Now, let’s compare this to how things would unfold in the IVVIA system. Instead of taking out a mortgage, Alice partners with four investors—Bob, Chuck, Dave, and Eve—who each contribute $104,000 (equal to Alice’s 20% down payment). They are also typical individual real estate investors, who would otherwise go to the bank. Instead together, they form a unit trust, purchase the house, and tokenize it, with each member receiving an equivalent share of tokens.
In this scenario, Alice continues to pay $3,175 per month, the same as she would have under a mortgage, which we’ll refer to as her Expenditure Cap. However, instead of repaying a bank loan, Alice allocates her monthly Expenditure Cap between renting and buying out her investors’ tokens.
Here’s how it works: Initially, Alice would pay rent to her co-investors based on their ownership of the property. With Alice owning 20% of the tokens, she would pay 80% of the rent to the other investors. Assuming an initial market rent of $1,216 per month, Alice’s share of the rent would be $973 (80% of the total). The remaining $2,202 from her monthly Expenditure Cap would be used to buy tokens from her co-investors, at a price reflecting the current market value of the property.
In the first month, Alice could afford to buy 1.30 tokens at the property’s new value of $521,000, bringing her total ownership to 20.44%. Over time, as Alice’s ownership share increases, her rent decreases. After ten years, she would own nearly 79% of the property, reducing her rent payments to just 21% of the market rent—$368 per month. By this point, the house’s value would have risen to $745,000, and Alice would be buying around 1.1 tokens monthly.
After 15.5 years, Alice would fully own the property, having spent a total of $700,000, including the initial down payment, rent, and token buyouts. This represents a significant saving of approximately $166,000 compared to the traditional mortgage route.
The investor’s perspective
What about investors? The basic scenario for them mirrors Alice’s mortgage. In IVVIA, investors earn profits from both rent and the difference between the initial token price and the selling price, starting the next month after the house purchase, based on their share. A simple calculation shows that an investment of $104,000 could yield a total return of $44,000.
However, to make this comparable to a mortgage, we need to add some conditions. While IVVIA allows investors to receive monthly cash flow, the mortgage, on the other hand, requires some household income to be tied up in monthly repayments for 20 years, effectively locking the wealth into the property’s value. Therefore, to make the comparison fair, we assume Bob, as one of the investors, doesn’t spend his rental profits or token sale income but accrues it, for example, in a bank deposit, similar to how a homeowner accrues equity. After 20 years, this accrual could result in a total of $1,200,000—140% more than $533,000 he would have earned in the traditional mortgage scenario.
From naïve to a real-world solution
While IVVIA represents a real solution to the challenges of real estate tokenization, there are some hurdles to consider. Long-term investments, like those in real estate, can run into legal complications—such as disputes, bankruptcies, or even deaths of the ivviatees. A simple smart contract doesn’t easily resolve these issues.
For IVVIA to scale up, we’ll likely need professional smart contract administrators who can manage the system impartially, handle legal complexities, and ensure compliance with evolving regulatory frameworks. Despite the challenges, the advantages of automation and decentralization still make this a far more efficient system than traditional real estate finance.
Conclusion
The idea of tokenizing real estate isn’t new, but what IVVIA brings to the table is a true economic solution. By merging the flexibility of tokenization with the stability of real estate, IVVIA solves the problem that has held back property tokenization from going mainstream. This isn’t just another blockchain use case; it’s a real change in how we think about property ownership and investment.
IVVIA works because it aligns the incentives of buyers and investors, turning property into a dynamic, tradable asset while offering individuals a flexible path to homeownership. By leveraging smart contracts, DeFi, and fractional ownership, IVVIA could very well represent the future of real estate—a fourth way that might just become the new norm.
As we approach the end of 2024 and reflect on the technological advancements it brought, the buzz surrounding artificial intelligence and high-performance computing continues to overshadow all other web3 developments. As such, this year saw an overwhelming customer demand for AI products and even greater pressure on data centers to deliver AI infrastructure to boost efficiency.
With companies racing to adopt these technologies, many have considered investing in compute resources like graphic processing unit chips, commonly used for training AI models, blockchains, autonomous vehicles, and other emerging applications. But before organizations fully embrace the exciting potential of this hardware, we need to carefully consider the complexities and challenges that come with them.
It’s true that the promise of AI is indeed enticing. Just look at the stats from OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which garners over 200 million active weekly users. From automating mundane tasks to driving sophisticated analytics, the potential of AI and large language models is vast, and these technologies are here to stay.
The growth has just started
Unsurprisingly, organizations are eager to gain a competitive edge through AI, leading major players like Meta and Apple to invest in the software that supports this technology.
A recent report from Bain & Company—a management consulting company—revealed that AI workloads are expected to grow 25 to 35 percent annually over the next several years, pushing the AI-related hardware and software market to between $780 billion and $990 billion by 2027.
However, investing in compute resources involves more than just purchasing hardware or subscribing to a cloud service. If we’re assessing some of the barriers to investing in this software, one of the biggest hurdles investors face is the initial cost.
The costs of advanced GPUs like NVIDIA’s A100 or H100 can be upwards of millions of dollars, with additional costs for servers, cooling systems, or the electricity needed to power the devices. This presents a challenge for retail investors looking to add this technology to their portfolios, often limiting investment opportunities to powerful corporations.
Beyond the hefty price tag, the hardware itself isn’t for the faint of heart. It requires a thorough understanding of optimizing and managing these resources effectively. Investors should have specialized knowledge in the hardware and software, making technical expertise a prerequisite.
Even if affordability and technical challenges weren’t barriers to investing, a significant obstacle remains: Supply or lack thereof. The Bain & Company report reveals that demand for AI components could grow by 30 percent or more, outpacing supply capabilities.
While investing in compute may seem out of reach, there are new models making it more accessible to everyday investors, allowing them to tap into the potential of advanced computing despite existing barriers.
Tokenization as a solution
Through the tokenization of high-compute GPU resources, Exabits offers users an opportunity to become stakeholders in the AI compute economy, allowing them to earn rewards and revenue without needing to manage the complexities of hardware ownership. With affordable entry points and reward systems, Exabits allows individuals to participate in the demand for GPU resources while avoiding the risks associated with direct investment, making investing in AI compute more accessible.
Exabits has coined its business model, “The Four Seasons of GPU,” emphasizing quality assurance and consistency across its GPU offerings. Just as the Four Seasons is world renowned for its high service standards, “The Four Seasons of GPU” provides quality-guaranteed hardware that investors can trust. Investors can rely on Exabits for personalized assistance, similar to the hotel’s commitment to customer satisfaction. As a platform and a business, Exabits aims to provide equal opportunities for investors to participate in this growing AI compute economy.
As demand for computation rises, so does the appetite for investment opportunities within this rapidly emerging space. With the ongoing growth of AI, blockchain, and other tech trends, the future of GPU development will depend on the industry’s ability to meet these demands and create opportunities that continue to broaden access to this esteemed technology.
Arkham Intelligence, a blockchain data firm, plans to launch a cryptocurrency derivatives exchange next month, according to reporting from Bloomberg.
Backed by investors like OpenAI founder Sam Altman, the startup is relocating its operations from London and New York to Punta Cana in the Dominican Republic. The company aims to serve retail investors but will not open the platform to U.S. customers.
Arkham, founded in 2020, specializes in analyzing blockchain data to reveal information about the entities and individuals behind cryptocurrency transactions.
The decision to launch a derivatives exchange comes as Arkham looks to capture part of the growing crypto market, particularly in derivatives, which are financial contracts that derive their value from underlying assets like Bitcoin (BTC).
In July, Arkham Intelligence introduced a feature allowing users to connect their Coinbase Wallets to its platform. This integration enabled users to track their crypto holdings while Arkham continued to de-anonymize blockchain transactions.
What is Arkham Intelligence?
Arkham is a blockchain analysis platform that uses artificial intelligence to deanonymize blockchain and on-chain data. It previously consisted of two primary components: the Analytics Platform, which provides analytics on numerous exchanges, funds, and tokens, and the Intel Exchange, which allows users to conduct intelligent transactions.
The new derivatives platform will operate under a Dominican Republic free-trade zone license, which offers tax and other financial benefits, according to Bloomberg.
Arkham’s focus on derivatives trading aims to compete with large exchanges like Binance, Bybit, and OKX.
Worldcoin is teaming up with Dune in a collaboration that aims to enhance data accessibility for its blockchain network, World Chain.
The Worldcoin Foundation announced its partnership with the web3 data analytics platform on Oct. 11, detailing plans to leverage Dune to ensure global access.
Specifically, Dune will work with Worldcoin (WLD), project contributor Tools for Humanity, and the Worldcoin Foundation to ensure transparency for on-chain data accessibility on World Chain. The partnership comes ahead of the blockchain’s mainnet launch.
With this collaboration, World Chain users, including developers, will be able to explore on-chain metrics for real humans, decentralized finance protocols, exchanges, and any blockchain-based public project.
Worldcoin’s new blockchain
Worldcoin, a project founded by OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman, has faced some challenges since its launch in July 2023. Despite regulatory hurdles and controversies, including concerns over its token supply, the project has seen a significant increase in iris scanning and verification.
In 2024, Worldcoin launched its World ID verification product in European countries such as Poland and Austria, while expanding into Asia and South America. However, the company, which offers eligible users the native WLD token after scanning and verifying their identity, has faced setbacks in Hong Kong, Spain and Portugal among other jurisdictions.
The company announced the upcoming launch of World Chain in April, highlighting a blockchain built on OP Stack. The company partnered with web3 platform Alchemy to debut the new blockchain.
World Chain is also set to integrate with the World ID, World App and Worldcoin cryptocurrency. It will also tap into Ethereum (ETH) and Optimism (OP) as part of the Superchain.
Users who verify their identity on the chain to prove they are human will enjoy benefits such as priority block space and gas-free transactions.
When Vitalik Buterin, co-founder of Ethereum (ETH), announced the completion of the long-awaited Merge in September 2022, efficiency was the name of the game for blockchain innovation. In recent years, scalability has overtaken efficiency as the most pressing issue among the ‘big five’ challenges currently facing web3.
Prominent layer-1 chains are now giving way to a wave of emerging layer-2 solutions, which promise to propel the blockchain ecosystem to new heights. Dissimilar from the consolidated efforts that drove the Merge, though, this latest stage of blockchain development—coined “The Surge” in the Ethereum space—has given rise to a suite of issues. A new scalability paradigm, spearheaded by a constantly expanding galaxy of L2s, has led to a fragmented blockchain ecosystem characterized by multiple chains, each with its own rules, tokens, and transaction fees.
For some, participating in capitalism means believing that competition breeds success. But when it comes to blockchains, more isn’t necessarily better. Just as the tech shortcomings of the early internet made it challenging for newcomers to navigate websites, the complexity of managing multiple blockchain layers presents significant challenges for users.
If we are to steward web3 to mass adoption, the time has come to ask: how many layers are too many?
Challenges of a fragmented blockchain ecosystem
As we stack more layers onto our proverbial blockchain cake, challenges for both users and developers continue to arise in the form of hampered usability and stifled innovation. Although the Wild West of L2s feels like a net positive, as more complexities are piled on top of user experience, we risk our blockchain cake becoming nearly impossible to slice through.
Onboarding into web3 can be a daunting task in and of itself, so juggling various wallets, tokens, and fee schedules across chains to perform simple tasks leads to subpar or even arduous user experience. For many, a fragmented ecosystem makes the barrier to entry that much higher.
And the struggle faced by developers is quite similar. The complexity of working across multiple layers can mean slower build times and increased development costs. The lack of interoperability between an always-increasing number of chains further complicates project scopes, especially for teams endeavoring to build cross-chain applications. In the current L2 sector, progress is easily hindered when developers feel forced to navigate a convoluted landscape.
Layer 2s: A potential that’s lacking
Of course, this layer cake approach to scalability isn’t without its merits. There’s a rhyme and reason to the current disjointed system of L2 constellations dominating the blockchain sector.
On paper, L2 solutions offer substantial benefits, including enhanced scalability and speed. Offloading transactions from an L1 to an L2 means increasing the overall volume of transactions that can be processed by said L1. Following the reaction further, L2s can lead to faster and more cost-effective operations, enhanced security, and an extra layer of protection for sensitive transactions.
However, these benefits, as we’ve seen, may only outweigh the disadvantages for so long. Fragmentation creates a complex web that can feel overwhelming, especially as the landscape of L2 solutions continues to expand and a clear solution remains elusive.
A unified approach
Fortunately, there is a promising solution to the challenges presented by the L2 race—chain abstraction. By removing the complexities and overarching technicalities of the blockchain that regularly interfere with usability, chain abstraction can help maintain the broader benefits of decentralized technology while also lowering the barrier to entry to general consumers.
A solution that many proponents of mass adoption are already in support of, chain abstraction allows us to create a unified layer that communicates with multiple blockchains and simplifies user interactions. This approach allows users to manage their assets and execute transactions without needing to understand the intricacies of each underlying layer.
Of course, chain abstraction doesn’t simply exist on its own, which is where omnichain infrastructure comes into play. As a practical application of chain abstraction, omnichain infrastructure takes the concept further by empowering the creation of a cohesive, interoperable ecosystem that facilitates seamless interactions across various blockchains.
By powering fragmentation solutions such as seamless cross-chain transactions and secure and efficient verifications while incentivizing developer flexibility, omnichain infrastructure makes a simplified user-centric design possible and blockchain interactions more intuitive and efficient.
Multichain today, omnichain tomorrow
So, where do we go from here?
While it’s true that the proliferation of L2s has ushered web3 into an era of fragmentation, complexity still exists throughout the blockchain. Layers are to be found everywhere, both within and beyond the L1 and L2 paradigms. Ultimately, this convolution only becomes more rampant as legacy institutions and consumer interests lead to bursts of new innovation, new platforms, and new needs.
This is where our initial question comes back into view. Because for the majority of new users, anything beyond a single integrated layer might simply be too many.
If scalability is as important as most devs make it out to be (and spoiler alert, it is), we cannot glaze over the potential of omnichain infrastructure to aid in our mass adoption journey. By interconnecting products and blockchains, uniting data to create seamless experiences, and making the power of web3 easily accessible, we can fuel even the most ambitious endeavors.
A digital art piece inscribed on Bitcoin’s Ordinals protocol titled “Ascend” has been sold for $57,450 at Christie’s Post-War and Contemporary Art Day, beating it’s low estimate of $39,000.
Ryan s Koopmans and Alice Wexell’s Bitcoin Ordinal “Ascend” was sold at a £44,100 or equal to $57,450 on Oct. 10 at Christie’s Post-War and Contemporary Art Day sale. The piece was initially estimated to sell at a price of £30,000 or $39,222.
This is the first time that a Bitcoin Ordinal has been featured in a live auction at Christie’s, one of the world’s oldest and most storied auction houses founded in 1776.
The artwork captures the beauty of a revitalized Iveria Sanatorium in Tskaltubo, Georgia. The structure, built between 1952 and 1962, has fallen into ruin and has since been revived through Koopmans and Wexell’s digital work.
“Ascend” is a part of Koopmans and Wexell’s “The Wild Within” project, which combines visual photography with 3D technology to bring abandoned structures back to life.
Manager of Digital Art Sales at Christie’s, Sebastian Sanchez, talked about how Bitcoin Ordinals differ from NFTs on Ethereum, presenting a new challenge for artists who seek to create within that realm.
“Ordinals present different constraints such as requiring a much smaller file size than what’s possible on Ethereum, so typically we don’t see a lot of high-quality art. However, artists are working with these constraints and pushing the boundaries of what’s possible,” said Sanchez in an email to crypto.news.
He explained that Ordinals add an extra layer of protection that external databases lack. External servers that become inactive run the risk of permanently deleting the image files stored inside it. Whereas Ordinals attach images and videos onto an individual Satoshi, the smallest unit of Bitcoin, without using external links.
Although there is a downside, as Sanchez believes that Ordinals have a “steeper learning curve” in terms of technicalities compared to NFTs and therefore harder to introduce to the mainstream art community.
Furthermore, he stated that more and more artists are experimenting with digital and physical artworks and combining the two worlds.
“We’ve seen artists create digitally-native work where the owner has the right to receive a signed print from an artist, as well as physical works that have Certificates of Authenticity on the blockchain,” he said.
Both Wexell and Koopmans are no strangers to the worlds of traditional fine art and photography.
On Sept. 2024, artworks from their acclaimed digital art series called “The Wild Within” were installed in the former Royal Villa of Durres at the first International Biennale of Contemporary Art in Durres, Albania.
Another one of their artworks “‘The Thought of You” was created based off of an abandoned villa in Italy. The piece was showcased at Enter Art Fair in Copenhagen, Denmark from Aug. 29 until Sept. 1.
Former Binance CEO Changpeng ‘CZ’ Zhao will make his first public appearance since stepping down at Binance Blockchain Week in Dubai.
According to Zhao’s Oct. 10 X post, the event is slated to be one of the biggest web3 events of the year, and he has confirmed that he will be attending in a personal capacity.
Zhao’s upcoming appearance has stirred up plenty of chatter in the crypto space with key figures and projects curious about what he might share. Tron founder and CEO Justin Sun joined others in welcoming the Binance co-founder:
Zhao’s upcoming appearance will be his first public engagement since pleading guilty to violating U.S. anti-money laundering regulations and paying a $50 million fine. Binance itself was fined $4.3 billion, one of the largest corporate settlements in U.S. history.
As a part of the settlement, Zhao resigned from his role as the CEO of Binance and served four months in prison. He has now been barred from managing the company for life.
However, he still retains a 90% ownership stake in Binance, keeping him among the wealthiest in the crypto space with an estimated net worth of $61 billion.
Binance Blockchain Week
Binance Blockchain Week 2024, set for Oct. 30-31, is expected to be one of the biggest Web3 events this year, building on the success of last year’s Istanbul edition.
According to the official announcement, the event’s theme centers around “Momentum,” focusing on the ongoing progress in the crypto industry despite challenges. It will explore the current state of the sector, its hurdles, and the direction it is heading.
Held at the Coca-Cola Arena, the event will feature discussions on how the crypto industry can maintain its decentralized values while adapting to evolving regulations. Attendees will have the chance to participate in interactive sessions and workshops designed to engage with new blockchain tools and platforms.
Besides Zhao, the event also boasts a lineup of several key industry players who’ll be making appearances. Notable speakers include Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire, Nansen CEO Alex Svanevik, Dubai Future Foundation CEO Khalfan Belhoul, and Sotheby’s Vice President of Digital Art Michael Bouhanna.
What’s next for Zhao after Binance?
Zhao’s departure from Binance marked the end of a momentous chapter in his career, with speculation growing around what his next move would be.
The former CEO has stated his intention to shift focus away from the crypto sector. At a hearing earlier this year, Zhao said he plans to dedicate his next chapter to “providing opportunities for youth,” particularly through educational platforms for underprivileged children.
A website called Giggle Academy has been created for this initiative, but it remains in its early stages.
Sonic SVM, a blockchain company focused on gaming, has introduced a new Web3 game on TikTok, according to a press release shared with crypto.news.
The game, called SonicX, simplifies the process of joining Web3 by embedding a wallet directly into TikTok, allowing users to explore blockchain without the usual complexities.
SonicX is a simple “clicker” game in which players tap the screen to collect digital rings stored on the blockchain. These rings, including cryptocurrencies and NFTs, can lead to rewards. The game builds on the popularity of similar “tap-to-earn” games, like Notcoin (NOT) and Hamster Kombat, which have gained traction on Telegram.
The key feature of SonicX is its embedded wallet, which allows TikTok users to log in using their existing accounts without needing to manage complicated private keys or passwords. This approach streamlines the onboarding process and makes it easier for users unfamiliar with blockchain technology to participate.
As players advance in the game, they can earn more rewards and refer their friends to join, creating a viral effect.
Since its launch last month, over 120,000 TikTok users have signed up, making SonicX one of the most successful Web3 integrations within a mainstream app like TikTok. This could signal growing interest in decentralized apps, especially among users who have never engaged with blockchain before.
Sonic SVM and Solana
Sonic SVM, backed by $12 million in funding, is looking to carve out a space for blockchain gaming on the Solana (SOL) network. Solana is known for its speed and lower transaction costs, making it popular in decentralized finance. However, it has yet to become a major player in the blockchain gaming space, where networks like Immutable X have taken the lead.
Sonic SVM aims to change this by offering tools for game developers to build on Solana. These tools allow developers to create game-specific networks, called Layer-2 rollups, which can process many transactions off the main blockchain at a faster rate and lower cost, according to the release.