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Claiming 'KYC-Free Global Payments', Inevitable Shutdown Within 6 Months

Cryptocurrency cards marketed as "No-KYC global payment" solutions are fundamentally unsustainable and inevitably face shutdown within 6 months due to structural and regulatory realities. These cards rely on exploiting corporate card programs, where a company undergoes business verification (KYB) to issue cards to "employees" without individual KYC. However, Visa and Mastercard's strictly regulated networks mandate that all end-users must be identifiable. When these projects gain traction and transaction volume increases, they attract scrutiny from card networks or issuing banks. Compliance reviews quickly identify the misuse of the corporate card model, leading to account freezes, project termination, and often frozen user funds. Users are attracted to these cards due to privacy concerns or lack of access, but they bear significant risks. Legally, users are not bank customers; their funds are controlled by the company holding the master account, offering no deposit insurance or consumer protection. When projects collapse, users face frozen balances and difficult refund processes. Legitimate alternatives exist, such as low-limit prepaid cards or gift cards purchased with crypto, but they operate within strict boundaries. The only structurally honest path to sustainable no-KYC payments lies outside the Visa/Mastercard duopoly, by building crypto-native networks that integrate directly with payment acquirers, though this approach is more complex and less common. Ultimately, any card bearing a Visa or Mastercard logo that promises high limits without KYC is built on a temporary and fragile foundation destined to fail.

比推02/10 12:11

Claiming 'KYC-Free Global Payments', Inevitable Shutdown Within 6 Months

比推02/10 12:11

The Darkness Before Dawn: Crypto in 2026 = The Internet in 2002

"DeFi Cheetah argues that the current despair in crypto, marked by high-profile departures like Kyle Samani's shift to AI, is deceptive. The industry is at a critical inflection point, witnessing a rise of "fintech wrappers"—products from traditional finance (like bank-issued stablecoins or tokenized assets) that merely leverage blockchain for efficient settlement while retaining the old, rent-seeking intermediary structures. These wrappers, comparable to "Western Union with private keys," fail to capture value on-chain and fragment liquidity, representing an IT upgrade rather than true crypto innovation. Drawing a parallel to the dot-com bust of 2002, the author contends that just as early internet companies were merely "newspaper wrappers," today's fintech wrappers are placing old finance onto new rails. The real revolution will be built by those who embrace crypto's native properties: a global state instead of siloed databases, atomic composability instead of API integrations, and permissionless liquidity instead of walled gardens. The consensus view that blockchains are merely asset ledgers is where alpha is not found. The current downturn is a filter. The true builders who remain will focus on constructing what cannot exist on private servers, leveraging trustless coordination, permissionless access, and composability to solve problems legacy systems cannot. The work of building the sovereign internet is just beginning."

marsbit02/10 11:42

The Darkness Before Dawn: Crypto in 2026 = The Internet in 2002

marsbit02/10 11:42

ARK Invest: Will Stablecoins Become the Cornerstone of the Next Generation Monetary System?

ARK Invest explores whether stablecoins could become the cornerstone of the next monetary system, drawing parallels between today’s privately issued digital currencies and the free banking era in the U.S. prior to the Federal Reserve's establishment in 1913. The article highlights the emergence of Tether (USDT) in 2014 as a solution to slow cross-border dollar transfers in crypto markets. Initially used for arbitrage, stablecoins like USDT gained traction in emerging economies during the COVID-19 pandemic as a hedge against hyperinflation and currency devaluation. By 2025, USDT’s supply reached $187 billion, backed largely by U.S. Treasuries and serving over 450 million users globally. The discussion references the GENIUS Act, which legitimizes privately issued stablecoins, and features insights from Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino, economist Arthur Laffer, and ARK CEO Cathie Wood. Laffer compares modern stablecoins to 19th-century private banknotes but notes that technological and regulatory advances mitigate past risks like fraud and instability. Looking forward, stablecoins may evolve into interest-bearing instruments or be pegged to baskets of commodities. Tether is also expanding into commodity settlement and developing new stablecoins like USAT for developed markets. The piece concludes that stablecoins could modernize financial infrastructure, combining the efficiency of blockchain with the stability of asset-backed currencies.

marsbit02/10 11:30

ARK Invest: Will Stablecoins Become the Cornerstone of the Next Generation Monetary System?

marsbit02/10 11:30

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