# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Crypto

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Crypto", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Musk Casually Overturns the Rice Bowls of Crypto KOLs

Elon Musk's X platform has updated its paid partnership policy, causing significant disruption among crypto KOLs. The new rules mandate that all paid content must be clearly labeled with a "Paid Partnership" disclosure tag, replacing the previous "#ad" requirement. Additionally, reporting unlabeled paid promotions has been simplified to an anonymous form. Initially, the policy mistakenly included "cryptocurrency" in a list of prohibited promotion categories, but this was quickly corrected by X’s product lead, Nikita Bier, who clarified that the change was an error and not targeted at crypto or prediction markets. Despite this, the core policy changes still apply to crypto influencers. The new rules effectively end the era of "hidden advertisements" in crypto, where KOLs often promoted projects without disclosing paid arrangements. Many crypto projects and KOLs prefer undisclosed promotions to maintain an appearance of organic endorsement, as labeled ads may reduce credibility and trigger backlash from followers who might perceive them as scams. The anonymous reporting system has already led to penalties for several KOLs, including temporary bans and forced post removals. This has created uncertainty and fear within the community, as malicious or mistaken reports could easily target influencers. Some KOLs are protesting sarcastically by labeling all posts as "paid partnerships," while others consider migrating to crypto-friendly platforms like Binance Square, which may offer a more accommodating environment. However, given crypto’s niche size relative to the broader internet, X is unlikely to reverse its policy changes for this audience.

marsbit03/04 04:01

Musk Casually Overturns the Rice Bowls of Crypto KOLs

marsbit03/04 04:01

The Hottest Open Source Project in History, Almost Became a 'Trophy' in the Crypto World

OpenClaw has rapidly become one of the most popular and fastest-growing open-source projects in history, amassing over 250,000 stars on GitHub in just three months. Its creator, Peter Steinberger, has gained significant influence in the AI community but has also taken a strong stance against the crypto industry. Despite its success, OpenClaw has faced challenges, including a trademark dispute that led to a name change. During this process, crypto speculators quickly created and promoted fake tokens using the project’s name, leading to significant financial losses for some investors. Steinberger publicly denounced these activities, clarifying that OpenClaw would never issue a token and disavowing any association with cryptocurrency. The project also briefly listed Venice, a crypto-native AI project on Base chain, as a recommended model provider—a move that was quickly reversed to maintain neutrality and avoid perceived endorsements of crypto-related initiatives. Steinberger has repeatedly expressed frustration with crypto communities, citing harassment, malicious code submissions, and off-topic speculation as disruptive to genuine technical discussion. He has even considered abandoning the project due to these issues. Steinberger, who is financially independent, has advised young developers to avoid cryptocurrency, reflecting his broader criticism of the industry’s speculative culture. The conflict highlights the ongoing struggle between open-source innovation and crypto-driven commercialization.

marsbit03/04 04:00

The Hottest Open Source Project in History, Almost Became a 'Trophy' in the Crypto World

marsbit03/04 04:00

OpenClaw Endorses Venice.ai, VVV Token Surges Over 500% in One Month

OpenClaw, an open-source self-hosted AI agent platform, has listed Venice.ai—a privacy-focused, uncensored generative AI platform—as a recommended model provider. This endorsement comes shortly after OpenClaw’s founder publicly discouraged young people from engaging with cryptocurrency, creating a notable contrast. Venice.ai, founded by crypto OG Erik Voorhees, positions itself as a decentralized alternative to ChatGPT. It emphasizes user privacy by not storing any data on its servers; all content remains encrypted on the user’s local device. The platform offers two privacy modes: Private (using open-source models on decentralized GPUs) and Anonymized (removing user metadata from prompts). The project features a dual-token economy: - VVV: A capital asset used for staking (currently ~19% APY) and minting DIEM. - DIEM: Represents perpetual AI compute credit. 1 DIEM = $1 daily API credit, usable across Venice’s models. This structure allows high-frequency users to access AI services at a lower marginal cost over time. VVV’s price surged over 500% in a month, rising from ~$1.5 to ~$8.4. This growth is attributed to both supply constraints—including a permanent burn of unclaimed airdropped tokens and reduced annual emissions—and rising demand, especially after OpenClaw’s integration. With over 25,000 API users and a staking rate of 38.8% for VVV, Venice is positioning itself as a privacy-backend solution for the expanding AI agent ecosystem, blending crypto-economic incentives with scalable AI infrastructure.

Odaily星球日报03/04 02:31

OpenClaw Endorses Venice.ai, VVV Token Surges Over 500% in One Month

Odaily星球日报03/04 02:31

Hong Kong Airdrops Stablecoins, US Defines Boundaries: The Institutionalization Phase of Stablecoins

Stablecoin regulation is entering a new institutionalized phase, as evidenced by recent developments in Hong Kong and the United States. Hong Kong is set to issue its first stablecoin issuer licenses by March, marking the start of a licensed era. Lawmaker Johnny Ng has proposed distributing stablecoin-based consumption vouchers to citizens to encourage adoption among local SMEs—a strategy reminiscent of the e-voucher campaigns that boosted digital payment uptake. Hong Kong’s regulatory framework requires licensed issuers to hold full reserve backing, independent custody, and face-value redemption, effectively treating stablecoin operators as quasi-financial institutions. Meanwhile, the U.S. is clarifying the regulatory status of payment stablecoins. Following a key meeting between banking and crypto industry representatives, the SEC is revising Rule 15c3-1 to include payment stablecoins under broker-dealer capital rules, applying a 2% capital deduction. Eligible stablecoins must be dollar-denominated, fully reserved, audited monthly, and redeemable. This move formally integrates payment stablecoins into the U.S. financial regulatory system. Together, these developments signal that stablecoins are transitioning from market experiments to regulated financial instruments—no longer just crypto products but recognized gateways into the global monetary system.

marsbit03/04 01:08

Hong Kong Airdrops Stablecoins, US Defines Boundaries: The Institutionalization Phase of Stablecoins

marsbit03/04 01:08

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