# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Dispute

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

Hyperliquid Infringement Dispute: Technological Rights Protection or Opportunistic Marketing?

Hyperliquid, a high-performance decentralized exchange (DEX), faces patent infringement allegations from Cypherium, a competing RWA blockchain project. The dispute centers on US Patent 11,411,721 B2, held by Cypherium, which covers systems for dynamically selecting and reconfiguring validator committees using mechanisms like aggregated signatures and two-phase reconfiguration in a Proof-of-Stake (PoS) environment. Cypherium’s founder, Sky Guo, claims Hyperliquid’s core consensus engine, HyperCore—a custom variant of the HotStuff algorithm—illegally uses this patented technology to achieve its high throughput and sub-second finality. The controversy arises as Hyperliquid’s native token, HYPE, surged over 40% amid a broader market downturn and the launch of its new prediction market proposal, HIP-4. Critics question the timing of the allegations, noting coinciding promotions for Cypherium’s upcoming project, "G-Exchange," suggesting potential "clickbait marketing." Hyperliquid has not yet publicly responded to the legal claims. With Hyperliquid’s code remaining closed-source, external verification of the infringement is challenging. The situation highlights tensions between protecting proprietary tech and maintaining decentralization trust. Additionally, HYPE is set to unlock 9.92 million tokens (2.79% of supply) on February 6, worth approximately $357 million at current prices.

marsbit02/04 02:50

Hyperliquid Infringement Dispute: Technological Rights Protection or Opportunistic Marketing?

marsbit02/04 02:50

Who Defines the "Facts"? The Truth About Power and the Potential for Malice in Polymarket's Resolution Mechanism

Polymarket, a prediction market platform, faces renewed criticism over fairness following its intervention in a market regarding a potential U.S. invasion of Venezuela. On January 4, Polymarket issued a clarification stating that the U.S. operation to capture Venezuelan President Maduro did not qualify as an "invasion," causing a sharp drop in the value of "YES" shares for the event occurring by January 31 and impacting user profits. This is not the first such incident. The article explains Polymarket’s resolution mechanism, which relies on the oracle protocol UMA. Each prediction market has predefined rules, but Polymarket can issue additional clarifications for unforeseen events, as in this case. The resolution process requires a whitelisted address to propose an outcome with a security deposit. If unchallenged, it is accepted. If disputed, a debate and UMA token holder vote occur, with unbalanced incentives favoring the challenger to ensure proposal quality. The core issues are ambiguity in rule interpretation and the centralization of power. Rules are inherently interpretable, and platform neutrality is complicated by its U.S. base and geopolitical biases. Furthermore, the UMA voting mechanism, though economically incentivized, remains vulnerable to manipulation by large token holders, as seen in a past incident where a $7 million market was inaccurately resolved. Ultimately, users are not betting on real-world outcomes but on how rules will be interpreted and enforced.

Odaily星球日报01/08 03:55

Who Defines the "Facts"? The Truth About Power and the Potential for Malice in Polymarket's Resolution Mechanism

Odaily星球日报01/08 03:55

活动图片