# Сопутствующие статьи по теме L1

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "L1", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Messari 2026 Crypto Thesis: Why Speculation Is No Longer Enough (Part 1)

Messari's 2026 Crypto Thesis argues that the market is shifting from pure speculation to systemic integration. The report highlights several key trends: First, it identifies a valuation trap in new Layer 1 blockchains. Many VC-backed L1s with high fully diluted valuations lack fundamental revenue, as token issuance far exceeds gas fee income. The market is expected to strip away the "monetary premium" of these tokens, with only a few ecosystems like Solana and Base maintaining real traction. Second, chain abstraction is emerging as a critical strategy, where blockchains become backend infrastructure. Users interact without needing to know which chain they're on, shifting competitive advantage from execution speed to control over user flow and liquidity. Third, the rise of an agent economy is predicted, with AI agents potentially driving up to 80% of on-chain transactions by 2026. This emphasizes the importance of APIs and machine-readable financial primitives over user-facing interfaces. Fourth, equity perpetuals (e.g., on Hyperliquid) are gaining traction as synthetic derivatives for global stock exposure, offering a more scalable alternative to tokenized stocks. Finally, DePIN is highlighted as the sector most likely to generate hundreds of millions in verifiable revenue by 2026, driven by real demand for AI compute resources rather than speculative hardware deployment. The report underscores that while fundamentals are becoming more critical, market narratives and liquidity flows remain key drivers of returns.

marsbit01/02 13:41

Messari 2026 Crypto Thesis: Why Speculation Is No Longer Enough (Part 1)

marsbit01/02 13:41

Where Did the $362 Million Go? Hyperliquid Counters FUD, A Decentralization Route Debate Behind the Reconciliation

A technical report published on December 20, 2025, accused Hyperliquid, a decentralized exchange, of multiple severe issues—including insolvency and a "God mode backdoor"—claiming it was a centralized platform disguised as a blockchain. Hyperliquid issued a detailed response refuting the claims. The most serious allegation—a $362M shortfall in user funds—was debunked. The discrepancy arose because the accuser overlooked native USDC on HyperEVM during Hyperliquid’s transition from an L2 to an independent L1. Total reserves across Arbitrum and HyperEVM matched user balances. Other accusations were partially addressed: some code was testnet-related, limited broadcast nodes were an anti-MEV measure, and chain freezes were part of upgrade procedures. However, Hyperliquid did not fully respond to claims about unqueryable governance proposals and a lack of a cross-chain "escape hatch" for withdrawals. The exchange also compared itself to competitors like Lighter and Aster, criticizing their reliance on centralized sequencers and lack of transparency, while highlighting its own fully on-chain state verification. Additionally, Hyperliquid addressed community concerns about insider trading, attributing significant short selling to a former employee. The incident underscores broader challenges in DeFi transparency as protocols grow more complex, emphasizing the crypto mantra: "Don’t trust, verify."

marsbit12/24 02:55

Where Did the $362 Million Go? Hyperliquid Counters FUD, A Decentralization Route Debate Behind the Reconciliation

marsbit12/24 02:55

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