# Сопутствующие статьи по теме NFT

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

43-Year-Old OnlyFans Helmsman Passes Away; He Once Bought ETH into the Company's Balance Sheet

Leonid Radvinsky, the 43-year-old Ukrainian-American majority owner of OnlyFans, has passed away after a long battle with cancer. Under his leadership since acquiring 75% of the parent company Fenix International in 2018, OnlyFans grew into a subscription-based content platform valued at approximately $18 billion, with over 377 million users and 4.63 million creators. Radvinsky maintained a low public profile but quietly engaged with crypto initiatives. In 2022, OnlyFans introduced NFT profile picture verification via Ethereum, marking its first step into web3. That same year, Fenix International purchased $19.9 million worth of ETH, recording it on its balance sheet, though it later wrote down $8.46 million due to market declines. The company also donated 500 ETH (then around $1 million) to Ukraine DAO in support of war relief efforts. Although OnlyFans never integrated crypto payments, its founder Tim Stokely later launched Zoop, an NFT trading card platform on Polygon, applying the creator-paid subscription model to web3. In 2025, Zoop and HBAR Foundation even submitted a bid to acquire TikTok’s U.S. operations with plans to incorporate token incentives and NFT-based creator monetization—though the deal did not materialize. Radvinsky’s tenure transformed OnlyFans into a financial powerhouse, generating over $6 billion in annual transactions and paying out more than $700 million in dividends in 2024 alone.

marsbit03/25 10:05

43-Year-Old OnlyFans Helmsman Passes Away; He Once Bought ETH into the Company's Balance Sheet

marsbit03/25 10:05

Token Is Completely on Fire, Blockchain Is Heartbroken

Token, a term once central to blockchain's vision of decentralization and economic transformation, has now been popularized by the AI industry as a unit of computation and billing. With the rise of products like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Deepseek, Token has become widely recognized as a measure of API calls and computational power—essentially a "currency for compute." This shift has left the blockchain sector in an ironic position: while it long struggled to explain Token's potential for revolutionizing ownership and community governance, AI has repurposed the term into a practical, everyday concept devoid of cryptographic complexity. The blockchain community once championed "Tokenization of Everything," aiming to convert real-world assets and labor into tradable tokens. Instead, AI achieved a form of tokenization by breaking down text, audio, and video into Tokens for processing—without requiring users to manage private keys or understand consensus mechanisms. This practical adoption contrasts sharply with blockchain’s association with speculation and scandals, as seen in the rise and fall of NFTs and memecoins. Amid a broader crisis of faith in blockchain’s promise—with many innovators expressing disillusionment over the industry’s shift toward speculation—AI’s rapid growth has intensified this sense of irrelevance. However, there are positive signs: traditional assets like U.S. Treasuries and stocks are increasingly being tokenized, attracting major financial institutions like BlackRock and Fidelity. This may signal Token’s return to its original purpose as a vehicle of value, even as AI dominates its popular meaning.

marsbit03/25 02:14

Token Is Completely on Fire, Blockchain Is Heartbroken

marsbit03/25 02:14

US SEC and CFTC Jointly "Unbind": Crypto Assets Are "Digital Commodities" Not "Securities"

The U.S. SEC and CFTC have jointly issued new interpretive guidance clarifying that most crypto assets are not securities. Instead, they are classified as digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, or stablecoins—provided stablecoin issuers do not pay interest. Only tokenized assets that represent traditional financial instruments are considered securities. Key classifications include: - Digital commodities (e.g., Bitcoin, Ethereum) are non-securities whose value derives from utility and market dynamics. - Digital collectibles (e.g., NFTs, meme coins) are for collection or use. - Digital tools (e.g., membership tokens, credentials) serve functional purposes. - Stablecoins are non-securities if they do not pay yields. The guidance also states that DeFi mining, staking, wrapped assets, and airdrops generally do not constitute securities offerings—unless airdrops require active effort (creating an investment contract risk). Notably, a token initially sold as a security can later be reclassified as a non-security if it becomes decentralized or gains utility. This clarity is expected to benefit crypto IPOs (e.g., exchanges like OKX and Kraken), DeFi protocols, and prediction markets like Polymarket by reducing regulatory uncertainty and attracting institutional liquidity. However, increased regulatory alignment may reduce innovation in gray areas and raise compliance costs. Overall, the move signals tighter integration with mainstream finance, potentially ensuring the industry’s broader adoption and stability.

Odaily星球日报03/18 10:18

US SEC and CFTC Jointly "Unbind": Crypto Assets Are "Digital Commodities" Not "Securities"

Odaily星球日报03/18 10:18

The True Replay of the Internet Bubble Is Web3, Not AI

Author TVBee argues that Web3, not AI, is the true reenactment of the 2000 dot-com bubble. The article compares the three sectors: the historical internet bubble, the current AI boom, and Web3. During the 2000 bubble, capital was focused on the supply side with many unprofitable companies, while demand-side applications were scarce due to limited internet access and primitive technology. In contrast, the current AI boom is primarily driven by infrastructure leaders like NVIDIA and AMD, which have substantial profits. Demand-side applications, such as various AI models and tools, are growing and integrating into more use cases, though the ecosystem is still developing. Web3, however, is criticized for its significant supply-side speculation with high valuations based on minimal revenue (e.g., ZKsync's $1.76B市值 vs. $458 daily income). Demand-side applications are limited mostly to DeFi, memecoins, and prediction markets, with much activity driven by airdrop farming rather than genuine utility. The author concludes that Web3, with its hype-driven capital and lack of practical products, mirrors the 2000 bubble most closely. Predictions include a likely U.S. stock market correction (but not a crash), a moderate impact on Bitcoin, and a prolonged, painful consolidation for altcoins to separate valuable projects from speculative ones. The author warns that the altcoin market decline since late 2024 is not yet over.

marsbit03/13 09:31

The True Replay of the Internet Bubble Is Web3, Not AI

marsbit03/13 09:31

活动图片