# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Regulation

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

Top 10 AI Models Speak Out: What Do Crypto Users Care About Most in 2025?

This article summarizes the top concerns of cryptocurrency users in 2025, as predicted by 10 major AI models. The models were asked to identify the three most common questions users would have about crypto in 2025, with instructions to avoid real-time searches and base answers on long-term discussion patterns. The responses, while varied, cluster around three core themes: market cycles, profit opportunities, and risk management. Key recurring questions include: - The current market phase (bull or bear) and how long it will last. - Bitcoin's price trajectory post-halving and the market's peak. - Where to find profitable opportunities (alpha) and the best assets or sectors to invest in (e.g., RWA, AI+Crypto, L2s, Solana). - The impact of regulatory changes and ETF approvals on the market and asset safety. - How to identify scams, assess project legitimacy, and securely store assets. - Practical on-chain concerns like avoiding MEV and setting slippage. The analysis notes that the models' different focuses reflect their design and user base. For instance, ChatGPT framed questions around a structured narrative of market anxiety, while Kimi addressed granular technical issues. More capable models tended to provide sharper, more specific questions, while others fell back on broader, common themes. Overall, the collective output reveals a user mindset focused on first gauging market trends, then seeking alpha, and finally mitigating risks.

比推12/24 06:50

Top 10 AI Models Speak Out: What Do Crypto Users Care About Most in 2025?

比推12/24 06:50

The Trillion-Dollar Stablecoin War: Binance Decides to Re-enter the Fray

The stablecoin market, with $27.6 trillion in on-chain transfers in 2024, has surpassed the combined volume of Visa and Mastercard. This marks a shift from a niche crypto product to a critical piece of global financial infrastructure. The article outlines the evolution of stablecoins. The 1.0 era was defined by first-mover advantage and passive monopolies. Tether's USDT dominates with a 60% market share, while Circle's USDC, despite its compliance focus, faced a crisis during the 2023 Silicon Valley Bank collapse, proving that network effect is the ultimate moat. Binance's journey reflects this competitive landscape. Its first stablecoin, the regulated BUSD, was shut down by U.S. regulators in 2023. It then pivoted to supporting FDUSD and has now taken a strategic stake in a new model with the launch of $U. Unlike traditional stablecoins, $U is a "stablecoin ETF" or "套娃" (nesting doll), backed by a basket of existing stablecoins: USDT, USDC, and the politically-connected USD1 from the Trump family. USD1's rapid growth, including a $2 billion investment into Binance from an Abu Dhabi fund, highlights a new dimension: stablecoins. The article argues that stablecoins are no longer just financial tools but vehicles for political capital and a new front in the battle for monetary influence, as evidenced by the U.S. passing the GENIUS Act to establish a federal regulatory framework. The "nesting doll" structure of $U aims to mitigate single-point risks (e.g., USDT's opacity, USDC's banking risk, USD1's political ties) and aggregate liquidity. However, it also creates a potential chain of risk contagion. The competition has moved from a solo fight for survival (1.0) to an era of alliances and aggregation (2.0), where the key is who can build the largest coalition. With giants like PayPal and Ripple entering the fray, the battle for the future of digital dollars is intensifying, and its outcome will have profound implications for the global financial system.

marsbit12/24 06:11

The Trillion-Dollar Stablecoin War: Binance Decides to Re-enter the Fray

marsbit12/24 06:11

What Are Crypto Users Most Concerned About in 2025? 10 AI Models Give Different Answers

The article explores what cryptocurrency users might be most concerned about in 2025 by querying 10 major AI models with the same prompt. Each model was asked to list the top three questions crypto users would frequently ask in 2025, with instructions to avoid real-time searches and rely on their understanding of long-term discussion patterns. The models provided varied responses, reflecting their unique focuses and contextual training. For instance, ChatGPT emphasized market cycles and alpha opportunities, while Grok focused on narratives like Bitcoin halving and ETF inflows. Perplexity prioritized price trends and scams, and Claude highlighted risk management for beginners. Gemini leaned toward real-world assets and technical roadmaps like L2 and AI integration. Chinese models like Douban and Wenxin were more aligned with regulatory impacts and market cycles, whereas Kimi delved into practical on-chain issues like wallet security and MEV. Overall, the questions centered on three core themes: market cycle positioning, profit opportunities, and risk management. The diversity in responses suggests differences in model design, data training, and intended use cases, with more advanced models often providing more structured and specific questions. The findings reflect the crypto community’s persistent focus on volatility, narrative-driven markets, and the balance between seeking returns and avoiding risks.

marsbit12/24 03:12

What Are Crypto Users Most Concerned About in 2025? 10 AI Models Give Different Answers

marsbit12/24 03:12

2025, Ethereum: Life Through Death

By 2025, Ethereum faced an identity crisis, caught between Bitcoin's "digital gold" narrative and high-performance competitors like Solana. Regulatory clarity emerged with the U.S. CLARITY Act classifying ETH as a commodity, while the SEC’s "Project Crypto" acknowledged its decentralized nature, allowing staking rewards without securities classification. The 2024 Dencun upgrade, intended to reduce L2 costs via EIP-4844, backfired—L2s thrived but paid minimal fees to L1, crashing Ethereum’s revenue and raising sustainability concerns. The December 2025 Fusaka upgrade addressed this with EIP-7918, tying Blob fees to L1 execution costs, ensuring L2s contribute fairly to L1 revenue. PeerDAS (EIP-7594) expanded data capacity, enabling scalable, low-cost transactions. Ethereum’s new "B2B tax model" reframed its value: L2s handle high-volume, low-value transactions, while L1 provides security and settlement, capturing fees through ETH burns and staking rewards. Analysts projected an 8x increase in ETH burn rates by 2026. Valuation models now combine DCF (discounted cash flow) for protocol revenue and "trustware" pricing for its role in securing high-value assets like RWA (real-world assets), where Ethereum dominates due to its security and decentralization. Despite Solana’s edge in consumer apps, Ethereum solidified its position as the foundation for institutional-grade DeFi and RWA, transitioning into a foundational economic layer for the digital economy.

marsbit12/24 01:27

2025, Ethereum: Life Through Death

marsbit12/24 01:27

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