# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Security

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

Looking Back at the Web3 Wallet Undercurrents of 2025: What Are the Major Players Really Competing On?

In 2025, the Web3 wallet sector is undergoing a quiet but significant transformation, driven by major players integrating advanced technologies to enhance security, usability, and functionality. Key developments include Coinbase and Bitget adopting TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) for secure key management and transaction signing, Binance and OKX leveraging TEE with MPC (Multi-Party Computation) and smart accounts for improved security and cross-chain operations, and MetaMask and Phantom introducing social login features using encrypted key sharding for better recovery and user experience. The evolution reflects a shift from purely self-custodial models to hybrid approaches that balance security with convenience, enabling features like automated trading, gas sponsorship, and seamless multi-chain interactions. This transition is fueled by emerging trends such as Perps (perpetual contracts), RWA (real-world assets), and CeDeFi, which demand more complex transaction capabilities. While no new dominant wallets emerged, existing leaders are repositioning as comprehensive entry points for diverse on-chain activities, moving beyond basic asset storage to integrated financial services. The adoption of TEE and MPC technologies, alongside potential future integration with passkeys, indicates a maturation of wallet infrastructure, setting the stage for broader adoption and more sophisticated applications in the coming years.

marsbit12/15 04:05

Looking Back at the Web3 Wallet Undercurrents of 2025: What Are the Major Players Really Competing On?

marsbit12/15 04:05

Ethereum Is Becoming the New Global Financial Backend

Ethereum is emerging as a global financial backend, reducing the complexity and cost of building financial services while increasing speed and security. It embeds core financial operations—such as ownership recording, value transfer, and obligation enforcement—into software, executed via a distributed validator set. This shared infrastructure eliminates the need for redundant internal systems, transforming capital-intensive processes into software-driven activities. The platform addresses key economic frictions: triangulation (discovery and agreement), transfer (value movement), and trust (enforcement). By providing a transparent, programmable, and cryptographically secured environment, Ethereum enables real-time settlement, automated compliance, and global interoperability. This reduces operational risks and costs, particularly for new entrants and markets with fragile financial systems. Ethereum’s impact is most significant in emerging economies, where it offers immediate functional improvements, while in developed markets, benefits accumulate gradually as more processes become programmable. It shifts institutional focus from infrastructure maintenance to innovation and product design, promoting leaner, more efficient financial services. As a resilient, open, and verifiable system, Ethereum is positioned to serve as the foundational layer for future financial infrastructure, driven by economic incentives favoring transparency and reliability.

marsbit12/13 10:36

Ethereum Is Becoming the New Global Financial Backend

marsbit12/13 10:36

The 20% Threshold Audit: Which of the Top 20 Cryptocurrencies Will Perish Under the CLARITY Act?

**Audit of the Top 20: Which Cryptocurrencies Will the CLARITY Act Kill?** Scheduled for a final push in December 2025, the U.S. CLARITY Act introduces a critical 20% threshold. If any single entity or affiliated party controls more than 20% of a network's token supply or validation power, the asset is classified as a "digital security" under the SEC's strict jurisdiction. If it remains below, it is a "digital commodity" under the more lenient CFTC. An audit of the top 20 cryptocurrencies reveals a stark divide: **The Safe Haven (Digital Commodities):** * **Bitcoin (BTC):** 0% control. The gold standard of decentralization. * **Ethereum (ETH):** <1% control. Highly dispersed validators and foundation holdings. * **Dogecoin (DOGE) & Litecoin (LTC):** Near 0% control. Their simple, early PoW issuance is now a major compliance advantage. **The Red Zone (At High Risk):** * **XRP:** High risk. Ripple's massive escrowed holdings could be deemed "entity-controlled." * **BNB:** High risk. Strong association with Binance exchange and its controlled burn mechanism. * **TON:** High risk. Historically concentrated supply from early mining. * **Sui & Aptos:** Extreme risk. Classic "VC coins" with teams, investors, and foundations holding over 50%. * **Layer 2 Tokens (e.g., ARB, OP):** Medium-High risk. Their DAO treasuries often hold 30-40+% of supply, which could be viewed as a single entity. **The Grey Zone:** * **Solana (SOL):** Its status is unclear. FTX's collapse dispersed supply, but the foundation and VC holdings remain a focus for regulators. The 360-day grace period will trigger a market reckoning. Projects may desperately airdrop or burn tokens to dilute control, accept a security" label and face liquidity death on major exchanges, or be preemptively delisted. The outcome will be a "gentrification" of crypto, splitting the market into compliant, institutional "digital commodities" and a shadowy world of illiquid "digital securities." Investors must now scrutinize token distribution or risk being locked out of liquidity.

marsbit12/12 09:40

The 20% Threshold Audit: Which of the Top 20 Cryptocurrencies Will Perish Under the CLARITY Act?

marsbit12/12 09:40

Decade-Long Tug-of-War Concludes: "Crypto Market Structure Bill" Races Toward Senate

After a decade of regulatory uncertainty, the U.S. is advancing the "Cryptocurrency Market Structure Act" (CLARITY Act), which is expected to move into the Senate for revision and voting next week. The bill, which passed the House with overwhelming support in July, aims to end the long-standing debate over whether digital assets are securities or commodities by introducing a clear classification framework. The core of the legislation distinguishes between "digital commodities" and "digital securities." Most tokens issued on decentralized blockchains will be classified as digital commodities under CFTC jurisdiction, while only those meeting the Howey test will remain regulated as securities by the SEC. The bill also establishes a "mature blockchain" exemption, allowing highly decentralized networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum to avoid SEC registration. Additionally, digital commodity trading platforms must register with the CFTC, with a 360-day interim registration period to ensure a smooth transition. The act mandates coordination between the CFTC and SEC through a joint advisory committee to prevent regulatory gaps. It also protects decentralized finance (DeFi) participants by exempting non-custodial, non-profit roles from broker-dealer regulations. This legislative push aligns with broader regulatory shifts under the Trump administration, which has appointed crypto-friendly leaders to key agencies like the SEC, CFTC, and FDIC. These changes, along with recent CFTC initiatives to allow spot crypto trading on regulated platforms, signal a structural shift toward embracing digital assets. The bill is poised to complement earlier stablecoin legislation, positioning the U.S. as a potential global leader in crypto regulation and attracting institutional investment, though challenges in DeFi oversight and international coordination remain.

marsbit12/12 09:14

Decade-Long Tug-of-War Concludes: "Crypto Market Structure Bill" Races Toward Senate

marsbit12/12 09:14

17 Most Anticipated Things in the Cryptocurrency Space in 2026

17 Key Crypto Developments to Watch in 2026 Stablecoin on/off ramps will mature, connecting digital dollars to local payment systems and enabling new behaviors like real-time cross-border payments and merchant adoption without bank accounts. Stablecoins will evolve into a foundational internet settlement layer. RWA tokenization will shift toward crypto-native approaches like perpetual futures for deeper liquidity. Stablecoins will see more native issuance rather than tokenization, and on-chain native debt issuance will reduce costs and improve accessibility. Banks will leverage stablecoins to innovate without overhauling legacy systems. The internet itself will become a banking layer as value moves programmatically via smart contracts and new primitives like x402. Wealth management will become personalized and automated for everyone via tokenized assets and AI-driven portfolio management. DeFi tools and tokenized private markets will expand access. AI agents will require identity verification (KYA - Know Your Agent) and new economic models to compensate content creators as agents scrape the open web. AI will also enable new research methodologies via layered, reasoning agents. Privacy will become crypto's key moat, creating strong network effects as bridging between private and public chains risks metadata leakage. Decentralized, quantum-resistant messaging will rise, emphasizing user ownership. "Secrets-as-a-service" will emerge for programmable data access control. DeFi security will evolve from "code is law" to "specification is law" with runtime enforcement of invariants. Prediction markets will expand with more contracts, AI-powered oracles, and decentralized governance. "Staked media" will rise, where commentators back arguments with verifiable, on-chain commitments. SNARKs will become efficient enough (~10,000x overhead) for verifiable cloud computing, moving beyond blockchain. Finally, crypto market structure regulation could align legal and technical frameworks, enabling networks to operate as truly open, decentralized systems.

marsbit12/11 20:32

17 Most Anticipated Things in the Cryptocurrency Space in 2026

marsbit12/11 20:32

Eight Years of Turbulence in Web3 Phones: From 'Geek Toy' to Xiaomi's 'Factory Standard'

Web3 Smartphones: An 8-Year Evolution from 'Geek Toy' to Xiaomi's 'Standard Feature' On December 10th, high-performance blockchain Sei announced a partnership with Xiaomi, the world's third-largest smartphone manufacturer. The Sei Foundation will develop a next-gen crypto wallet and DApp discovery platform, which will be pre-installed on Xiaomi's new smartphones for global markets (excluding mainland China and the US). Utilizing MPC technology, the collaboration aims to allow users to log in directly via Google or Xiaomi accounts, eliminating intimidating seed phrases. A pilot stablecoin payment system is also slated for 2026, enabling purchases at Xiaomi's retail stores with tokens like USDC. The journey of Web3 phones began around 2018 with devices like Sirin Labs' Finney and HTC's Exodus 1, which focused on "hardware sovereignty" and extreme security, often featuring physical safeguards or trusted execution environments (TEE). These early attempts, including niche projects like Pundi X's communication-focused BOB phone and Electroneum's low-cost "cloud mining" M1, were commercially unsuccessful due to high costs and poor user experience, remaining confined to tech enthusiasts. Mainstream manufacturers like Samsung cautiously entered the space around 2019, integrating features like the Samsung Blockchain Keystore into flagship models. A notable early example was the "KlaytnPhone" edition of the Galaxy Note 10, which included free KLAY, prefiguring the later "airdrop" model. Luxury brand Vertu and HTC also made attempts, but Web3 functions often remained hidden or mere marketing gimmicks. The market was revitalized in 2023 by the Solana Saga. Initially struggling, it sold out instantly after its included BONK token airdrop exceeded the phone's price, earning it the nickname "dividend phone." This success ushered in a new era of "ecosystem binding" and token incentives. Subsequent models like Solana Chapter 2 (Seeker) refined this model with soul-bound tokens (SBT) to prevent scalping. Competition intensified with the TON ecosystem's $99 Universal Basic Smartphone (UBS), Binance Labs' Coral Phone, and the JamboPhone—a $99 device focused on "learn-to-earn" models in emerging markets. An alternative approach emerged from China Telecom and Conflux's BSIM card, which adds Web3 capabilities to any Android phone via a secure SIM card. The evolution highlights five key shifts: 1) Advanced security is moving from simple TEE to architectures like TEEPIN and MPC; 2) Phones are now gateways to specific ecosystems (e.g., Solana, Aptos, Movement Labs); 3) User growth is driven by airdrops and economic incentives, not just security; 4) The focus has shifted from technical concepts (running a full node) to practical applications like payments; 5) The scale is changing dramatically, as Xiaomi's massive annual shipments could onboard hundreds of millions of users, far surpassing niche manufacturers. The conclusion is clear: the greatest barrier to Web3 adoption is not security but complex user experience. The ultimate goal is for Web3 to become an invisible, seamless feature—like 5G—rather than a marketed label. Solana Mobile proved incentive-driven adoption works, but the partnership between Sei and Xiaomi may demonstrate that experience-driven integration is the sustainable path to bringing Web3 to a billion users.

marsbit12/11 09:28

Eight Years of Turbulence in Web3 Phones: From 'Geek Toy' to Xiaomi's 'Factory Standard'

marsbit12/11 09:28

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