# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Trust

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

Publicly Pumping Ethereum, Internally Bearish in Reports: Is Tom Lee's Team Still Trustworthy?

Tom Lee, co-founder of Fundstrat and a prominent public Ethereum bull, faces credibility questions after an internal Fundstrat report presented a bearish short-term outlook, contrasting his highly optimistic public statements. Publicly, Lee repeatedly called Ethereum to reach $12,000-$15,000 by end-2025 and declared it "severely undervalued" at $3,000. He has been a vocal "perma-bull" in media appearances. However, Fundstrat's internal 2026 Crypto Outlook report, led by Digital Asset Strategist Sean Farrell, advised paying subscribers to expect a significant market correction in early 2026. Its base case predicted ETH could fall to $1,800-$2,000 and BTC to $60,000-$65,000, citing macroeconomic risks like a potential U.S. government shutdown and Federal Reserve leadership change. The report recommended clients increase cash/stablecoin holdings and wait for better entry points, while maintaining a long-term bullish year-end 2026 target of $4,500 for ETH. Fundstrat responded that the discrepancy stems from different analysts serving different client types: Lee's long-term, structural views are for traditional investors with low (1%-5%) crypto allocations, while Farrell's tactical, short-term risk management is for crypto-heavy portfolios. Critics argue this distinction was never clearly disclosed in Lee's public media appearances, which serve as marketing for Fundstrat's subscription service. Further complicating matters, Lee is also Chairman of BitMine, a company adopting an Ethereum treasury strategy, raising potential conflict of interest concerns about his public endorsements. The incident highlights the blurred lines between personal commentary, institutional research, and marketing in the crypto research space.

marsbit12/23 03:08

Publicly Pumping Ethereum, Internally Bearish in Reports: Is Tom Lee's Team Still Trustworthy?

marsbit12/23 03:08

Identity, Recourse, Attribution: Decoding the Three Breakthrough Points of the Next-Generation AI Agent Economy

Identity, Recourse, Attribution: Decoding the Three Breakthrough Points of the Next-Generation AI Agent Economy As AI agents begin to handle transactions, new standards like OpenAI's ACP and Google's AP2 are emerging to facilitate payments, while protocols like x402 enable machine-to-machine micropayments. However, these systems lack the trust infrastructure—identity verification, fraud detection, and dispute resolution—that underpins traditional commerce. This creates a critical gap: while blockchain enables fast, irreversible settlements, agents operate without mechanisms for recourse when errors occur. The solution requires building new layers for the agent economy: a "Know Your Agent" (KYA) identity system to establish persistent, verifiable credentials; a recourse mechanism to handle disputes and provide insurance-like protection; and an attribution layer to track influence on purchasing decisions. Established players like card networks and AI labs are unlikely to lead this effort due to misaligned incentives, creating opportunities for startups. The development of agent commerce will unfold in three stages: as an interface (current stage), executing under human supervision (where trust layers become critical), and fully autonomous transactions. Startups that build identity, recourse, and attribution infrastructure will enable the transition to an economy where agents transact freely and securely at scale.

深潮12/22 10:00

Identity, Recourse, Attribution: Decoding the Three Breakthrough Points of the Next-Generation AI Agent Economy

深潮12/22 10:00

Dialogue with Christian, a Post-00s Fintech Entrepreneur: Craving Iteration Speed and Mutual Candor, Financial Mindset Matters More Than Choices, 'Young People Should Have Awe'

Amid a challenging 2025, Christian, the 00-year-old founder of fintech startup Infini, reflects on a year marked by a major security breach and a strategic pivot. The company shifted from consumer-focused crypto services to B2B financial infrastructure, emphasizing payment solutions and stablecoin integration. Christian stresses that the core value in fintech isn't just efficiency but trust, earned through rapid iteration, transparent service, and 24/7 responsiveness. He believes financial products should empower users with financial literacy and risk awareness, rather than just offering investment options. Infini’s new direction focuses on building a "financial OS" to help global entrepreneurs—especially solo developers and small teams—receive payments and manage capital easily, reducing dependency on traditional banking. Christian also shares management insights: prioritize speed, curiosity, and radical honesty within teams. He admires Revolut’s execution speed and high standards, and draws inspiration from historical leaders like Emperor Taizong of Tang for their strategic decisiveness and ability to integrate talented but strong-willed individuals. Despite a tough year, he views these challenges as crucial lessons in resilience, team alignment, and maintaining long-term vision.

marsbit12/19 07:13

Dialogue with Christian, a Post-00s Fintech Entrepreneur: Craving Iteration Speed and Mutual Candor, Financial Mindset Matters More Than Choices, 'Young People Should Have Awe'

marsbit12/19 07:13

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