# KYC İlgili Makaleler

HTX Haber Merkezi, kripto endüstrisindeki piyasa trendleri, proje güncellemeleri, teknoloji gelişmeleri ve düzenleyici politikaları kapsayan "KYC" hakkında en son makaleleri ve derinlemesine analizleri sunmaktadır.

The Next Generation of Payments Lies Not in the Payment Layer

The Next-Generation of Payment is Not in the Payment Layer This is the second piece in a series analyzing Stripe's AI strategy. The series stems from Stripe's vision of becoming the economic infrastructure for the AI Agent era, announced at Stripe Sessions 2026. A key debate centers on whether Know Your Agent (KYA) is merely an upgrade to existing payment systems. The author argues the opposite: payment will become a subsystem of KYA, not the other way around. Historically, major payment innovations (online banking, mobile wallets, QR codes) emerged from new transaction scenarios that broke the underlying assumptions of old systems, not from optimization within the payment layer itself. Agent economy is that new scenario, and KYA is the foundational infrastructure growing to support it. KYA's proposed five layers—Agent Identity, Authorization Scope, Intent Signing, Liability Chain Auditing, and Credit Rating—extend far beyond payments. Only authorization and auditing directly touch the payment链路. Identity, intent, and credit layers serve broader needs like cross-platform calls, AI alignment, and permission management. Stripe's strategic moves validate this view. Its focus on "economic infrastructure for AI," investments in protocols like Agentic Commerce Protocol (an identity/session protocol), Shared Payment Tokens, stablecoin infrastructure, embedded wallets, and its own Tempo blockchain for settlement, all point to building the KYA layer, not just optimizing payments. Data shows the core challenge in AI commerce has shifted upstream: determining "who this is, what they intend to do, and if they deserve resources" happens long before checkout. This is why Stripe is moving its Radar fraud prevention from the transaction moment to the entire user lifecycle—a KYA-layer concern. Legally, ultimate responsibility will still fall on a human, as laws like AB 316 dictate. However, in a distributed,网状 liability chain involving users, Agent platforms, model providers, and payment protocols, KYA's role is to use cryptography to make every entity's actions and roles verifiable and traceable. This enables accountability where it was previously impossible to pinpoint evidence, fundamentally changing责任追溯, not just payment efficiency. The next-generation payment形态 will not be designed within the payment layer. It will emerge from the Agent economy scenario after the KYA infrastructure is established.

marsbit05/10 03:16

The Next Generation of Payments Lies Not in the Payment Layer

marsbit05/10 03:16

Can a Hair Dryer Earn $34,000? Deciphering the Reflexivity Paradox in Prediction Markets

An individual manipulated a weather sensor at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport with a portable heat source, causing a Polymarket weather market to settle at 22°C and earning $34,000. This incident highlights a fundamental issue in prediction markets: when a market aims to reflect reality, it also incentivizes participants to influence that reality. Prediction markets operate on two layers: platform rules (what outcome counts as a win) and data sources (what actually happened). While most focus on rules, the real vulnerability lies in the data source. If reality is recorded through a specific source, influencing that source directly affects market settlement. The article categorizes markets by their vulnerability: 1. **Single-point physical data sources** (e.g., weather stations): Easily manipulated through physical interference. 2. **Insider information markets** (e.g., MrBeast video details): Insiders like team members use non-public information to trade. Kalshi fined a剪辑师 $20,000 for insider trading. 3. **Actor-manipulated markets** (e.g., Andrew Tate’s tweet counts): The subject of the market can control the outcome. Evidence suggests Tate’sociated accounts coordinated to profit. 4. **Individual-action markets** (e.g., WNBA disruptions): A single person can execute an event to profit from their pre-placed bets. Kalshi and Polymarket handle these issues differently. Kalshi enforces strict KYC, publicly penalizes insider trading, and reports to regulators. Polymarket, with its anonymous wallet-based system, has historically been more permissive, arguing that insider information improves market accuracy. However, it cooperated with authorities in the "Van Dyke case," where a user traded on classified government information. The core paradox is reflexivity: prediction markets are designed to discover truth, but their financial incentives can distort reality. The more valuable a prediction becomes, the more likely participants are to influence the event itself. The market ceases to be a mirror of reality and instead shapes it.

marsbit04/25 03:21

Can a Hair Dryer Earn $34,000? Deciphering the Reflexivity Paradox in Prediction Markets

marsbit04/25 03:21

$20 for a Face: The Underground Business of Crypto KYC

Crypto KYC Bypass: A $20 Underground Industry Despite stringent KYC (Know Your Customer) requirements from major crypto exchanges, a thriving underground market exists to bypass these checks for as low as $20. Users often face geo-blocks or lengthy verifications, preventing access to services. This has fueled demand for illicit KYC services. Reports indicate over 500,000 participants in underground KYC markets, with more than 1 million listings selling verified profiles from platforms like Coinbase and Kraken. These accounts often include real personal data, sometimes without the original owners' knowledge. Fraud techniques have evolved, including deepfake attacks (up 2000% in three years), screen-based spoofing, and AI-generated fake documents. The virtual currency sector is the primary target, accounting for over 78% of KYC attacks. An investigation into a Telegram-based KYC vendor revealed a TRON address with over $59,000 in USDT from 600 transactions over two years, all eventually transferred to an OKX hot wallet. An interview with a KYC service provider, "Maoli," who operates in Chinese-speaking regions, detailed the process: clients pay for accounts verified by "foreigners" recruited globally, often from lower-income regions, who perform the KYC steps for a small fee. These accounts are sold with warnings against holding large funds due to fraud risks and potential reclaiming by the original identity owners. Maoli described the business as a "three-way win": users gain access, exchanges get user numbers, and he profits. However, this ignores the victims of identity theft whose data is used without consent. The KYC system, while intended for security, functions as a permeable barrier, with a vast shadow economy ensuring access for those willing to pay.

marsbit03/30 07:36

$20 for a Face: The Underground Business of Crypto KYC

marsbit03/30 07:36

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