In-Depth Report on DeFi: SEC's New Policy – From "Innovation Exemption" to "On-Chain Finance", Could There Be Another DeFi Summer?

HTX Learn發佈於 2025-06-19更新於 2026-07-12

文章摘要

Decentralized Finance (DeFi) has experienced breakneck growth since 2018, becoming one of the core pillars of the global crypto asset ecosystem.

I. Introduction: SEC's New Policy and a Pivotal Shift in the DeFi Regulatory Landscape

Decentralized Finance (DeFi) has experienced breakneck growth since 2018, becoming one of the core pillars of the global crypto asset ecosystem. Through open and permissionless financial protocols, DeFi offers a wide range of financial features, including asset trading, lending, derivatives, stablecoins, and asset management. It is built on technical foundations such as smart contracts, on-chain settlement, decentralized oracles, and governance mechanisms, which together have enabled DeFi to deeply simulate and reconfigure traditional financial structures. Especially since the "DeFi Summer" in 2020, the total value locked (TVL) in DeFi protocols once surpassed $180 billion, signaling unprecedented scalability and market recognition of this field.

However, the rapid expansion of this sector has come with persistent challenges, including compliance ambiguity, systemic risk, and a vacuum in regulation. Led by former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, U.S. regulators adopted an increasingly stringent approach across the broader crypto industry, with a focus on centralized enforcement. Specifically, DeFi protocols, decentralized exchanges (DEXs), and DAO governance structures came under scrutiny for potential violations such as unregistered securities trading and operating as unregistered brokers or clearing agents. From 2022 to 2024, projects such as Uniswap Labs, Coinbase, Kraken, and Balancer Labs were subject to various forms of investigations and received enforcement letters from the SEC or CFTC. At the same time, the longstanding absence of clear standards for determining whether a project is "sufficiently decentralized", involves "public fundraising", or qualifies as a "securities trading platform" left the DeFi industry mired in multiple challenges such as technological stagnation, capital investment contraction, and developer attrition amid regulatory uncertainty.

This regulatory tone saw a dramatic shift in the second quarter of 2025. In early June, new SEC Chair Paul Atkins proposed a more constructive regulatory path for DeFi during a congressional fintech hearing, outlining three key policy directions: First, the SEC will establish an "Innovation Exemption mechanism" for protocols with a high degree of decentralization, temporarily waiving certain registration requirements within designated pilot programs. Second, a "Functional Categorization Framework" would be promoted, under which protocols would be regulated based on their operational logic and on-chain activities, rather than being automatically classified as securities platforms solely due to their use of tokens. Third, DAO governance structures and Real-World Asset (RWA) tokenization projects would be brought into an open financial regulatory sandbox, using low-risk, traceable regulatory tools to accommodate rapidly evolving technological prototypes. This shift in policy direction aligns with the white paper on systemic risk in digital assets released by the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) of the U.S. Treasury in May of the same year. The report, for the first time, called for regulatory sandboxes and functional testing as mechanisms to safeguard investors without "stifling innovation".

II. The Evolution of U.S. Regulatory Strategy: From "Presumption of Illegality" to "Functionally Adaptive Regulation"

The evolution of U.S. regulation toward DeFi not only epitomizes how its financial compliance framework responds to the challenges posed by emerging technologies but also vividly reflects how regulators balance "financial innovation" with "risk prevention". The SEC's current policy stance on DeFi is not an isolated instance but rather the result of inter-agency dynamics and the gradual evolution of regulatory logic over the past five years. To understand the basis of this transformation, we must revisit the root of the regulatory attitudes during the early stages of DeFi's rise, the feedback loop triggered by major enforcement events, and the systematic tensions in the application of laws across federal and state jurisdictions.

Since the DeFi ecosystem began taking shape in 2019, the SEC's core regulatory logic has relied heavily on the Howey Test established in 1946, a framework for determining whether certain assets are securities. Under this test, any contractual arrangement that represents an investment in a common enterprise with the expectation of profit solely through the efforts of others may be classified as a securities transaction and thus subject to regulation. Based on this standard, the vast majority of tokens issued by DeFi protocols (particularly those with governance influences or revenue-distribution functions) are presumed to be unregistered securities, thereby posing potential compliance risks. In addition, according to the Securities Exchange Act and Investment Company Act, any activity that matches, clears, holds, or recommends digital assets, without a clear exemption, may constitute violations for operating as an unregistered broker or clearing institution.

Between 2021 and 2022, the SEC launched a series of high-profile enforcement actions. Representative cases include the investigation into whether Uniswap Labs operated as "an unregistered securities trading platform", accusations of "illegal marketing" against protocols such as Balancer and dYdX, and even privacy protocols like Tornado Cash being added to the sanctions list of the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). These cases revealed the regulator's sweeping, aggressive, and ambiguously defined enforcement strategy in the DeFi space. The regulatory tone during this period could be summarized as one of "presumption of illegality", meaning that project teams bore the burden of proving that their protocol design did not constitute securities transactions or fall under U.S. jurisdiction, or else face compliance risk.

However, this regulatory strategy of "enforcement first, rules later" soon encountered headwinds on both the legislative and judicial fronts. To begin with, many court rulings began to expose the limitations of applying traditional regulatory judgments to decentralized contexts. For instance, in the SEC vs. Ripple case, a U.S. court ruled that XRP did not constitute a security in some secondary market transactions, effectively undermining the SEC's stance that "all crypto tokens are securities". Meanwhile, the continued legal battle between Coinbase and the SEC elevated "regulatory clarity" into a central theme in both industrial and congressional efforts to advance crypto legislation. Second, the SEC has faced fundamental challenges in applying laws to structures like DAOs. Since DAOs operate without a legal representative or centralized beneficiaries in the traditional sense, it is difficult to classify their on-chain autonomy mechanisms as the traditional securities logic of "profits from the efforts of others". Accordingly, regulators have also found themselves lacking effective legal tools to impose subpoenas, fines, or bans, leading to a deadlock in enforcement execution.

It was against this backdrop of mounting institutional consensus that the SEC began to shift its strategy following a leadership change in early 2025. Newly appointed Chair Paul Atkins, a long-time advocate of "technology neutrality" as a regulatory baseline, emphasized that regulatory boundaries for financial compliance should be defined by function rather than by the technical means through which those functions are implemented. Under his direction, the SEC formed an internal DeFi strategy task force and co-launched a DeFi roundtable with the U.S. Treasury, employing tools such as data modeling, protocol testing, and on-chain tracing to construct a system for risk classification and governance evaluation of major DeFi protocols. This tech-driven, risk-tiered regulatory method marks a transition from the traditional logic of securities law to a model of "functionally adaptive regulation", one that grounds policy design in the actual financial functions and behavioral models of DeFi protocols, thereby integrating compliance requirements and technological flexibility.

It should be noted that the SEC has not relinquished its claim to regulatory jurisdiction over the DeFi sector. Rather, it is attempting to build a more flexible and iterative regulatory strategy. For instance, DeFi projects with clearly centralized components (such as frontend interface operations, multisig governance control, or protocol upgrade permissions) will be required to perform registration and disclosure obligations. Meanwhile, for protocols that are highly decentralized and executed entirely on-chain, the SEC may introduce an exemption mechanism based on "technical testing and governance audits". In addition, by encouraging projects to voluntarily enter regulatory sandboxes, the SEC plans to cultivate a compliant "middle ground" for the DeFi ecosystem, provided that market stability is ensured and users' rights and interests are protected. This approach can prevent the collateral damage to technological innovation caused by one-size-fits-all policies.

On the whole, U.S. regulatory approaches to DeFi are gradually evolving, from the early phase of aggressive legal application and enforcement crackdowns toward a model based on institutional consultation, functional identification, and risk-based guidance. This shift not only reflects a deepened understanding of technological heterogeneity but also represents regulators' attempts to introduce new governance paradigms in the face of open financial systems. In future policy implementation, the key challenge for the sustainability of DeFi regulatory institutions in the U.S. and even the world will lie in striking a dynamic balance between protecting investors' interests, ensuring systemic stability, and propelling technological advancement.

III. The Three "Wealth Codes": Revaluation Under Institutional Logic

With the SEC's new regulatory policies now officially in effect, there has been a substantive shift in the general attitude towards DeFi in the U.S. regulatory environment. The transition from ex-post enforcement to ex-ante compliance and then to functionally adaptive regulation has brought long-awaited institutional tailwinds to the DeFi sector. As the new regulatory framework continues to take shape, market participants have begun to re-evaluate the foundational value of DeFi protocols. Many sectors and projects whose valuations had long been suppressed due to "regulatory uncertainty" are now showing strong potential for revaluation and renewed investment appeal. From an institutional logic perspective, the current revaluation in the DeFi sector is unfolding along three main trajectories: the institutional premium on compliant intermediary structures, the strategic importance of on-chain liquidity infrastructure, and the space for credit restoration in protocols with high endogenous yield models. These three directions form the key entry points of the next round of "wealth generation" in DeFi.

First of all, as the SEC emphasizes a "function-oriented approach" to regulation and introduces registration exemptions or sandbox testing mechanisms for certain frontend operations and service-layer protocols, compliant on-chain intermediaries are emerging as a new area of undervalued opportunity. Unlike the early DeFi ecosystem's extreme pursuit of disintermediation, today's regulatory environment and market are generating structural demand for "compliant intermediary services". Especially at critical junctures such as Know-Your-Customer (KYC), on-chain anti-money laundering (AML), risk disclosures, and protocol governance custody, projects with a clear legal person governance structure and service licenses will become indispensable gateways to regulatory compliance. This trend will increase policy tolerance and investor favor toward DID protocols offering on-chain KYC services, compliant custodians, and frontend operation platforms with high governance transparency, leading to a shift in how these entities are valued, from "technical tools" to "institutional infrastructure". It should be noted that the rapidly evolving "compliance chain" modules within certain Layer 2 solutions (such as rollups with whitelist mechanisms) will also play a pivotal role in the rise of this compliant intermediary architecture, offering a credible execution infrastructure that enables traditional financial capital to participate in DeFi.

Second, the on-chain liquidity infrastructure, which serves as the foundational resource allocation engine of the DeFi ecosystem, is regaining strategic valuation support due to its institutional clarity. Liquidity aggregation platforms, represented by decentralized trading protocols such as Uniswap, Curve, and Balancer, faced multiple challenges over the last year, including liquidity depletion, waning token incentives, and pressure from regulatory uncertainty. However, driven by new policies, platforms that offer protocol neutrality, high composability, and transparent governance are once again emerging as the preferred destinations for structural capital inflows into the DeFi ecosystem. In particular, under the principle of "separating protocol from front-end regulation" proposed by the SEC, the legal risk of base-layer AMM protocols that function as on-chain code execution tools will be drastically mitigated. This, combined with the expanding bridge between real-world assets (RWAs) and on-chain assets, is expected to systematically restore both on-chain trading depth and capital efficiency expectations. Furthermore, on-chain oracles and price feed infrastructures represented by Chainlink are becoming key "risk-controllable neutral nodes" in institution-grade DeFi deployments because they are not classified as direct financial intermediaries under current regulatory frameworks. Therefore, they play a vital role in maintaining systemic liquidity and enabling price discovery within a compliance framework.

Third, DeFi protocols with high endogenous yields and stable cash flows are poised to enter a credit restoration cycle as institutional pressure begins to ease, once again attracting risk capital. In earlier stages of DeFi's development, lending protocols such as Compound, Aave, and MakerDAO established themselves as the credit foundation of the entire ecosystem due to their robust collateral models and liquidation mechanisms. However, as the crypto credit crisis unfolded between 2022 and 2023, DeFi protocols experienced balance sheet strain due to liquidation pressure, with frequent incidents of stablecoin depegging and liquidity depletion. Combined with growing concerns over asset security due to regulatory gray areas, most of these protocols faced structural risks, including eroded market trust and low token prices. Today, with a clearer regulatory outlook and establishment of frameworks that formally recognize protocol revenue, governance structures, and auditing mechanisms, these protocols now have the potential to serve as "on-chain stable cash flow vehicles" thanks to their quantifiable, on-chain verifiable real revenue models and low operational leverage. Especially as DeFi stablecoin models evolve toward "multi-collateral and RWA-pegged" frameworks, on-chain stablecoins such as DAI, GHO, and sUSD are expected to build institutional moats, underpinned by clearer regulatory positioning, that enable them to compete with centralized stablecoins (e.g., USDC and USDT), thereby increasing their systemic appeal in institutional portfolio allocation.

It is worth noting that the common logic behind these three strategic directions is a rebalancing process of transforming the "policy perception premium" brought about by the SEC's new regulatory framework into the "market capital pricing power". In the past, DeFi's valuation system relied heavily on speculative momentum and inflated expectations. Due to the lack of institutional moats and fundamental support, it was particularly vulnerable in countercyclical market phases. Now, with regulatory risks easing and legal pathways gaining clarity, DeFi protocols are increasingly able to establish a mechanism of valuation anchor for institutional capital based on real on-chain revenues, compliant service capabilities, and institutional participation thresholds. This mechanism not only allows DeFi protocols to rebuild their "risk premium–return models" but also marks the first time DeFi protocols are equipped with a credit pricing logic akin to that of financial enterprises. In doing so, it lays the institutional groundwork for integration with traditional financial systems, RWA connection channels, and the issuance of on-chain bonds.

IV. Market Response: From Surging TVL to Asset Revaluation

The release of the SEC's new regulatory policy has not only sent a positive signal of cautious acceptance and functional regulation of DeFi at the policy level but has also instantly triggered a chain reaction in the market, forming an efficient positive feedback loop of "regulatory expectations – capital inflow – asset revaluation". The most direct manifestation of this is the significant rebound in DeFi's total value locked (TVL). According to statistics from major data platforms like DefiLlama, within a week of the new policy's issuance, Ethereum-based DeFi TVL surged from approximately $46 billion to nearly $54 billion, up over 17% in a single week, marking the largest weekly increase since the FTX crisis in 2022. Meanwhile, TVL of multiple mainstream protocols, including Uniswap, Aave, Lido, and Synthetix, rose simultaneously, accompanied by a comprehensive recovery in metrics such as on-chain trading activity, gas usage, and DEX trading volumes. This across-the-board market response reflects that clear regulatory signals have, in the short term, effectively eased concerns among both institutional and retail investors about DeFi's potential legal risks, thereby encouraging off-chain capital to return to the sector and driving a fresh injection of structural liquidity.

Driven by this swift return of capital, many leading DeFi assets have undergone revaluation. Governance tokens such as UNI, AAVE, and MKR, for instance, experienced average price hikes ranging from 25% to 60% within the week following the implementation of the new policy, far outpacing the increases of BTC and ETH during the same period. This rebound in price was not merely sentiment-driven. Rather, it reflected a new round of market valuation modeling focused on the cash flow potential and institutional legitimacy of DeFi protocols. Previously, due to uncertainty over compliance, DeFi governance tokens' valuation systems were heavily discounted by the market, with the protocols' real revenue, the value of governance rights, and their growth potential largely unaccounted for in their market capitalization. By contrast, now that institutional pathways are becoming clearer and policy tolerance for operational legitimacy is increasing, the market has begun revising DeFi protocol valuations using traditional financial metrics such as price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, TVL multiples, and on-chain active user growth models. This return to fundamental valuation methods not only boosts the investment appeal of DeFi assets as "quasi-cash-flow-generating assets" but also marks the DeFi market's transition toward a more mature and quantifiable phase of capital pricing.

Furthermore, on-chain data also reveals how the structure of capital distribution is changing. Following the new policy's release, many protocols saw notable increases in on-chain deposit transactions, user numbers, and average transaction amounts. In particular, among protocols with high degrees of RWA integration (such as Maple Finance, Ondo Finance, and Centrifuge), the share of institutional wallets rose sharply. For example, Ondo's short-term U.S. Treasury token OUSG grew by more than 40% in issuance since the policy launch, demonstrating that some institutional funds seeking compliant paths are now turning to DeFi platforms to allocate capital into on-chain, fixed-return-like assets. At the same time, stablecoin inflows into centralized exchanges declined, while net stablecoin inflows into DeFi protocols started to recover, evidence of the restoration of investor confidence in the security of on-chain assets. There is an emerging trend in which the decentralized financial system is regaining the pricing power over capital. TVL is no longer merely a short-term metric of speculative activity but is gradually evolving into a barometer of asset allocation and capital trust.

It is worth noting that while the current market response has been strong, the asset revaluation process remains in its early stages, and the full realization of the regulatory premium is far from complete. Compared with traditional financial assets, DeFi protocols still face relatively high regulatory trial-and-error costs, governance inefficiencies, and challenges in auditing on-chain data, as a result of which the market remains somewhat cautious despite shifting risk preferences. Nevertheless, this resonance of "shrinking institutional risk and recovering value expectations" is exactly what opens up room for mid-term valuation expansion across the DeFi sector. At present, the price-to-sales (P/S) ratios of many top protocols remain well below their mid-cycle levels during the 2021 bull market. As long as real revenue maintains growth, regulatory certainty will provide upward momentum for their valuation baselines. At the same time, asset revaluation is also influencing token design and distribution mechanisms. For instance, some protocols are resuming buybacks of governance tokens, increasing the proportion of surplus distributed to users, or advancing reforms to staking models tied to protocol revenues, further embedding "value capture" into the market's pricing logic.

V. Future Outlook: DeFi's Institutional Reconstruction and New Cycle

Looking ahead, the SEC's new policy is more than just a compliance-level policy adjustment. It marks a pivotal turning point for the institutional reconstruction of the DeFi industry and its path toward sustainable, healthy development. By clarifying regulatory boundaries and market operating rules, the policy lays the groundwork for DeFi to transition from a phase of "unbridled growth" to a mature market that is "compliant and orderly". Against this backdrop, DeFi not only faces significantly reduced compliance risks but also ushers in a new stage of development characterized by value discovery, business innovation, and ecosystem expansion.

First, from the perspective of institutional logic, DeFi's institutional reconstruction will fundamentally reshape its design paradigms and business models. With a primary focus on automated execution based on "code is law", traditional DeFi protocols often overlook compatibility with real-world legal systems, resulting in potential legal gray areas and operational risks. By clarifying and refining compliance requirements, the SEC's new policy compels DeFi projects to develop dual-identity systems that integrate technological advantages with compliance. For example, key challenges in the design of future DeFi protocols include balancing compliant identity verification (KYC/AML) with on-chain anonymity, clarifying legal liability in protocol governance, and establishing mechanisms for compliance data reporting. By embedding compliance mechanisms into smart contracts and governance frameworks, DeFi will gradually form a new paradigm of "compliance by design", achieving deeper integration between technology and law. This will reduce uncertainty and penalties that may result from regulatory conflicts.

Second, institutional reconstruction will inevitably catalyze the diversification and maturation of DeFi's business models. Previously, the DeFi ecosystem was overly reliant on short-term incentives such as liquidity mining and transaction fees, making it difficult to generate sustainable cash flow and long-term profitability. Under the guidance of the new policy, project teams will shift their focus toward building sustainable revenue models. For instance, they will gradually develop a closed-loop return structure comparable to that of traditional financial assets through methods such as protocol-level revenue sharing, asset management services, the issuance of compliant bonds and collateral assets, and the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA). Especially in terms of RWA integration, signals of regulatory compliance have significantly strengthened institutional trust in DeFi products, enabling a wider array of asset types, such as supply chain finance, real estate securitization, and invoice financing, to enter the on-chain ecosystem. In the future, DeFi will cease to be a mere decentralized trading venue. Instead, it is poised to evolve into an institutionalized financial infrastructure for issuing and managing on-chain assets.

Third, the institutional reconstruction of governance mechanisms will become a key driver of DeFi's next growth cycle. In the past, DeFi governance relied heavily on token-based voting, suffering from excessive decentralization of governance power, low voter participation, and inefficient governance, along with a lack of integration with traditional legal systems. The governance standards introduced by the SEC's new policy have prompted protocol designers to explore more legally robust governance frameworks, enhancing governance legitimacy and enforceability through measures such as registering DAOs as legal entities, legally validating governance actions, and introducing multi-party compliance regulatory mechanisms. Hybrid models may be adopted for future DeFi governance, combining on-chain voting, off-chain protocols, and legal frameworks to create decision-making systems that are transparent, compliant, and efficient. This will not only mitigate risks of power centralization and manipulation in governance processes but also improve protocols' credibility among external regulators and investors, thus laying a solid foundation for DeFi's sustainable development.

Fourth, as compliance and governance systems improve, the DeFi ecosystem will welcome a broader range of participants and undergo a transformation in its capital structure. The new policy has considerably lowered the barriers for institutional investors and traditional financial institutions to enter DeFi. Traditional capital players such as large asset management companies, pension funds, and family offices are actively seeking compliant on-chain asset allocation schemes, which will spur the creation of more customized DeFi products and services tailored to institutional needs. Simultaneously, insurance, lending, and derivatives markets will experience explosive growth in compliant environments, driving full-spectrum coverage of on-chain financial services. In addition, project teams will optimize their tokenomics, reinforcing the internal rationale of tokens as both governance tools and value carriers. This will encourage long-term holding and value-driven investment, mitigate short-term speculative volatility, and inject sustained momentum into the ecosystem's stable growth.

Fifth, technological innovation and cross-chain integration are the technical backbone and driving force behind DeFi's institutional reconstruction. Compliance requirements are driving technological innovations in privacy protection, identity verification, and smart contract security, giving rise to the widespread adoption of privacy-enhancing technologies such as zero-knowledge proofs, homomorphic encryption, and multi-party computation. Meanwhile, cross-chain protocols and Layer 2 scaling solutions will facilitate seamless transfers of assets and data across multiple blockchain ecosystems, breaking down on-chain silos and enhancing overall DeFi liquidity and user experience. In the future, a compliant, multi-chain integrated ecosystem will provide a solid base for DeFi business innovation and promote deeper integration with the traditional financial system, creating a new hybrid financial model that blends "on-chain + off-chain" operations.

Lastly, it should be noted that although DeFi's institutionalization signals a fresh start, challenges persist. There are several key issues concerning DeFi's healthy development in the future, including the stability of policy implementation and international regulatory coordination, the management of compliance costs, the improvement of project teams' compliance awareness and technical capabilities, and the balance between user privacy protection and transparency. All industry stakeholders must work together to promote standard-setting and the development of self-regulatory mechanisms, build a multi-layered compliance ecosystem with support from industry alliances and third-party auditing institutions, and continuously enhance the sector's overall institutionalization level and market trust.

VI. Conclusion: DeFi's New Frontier of Wealth Has Just Begun

As the forefront of blockchain-based financial innovation, DeFi stands at a critical juncture of institutional reconstruction and technological upgrading. The SEC's new policy has fostered an environment that balances regulation with opportunity, driving the industry's transition from unbridled growth toward compliant development. In the future, with ongoing technology breakthroughs and ecosystem refinements, DeFi is poised for broader financial inclusion and value reshaping, establishing itself as a cornerstone of the digital economy. However, the industry must continue to work to address compliance risks, technical security, and user education to truly unlock long-term prosperity in this new frontier of wealth. With the SEC's new policy, the shift from "Innovation Exemption" to "On-Chain Finance" could spark a market-wide breakout, potentially heralding another DeFi summer and triggering a revaluation of blue-chip DeFi tokens.

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什麼是 ETH 2.0

ETH 2.0:以太坊的新時代 介紹 ETH 2.0,廣為人知的以太坊 2.0,標誌著對以太坊區塊鏈的一次重大升級。這次過渡不僅僅是表面上的改造;其目標是從根本上增強網絡的可擴展性、安全性和可持續性。ETH 2.0 透過從能量密集型的工作量證明(PoW)共識機制轉向更高效的權益證明(PoS),承諾為區塊鏈生態系統帶來變革性的改變。 什麼是 ETH 2.0? ETH 2.0 是一系列獨特且相互連接的更新,專注於優化以太坊的能力和性能。這次全面改革旨在解決現有以太坊機制所面臨的主要挑戰,特別是交易速度和網絡擁堵問題。 ETH 2.0 的目標 ETH 2.0 的主要目標圍繞著改善三個核心方面: 可擴展性:旨在顯著提升網絡每秒可以處理的交易數量,ETH 2.0 希望突破目前約每秒 15 笔交易的限制,潛在地達到數千筆。 安全性:增強的安全措施是 ETH 2.0 的核心,特別是提高抵抗網絡攻擊的能力以及保護以太坊的去中心化精神。 可持續性:新的 PoS 機制旨在不僅提高效率,還大幅降低能耗,讓以太坊的運營框架與環保考量相符。 誰是 ETH 2.0 的創造者? ETH 2.0 的創建可追溯至以太坊基金會。這個非營利組織在支持以太坊發展方面發揮著關鍵作用,由著名的聯合創始人 Vitalik Buterin 主導。他對於更可擴展和更可持續以太坊的願景,是這次升級的推動力,並吸引了來自全球的開發者和愛好者的貢獻,共同致力於改善協議。 誰是 ETH 2.0 的投資者? 雖然有關 ETH 2.0 的投資者的具體信息尚未公開,但以太坊基金會已知方向來自區塊鏈及技術領域的各種組織和個人支持。這些合作夥伴包括創投公司、技術公司和慈善機構,它們共同致力於支持去中心化技術和區塊鏈基礎設施的發展。 ETH 2.0 如何運作? ETH 2.0 以引入一系列關鍵特性而著稱,使其與前身有所區別。 權益證明(PoS) 轉向 PoS 共識機制是 ETH 2.0 的標誌性變化之一。與依賴於能量密集型挖礦進行交易驗證的 PoW 不同,PoS 允許用戶根據他們在網絡中抵押的 ETH 數量來驗證交易和創建新區塊。這導致能量效率的提升,能耗降低約 99.95%,使以太坊 2.0 成為一個相當綠色的替代方案。 分片鏈 分片鏈是 ETH 2.0 的另一個關鍵創新。這些較小的鏈與主要的以太坊鏈平行運行,使得多筆交易可以同時處理。這種方法增強了網絡的整體容量,解決了困擾以太坊的可擴展性問題。 信標鏈 在 ETH 2.0 的核心是信標鏈,它協調網絡並管理 PoS 協議。它在某種程度上充當了組織者:它監督驗證者,確保各分片與網絡的連接,並監控整體區塊鏈生態系統的健康狀況。 ETH 2.0 的時間軸 ETH 2.0 的旅程標誌著幾個關鍵里程碑,描繪了這次重大升級的演變: 2020年12月:信標鏈的啟動標誌著 PoS 的引入,為 ETH 2.0 的遷移鋪平了道路。 2022年9月:“合併”的完成代表著以太坊網絡成功從 PoW 轉型為 PoS 框架,預示著以太坊的新時代。 2023年:預期分片鏈的推出旨在進一步增強以太坊網絡的可擴展性,鞏固 ETH 2.0 作為去中心化應用和服務的強大平台。 主要特性和優勢 改進的可擴展性 ETH 2.0 最重要的優勢之一是其改進的可擴展性。PoS 和分片鏈的結合使網絡能夠擴大容量,允許其處理的交易量遠超舊有系統。 能源效率 PoS 的實施對於區塊鏈技術中的能源效率來說是一個巨大的進步。通過大幅降低能源消耗,ETH 2.0 不僅減少了運營成本,還與全球可持續發展目標更加一致。 增強的安全性 ETH 2.0 的更新機制提高了網絡的安全性。PoS 的部署,加上通過分片鏈和信標鏈建立的創新控制措施,確保了對潛在威脅更高程度的保護。 降低用戶成本 隨著可擴展性的改善,交易成本也會明顯降低。預期增強的容量和減少的擁堵將轉化為用戶更低的手續費,使以太坊在日常交易中變得更可及。 結論 ETH 2.0 標誌著以太坊區塊鏈生態系統的一次重要演變。隨著其解決可擴展性、能源消耗、交易效率和整體安全性等關鍵問題,這次升級的重要性不言而喻。轉向權益證明、引入分片鏈以及信標鏈的基礎性工作,顯示出以太坊未來能夠滿足去中心化市場日益增長的需求。在一個由創新和進步推動的行業中,ETH 2.0 是區塊鏈技術在為更可持續和高效的數字經濟鋪路方面能力的見證。

217 人學過發佈於 2024.04.04更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 ETH 2.0

什麼是 ETH 3.0

ETH3.0 與 $eth 3.0:以深入分析以太坊的未來 介紹 在快速發展的加密貨幣和區塊鏈技術領域,ETH3.0,通常標記為 $eth 3.0,已成為一個備受關注和猜測的話題。該術語包含兩個主要概念,值得說明: 以太坊 3.0:這代表潛在的未來升級,旨在增強現有的以太坊區塊鏈的能力,特別集中於提高可擴展性和性能。ETH3.0 表情符號代幣:這個獨特的加密貨幣項目旨在利用以太坊區塊鏈創建一個以表情符號為中心的生態系統,促進加密貨幣社區的參與。 理解這些 ETH3.0 的方面不僅對加密愛好者至關重要,也對觀察數字空間中的更廣泛技術趨勢的人有所幫助。 什麼是 ETH3.0? 以太坊 3.0 以太坊 3.0 被認為是對已建立的以太坊網絡的擬議升級,自其誕生以來,它一直是許多去中心化應用程式(dApps)和智能合約的支柱。預想的增強主要集中於可擴展性——整合先進技術,如分片和零知識證明(zk-proofs)。這些技術創新旨在促進每秒交易數量的前所未有(TPS),潛在地達到數百萬筆,從而解決當前區塊鏈技術面臨的最重大限制之一。 這次改進不僅是技術性的,更是戰略性的;它旨在為以太坊網絡的普遍採用和未來的實用性做準備,因為該未來將面臨對去中心化解決方案日益增長的需求。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 與以太坊 3.0 不同,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣進入了一個更輕鬆和更具玩樂性的領域,通過將互聯網表情符號文化與加密貨幣動態相結合。該項目使用戶能夠在以太坊區塊鏈上購買、出售和交易表情符號,提供一個促進社區通過創造力和共同利益參與的平台。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣旨在展示區塊鏈技術如何與數字文化交匯,創造出既有趣又具有經濟價值的使用案例。 誰是 ETH3.0 的創造者? 以太坊 3.0 對以太坊 3.0 的倡議主要由以太坊社區內的一個開發者和研究人員的聯盟推動,特別是包括 Justin Drake。他因對以太坊演變的見解和貢獻而聞名,Drake 在關於將以太坊轉變為新共識層的討論中是一個重要人物,這被稱為「Beam Chain」。 這種協作開發的方式標誌著以太坊 3.0 不是單一創造者的產品,而是集中精力促進區塊鏈技術進步的集體智慧的體現。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 關於 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣的創造者的詳細資料目前無法追溯。表情符號代幣的特性通常導致更分散和社區驅動的結構,這可以解釋為什麼缺乏具體的歸屬感。這與更廣泛的加密社區的精神相符,該社區的創新往往源於協作而非個人努力。 誰是 ETH3.0 的投資者? 以太坊 3.0 對以太坊 3.0 的支持主要來自以太坊基金會以及一個充滿熱情的開發者和投資者社區。這種基礎聯繫提供了相當程度的合法性,並增強了成功落實的前景,因為它利用了多年網絡運營建立的信任和可信度。 在快速變化的加密貨幣氣候中,社區支持在推動開發和採用中發揮了關鍵作用,將以太坊 3.0 置於未來區塊鏈進步的重要競爭者地位。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 雖然目前可用的來源並沒有明確提供支持 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣的投資機構或組織的具體信息,但這反映出表情符號代幣典型的資金模型,通常依賴於基層支持和社區參與。此類項目的投資者通常由因社區驅動的創新潛力以及在加密社區中發現的合作精神而受到激勵的個人組成。 ETH3.0 如何運作? 以太坊 3.0 以太坊 3.0 的區別特點在於其擬議的分片和零知識證明技術的實施。分片是一種將區塊鏈劃分為更小、更易管理的單元或「分片」的方法,這些分片能夠同時處理交易,而不是按序處理。這種處理的去中心化有助於避免擁堵,並確保即使在高負載下,網絡也能保持響應。 零知識證明(zk-proof)技術通過允許交易驗證而不揭示涉及的基本數據,增加了一層複雜性。這一方面不僅增強了隱私性,還提高了整個網絡的效率。還有討論將零知識以太坊虛擬機(zkEVM)納入此次升級,進一步擴大網絡的能力和實用性。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣通過利用表情符號文化的受歡迎程度而脫穎而出。它建立了一個市場,讓用戶參與表情符號交易,不僅僅是為了娛樂,也是為了潛在的經濟利益。通過整合質押、流動性供應和治理機制等特性,該項目營造了一種促進社區互動和參與的環境。 通過提供娛樂和經濟機會的獨特結合,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣旨在吸引多樣的觀眾,範圍從加密愛好者到隨便的表情符號愛好者。 ETH3.0 的時間表 以太坊 3.0 2024年11月11日:Justin Drake 暗示即將到來的 ETH 3.0 升級,重點是可擴展性改進。這一公告標誌著關於以太坊未來架構正式討論的開始。2024年11月12日:預期中的以太坊 3.0 提案將在曼谷的 Devcon 上公佈,為更廣泛的社區反饋和潛在的開發後續步驟奠定基礎。 ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 2024年3月21日:ETH3.0 表情符號代幣正式在 CoinMarketCap 上列出,標誌著其進入公眾加密領域,並增強了其基於表情符號的生態系統的可見性。 關鍵要點 總之,以太坊 3.0 代表了以太坊網絡內的重要演變,集中於通過先進技術克服可擴展性和性能的限制。其擬議的升級反映出對未來需求和可用性的主動應對。 另一方面,ETH3.0 表情符號代幣 encapsulates 加密貨幣領域中以社區為驅動文化的本質,利用表情符號文化來創建鼓勵用戶創造力和參與的平台。 理解 ETH3.0 和 $eth 3.0 的不同目的和功能對於任何對加密領域中正在進行的發展感興趣的人來說都是至關重要的。隨著這兩個倡議鋪展獨特的道路,它們共同凸顯了區塊鏈創新動態和多樣化的本質。

220 人學過發佈於 2024.04.04更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 ETH 3.0

如何購買ETH

歡迎來到HTX.com!在這裡,購買Ethereum (ETH)變得簡單而便捷。跟隨我們的逐步指南,放心開始您的加密貨幣之旅。第一步:創建您的HTX帳戶使用您的 Email、手機號碼在HTX註冊一個免費帳戶。體驗無憂的註冊過程並解鎖所有平台功能。立即註冊第二步:前往買幣頁面,選擇您的支付方式信用卡/金融卡購買:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即時購買Ethereum (ETH)。餘額購買:使用您HTX帳戶餘額中的資金進行無縫交易。第三方購買:探索諸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方式以增加便利性。C2C購買:在HTX平台上直接與其他用戶交易。HTX 場外交易 (OTC) 購買:為大量交易者提供個性化服務和競爭性匯率。第三步:存儲您的Ethereum (ETH)購買Ethereum (ETH)後,將其存儲在您的HTX帳戶中。您也可以透過區塊鏈轉帳將其發送到其他地址或者用於交易其他加密貨幣。第四步:交易Ethereum (ETH)在HTX的現貨市場輕鬆交易Ethereum (ETH)。前往您的帳戶,選擇交易對,執行交易,並即時監控。HTX為初學者和經驗豐富的交易者提供了友好的用戶體驗。

4.3k 人學過發佈於 2024.12.10更新於 2026.06.02

如何購買ETH

相關討論

歡迎來到 HTX 社群。在這裡,您可以了解最新的平台發展動態並獲得專業的市場意見。 以下是用戶對 ETH (ETH)幣價的意見。

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